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The King of Infinite Space by Lyndsay Faye | L.A. Times Lyndsay Faye plays a kind of literary jazz. The author likes to riff on the standards, putting her own stamp on them as she jams. Her previous...
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Mirror Work | Be About It Zine #19 My short essay “Mirror Work” appears in Alexandra Naughton’s zine Be About It. You should order a copy! They’re only $3!
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Good Neighbors: A review of Wolfram Eilenberger’s Time of the Magicians and Claire Messud’s Kant’s Little Prussian Head & Other Reasons Why I Write | The Georgia Review For the sixth time, I have...
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Build That World: On Helen Macdonald’s Vesper Flights and Rachel Kushner’s The Hard Crowd | Gulf Coast I reviewed two excellent essay collections in the Winter/Spring 2022 issue of Gulf Coast. It’s a...
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Maxwell’s Demon by Steven Hall | The Rumpus Steven Hall’s first novel, The Raw Shark Texts, falls into a fuzzily defined genre known as slipstream. This term, coined by sci-fi author Bruce Sterling in...
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An Interview with Amy Long, the Mastermind Behind the “Taylor Swift as Books” Instagram | Literary Hub Earlier this year, I noticed writers giddily posting images of their book covers paired with...
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The Women I Love by Francesco Pacifico | L.A. Times The protagonist of Francesco Pacifico’s The Women I Love is writing a novel, and he has this to say about his literary project: “I’m recalling this...
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Essays Two by Lydia Davis | Star Tribune Lydia Davis has thrice distinguished herself in the world of American letters. First, as a fiction writer (seven collections and one novel), then as a...
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How Reading John McPhee’s Book on Tennis Helped Me Write About Skateboarding | Literary Hub To assist my operation, I sought out books about sports with which I wasn’t as intimately familiar as...
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Older, Grayer, Sober: Aging Alongside the Jackass Dudes | Literary Hub When I was 26, I took part in a weekend-long skate contest with a team of about ten other skaters. The contest was a New England...
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What’s in a Name?: A Review of Carrie Bennett’s Lost Letters and Other Animals, Nicholas Wong’s Besiege Me, and Mark Leidner’s Returning the Sword to the Stone | Salamander #53 You can tell a lot...
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Good Neighbors: A review of Wolfram Eilenberger’s Time of the Magicians and Claire Messud’s Kant’s Little Prussian Head & Other Reasons Why I Write | The Georgia Review For the sixth time, I have...
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Build That World: On Helen Macdonald’s Vesper Flights and Rachel Kushner’s The Hard Crowd | Gulf Coast I reviewed two excellent essay collections in the Winter/Spring 2022 issue of Gulf Coast. It’s a...
View ArticleArticle 6
Maxwell’s Demon by Steven Hall | The Rumpus Steven Hall’s first novel, The Raw Shark Texts, falls into a fuzzily defined genre known as slipstream. This term, coined by sci-fi author Bruce Sterling in...
View ArticleArticle 5
An Interview with Amy Long, the Mastermind Behind the “Taylor Swift as Books” Instagram | Literary Hub Earlier this year, I noticed writers giddily posting images of their book covers paired with...
View ArticleArticle 4
The Women I Love by Francesco Pacifico | L.A. Times The protagonist of Francesco Pacifico’s The Women I Love is writing a novel, and he has this to say about his literary project: “I’m recalling this...
View ArticleArticle 3
Essays Two by Lydia Davis | Star Tribune Lydia Davis has thrice distinguished herself in the world of American letters. First, as a fiction writer (seven collections and one novel), then as a...
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How Reading John McPhee’s Book on Tennis Helped Me Write About Skateboarding | Literary Hub To assist my operation, I sought out books about sports with which I wasn’t as intimately familiar as...
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