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October 2010

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An Interview with Dave McKean

"I think the point to a story, or any creative endeavor really, is to work through your questions and try and reach some sort of conclusion. I don’t see that art is any different from science. We build our knowledge of the world by constantly offering possible answers, or visions of the world, and pass the baton on to the next generation." by Martyn Pedler

Love and Theft

I do not believe that only poets read contemporary poetry, but I do believe that all curious and serious readers of contemporary poetry are reading to steal. We want to steal technique, mood, vocabulary, experience. All reading is stealing -- but poetry readers are going a little further, maybe, are thrill-seeking, pursuing a potentially synesthesic change of the brain. by Olivia Cronk

An Interview with Kate Durbin

"After Marilyn Monroe died there were a bunch of copycat suicides by young women. One woman wrote this in her suicide note: 'If the most beautiful thing in the world has no reason to live, what hope can there be for the rest of us?' I think this is a valid question." by Elizabeth Hildreth

Reading A Cabinet of Roman Curiosities

Among the many excellent reasons to study history -- natural history, unnatural history -- is to remind ourselves that prevailing beliefs in any given culture at any given moment are usually batshit crazy. At best, they are optional, but they are almost never harmless. They often delude us and limit us. by Elizabeth Bachner

The Nobel Reprise, Letter 3: Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio

Books, to me, are not just books. They are creatures, relatives, friends. They are private traveling companions, with whom I have long conversations. I feel them emotionally; I like or dislike them in the way I might like or dislike a stranger at a bar. by Pauls Toutonghi

The Nobel Reprise, Letter 4: Luigi Pirandello

I am terrible at writing about places, and that's because I'm terrible at being in them. I think I have a problem with the proposition or maybe the preposition. I don't feel like I'm in places. I think I'm at them. by Ben Greenman

Japan Stories: In Search of a Differently-Paced Life

I’m hardly alone in this sense that it takes incredible energy just to resist being engulfed by culture’s great forces. It’s become thoroughly unremarkable to feel stoop-shouldered with work, glassy-eyed from the assault of information’s flow through electronic outlets, and snared, if only momentarily, by the fast-moving consumer currents in which last year’s big screen TV or iPod Touch suddenly goes lame alongside a 3D TV or Nano. by Barbara J. King

An Interview with Sigrid Nunez

"The world of my novel isn’t all that different from our world today. With the health care system as broken as it is, and with the kind of intense mistrust of government we see in America today, and the tendency of people in power to put financial gain ahead of the pubic good, it’s pretty scary to think just how bad things could get." by Melynda Fuller

An Interview with Kim Phillips-Fein

"A lot of conservatives are very committed to a populist, grassroots understanding of their movement. And the book, I think, shows the limits of that approach if you really want to understand the structure of the conservative movement. So I think there is something in it that is likely troubling to many conservatives, and the hostile responses it has received probably reflect that." by Mariya Strauss

An Interview with Julia Glass

"My younger kid is in fourth grade and I was picking him up from his second day of school a few days ago...as these kids were waiting for their parents to pick them up, maybe 90 percent of them were on their handheld devices. You’re so not in the world when you live like that. It’s not that I don’t see all the richness and value we gain from all this technology, but there’s a cautionary tale there." by Emily Wilson

An Interview with Skip Horack

"Honestly, I don’t know how overly conscious I was (at least early on) of the juxtaposition of violence and beauty in the book -- in the quest to be both accurate and vivid, that was just the world that emerged on the page, if that makes sense." by Pauls Toutonghi

reviews

Fiction

  • Ghosted by Shaughnessy Bishop-Stall
  • Inferno (a poet's novel) by Eileen Myles
  • The Very Best of Charles de Lint and Muse and Reverie by Charles de Lint
  • Skippy Dies by Paul Murray
  • Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor
  • Room by Emma Donoghue
  • C by Tom McCarthy

Nonfiction

  • Big Girls Don't Cry: The Election that Changed Everything for American Women by Rebecca Traister
  • In Rough Country: Essays and Reviews by Joyce Carol Oates
  • Hollywood Westerns and American Myth: The Importance of Howard Hawks and John Ford for Political Philosophy by Robert B. Pippin
  • The Secret Miracle: The Novelist's Handbook edited by Daniel Alarcón

Poetry

  • The Poets Laureate Anthology edited by Elizabeth Hun Schmidt
  • Maggot by Paul Muldoon

Hundred Books project

columns

Bookslut in Training

  • I See a Darkness

Comicbookslut

  • Looking Inside Charles Burns’ X’ed Out

Cookbookslut

  • A Tavola Non Si Invecchia

Cookbookslut

  • Notes from La Rentrée