AltWeeklies Wire

True Korthnew

Heimo Korth is the subject of author James Campbell’s book debut, a Krakauer-meets-McPhee-style portrait of family life in the bush -- a sort of Daniel Boone for the modern reader.
Missoula Independent  |  Azita Osanloo  |  08-26-2004  |  Nonfiction

David Mitchell Gets Off on his Cloudnew

With his third novel, David Mitchell moves up a notch in the British literary hierarchy of the hottest, past Louis de Bernières and Lawrence Norfolk, encroaching on Will Self and Martin Amis.
Boston Phoenix  |  Peter Keough  |  08-26-2004  |  Fiction

911 Omissions: Who Needs Henry Kissinger, After All?new

The only way to explain the best-seller status of this dry, stiff and cynical book is to understand the 9/11 disaster as a national trauma so intense that the co-dependent American family is still reaching for anything that will assure it.
New York Press  |  Sander Hicks  |  08-26-2004  |  Nonfiction

The Illustrator at War: A Q&A With Steve Brodnernew

The cartoonist's trademark style is perhaps best described as psychedelic-progressive. If Howard Zinn ever enjoyed peyote visions, they'd likely find a home in Brodner's nightmarish political dreamscapes.
New York Press  |  Alexander Zaitchik  |  08-26-2004  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Last Great Poet of Eastern Europe Dies at 93new

Czeslaw Milosz's poetry -- scattered over 20 books, a lifework for which he won the Nobel Prize -- adumbrated the moral and political strife of a Europe in ruin.
New York Press  |  Joshua Cohen  |  08-26-2004  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

My Nipples Loved Fruitnew

Call me an anthrocentrist (my nipples often do, though they lisp the "tr"), but I read the novel more as the story of an obese 13-year-old Canadian boy whose considerable social burdens have been increased by the budding of his nipples into cherry-sized stigmata.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Thomas Bell  |  08-26-2004  |  Fiction

McSweeney's Anthology Reveals the Mind of the Comic Book Guynew

The comic book anthology McSweeney's Quarterly Concern #13 marks the latest milestone in the medium's drawn-out coming of age. If American comics saw their infancy with newspaper strips in the early 20th century, and endured an endless adolescence with superhero titles, the art form now emerges ready for adulthood.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Curt Holman  |  08-26-2004  |  Fiction

The Poet Goes Straight: Cop's Daughter Slips and Rises Back Upnew

Once a strung-out heroin addict, poet Jackie Sheeler runs a Friday-night open mic for poetry readings at the Cornelius St. Cafe and started poetz.com to help neophyte writers.
New York Press  |  C.J. Sullivan  |  08-25-2004  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Critic Claims Steinbeck Was First Eco-Writernew

A literary scholar argues that John Steinbeck should be a central figure of study among ecocritics because the author's literary themes are based on a holistic environmental perspective.
Monterey County Weekly  |  Ryan Masters  |  08-24-2004  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

America's Best Hated Authornew

The author of The Grapes of Wrath was a threat to literary critics of the 1930s, even those who considered themselves progressive, because he did not kowtow to the officially sanctioned left-wing ideology of the day.
Monterey County Weekly  |  Eric Johnson  |  08-24-2004  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Mystery Novel Talks About Oysters, War Brides and Fusion Cuisinenew

The notions of change, adaptability, and cross-cultural fusion are central to Sujata Massey's stunning seventh novel, where the unlikely story lines of Asian oysters repopulating the Chesapeake, a buzzing new fusion restaurant in Washington, D.C., and the grim consequences of the Vietnam War meld into a seamless whole.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Lizzie Skurnick  |  08-24-2004  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Liberal Left Hooknew

Elder Democratic statesman George McGovern comes out swinging, quietly, in defense of American liberalism.
Missoula Independent  |  Nicole Panter  |  08-20-2004  |  Nonfiction

If You Write It: A Green in the White Housenew

Activist Mark Dunlea put his hard-earned political knowledge into Madame President, a novel about a female, Green Party president that he hopes will have a positive impact on the system.
Metroland  |  Shawn Stone  |  08-19-2004  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

This Really is Burning Man

Given that Burning Man is a festival that can hardly be documented, this book does a great job of documenting it.
Monday Magazine  |  John Threlfall  |  08-12-2004  |  Nonfiction

Rally 'Round the Books, Boysnew

George W. Bush's administration has been disastrous for forests, as evidenced by a glance at bookstore shelves. Dead trees take the form of scathing and scathingly funny critiques: It's enough to concern the most passive "arbolist."
Illinois Times  |  Corrine Frisch  |  08-12-2004  |  Nonfiction

Narrow Search

Category

Narrow by Date

  • Last 7 Days
  • Last 30 Days
  • Select a Date Range
  • From:

    To: