Recent Posts

  • If you can’t sell books, sell teddy bears September 3, 2010
    Or that seems to be Borders’ solution to its constant financial problems, at least for the time being until the next quarter with lower than expected sales.  Really, the problem with Borders is that it lost its identity about eight or so years ago when it decided to become a shadow of Barnes & Noble.   [...] […]
    Soo Jin Oh
  • Reflections on Rockwell September 3, 2010
    In recent years, fans of Norman Rockwell, with the assistance of some art historians, have attempted to lift him into the canon of high art. As a fan of midcentury American illustration, I don’t really care how he is assessed on that scale: like the recurring fantasy that underlies so much of our politics of [...] […]
    Levi Stahl
  • A Taste of Cherry in a Heat Wave September 3, 2010
    I’ve been thinking a lot about heat waves. The thick summer weather has felt like a wall of fire that must be bravely pushed through to order to exit from an air conditioned office building and make my way to the corner to board a bus crowded with sweaty citizens. So perhaps it’s no surprise that [...] […]
    Carrie Olivia Adams
  • The Ballad of David Markson September 3, 2010
    "What’s not so up for dispute is that Markson accomplished what, by all rights, should be a literary impossibility." (Colin Marshall for The Millions) […]
    Jeff Waxman
  • Gass-X September 3, 2010
    "Ich liebe dich. No sentence pronounced by a judge could be more threatening. It means that you are about to receive a gift you may not want." Via Dylan Suher, Greg Gerke's sort-of review of William H. Gass's Reading Rilke in BIG OTHER. […]
    Jeff Waxman

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Group Reads

Last Samurai

Fall Read: The Last Samurai by Helen DeWitt

Starting Sept 19, read one of the '00s most-lauded postmodern novels. Info here. Buy the book here and support this site.

Tale of Genji

The Summer of Genji

Two great online lit magazines team up to read a mammoth court drama, the world's first novel.

Your Face Tomorrow

Your Face This Spring

A 3-month read of Javier Marias' mammoth book Your Face Tomorrow

  • In Homer’s Head: Ransom by David Malouf
    In Ransom, Malouf satisfyingly gives us a meeting between Priam and Achilles that builds from the interiority of Priam. The novel seems to want to teach the importance of doing something human to those who might never get around to picking up Homer or who, if they do, might wish they could get into the character's heads. […]
  • How Jeanette Winterson Makes Fiction
    Winterson has always told and retold the same fictions: of parents and children; of origins, and adoptions; of differences, of margins; of love; of passion; she has always manipulated rhythm and language as an excavation of sources. Much of her fiction mirrors what we know of Winterson's own story, but she agitates against the idea that her work has to […]
  • Inveterate and Unrepentant Book Collecting: A Guide to My Favorite Contact Sport
    It's difficult to pin down exactly why books as objects mean so much to me. I wasn't alive when William Goyen's excellent Come, The Restorer was published, but owning an original printing with the dust jacket—as it would have been purchased at the time of its release—makes the book more special to me than some beat-up paperback rei […]
  • The Master of the Not Quite: The Broken Estate: Essays on Literature and Belief by James Wood
    Wood can be harsh, yes, but he is seldom unfair. Wyatt Mason was wrong to accuse him of having suggested, by dint of a string of negative reviews, that no good contemporary literature exists. (He has written favorably of McEwan, Bolaño, Robinson, Ozick, Kirsch, Sebald, Roth, Saramago, Swift, Carey.) He never simply dismisses a writer (in the manor of, s […]

What I've Read

What I’ve Read

Read in 2010

1. In the United States of Africa by Abdourahman A. Waberi

2. The Changeling by Kenzaburo Oe

3. Rex by Jose Manuel Prieto

4. Landscape With Dog And Other Stories by Ersi Sotiropoulos

5. Anonymous Celebrity by Ignacio De Loyola Brandao

6. Wonder by Hugo Claus

7. The Weather Fifteen Years Ago by Wolf Haas

8. The Confessions of Noa Weber by Gail Hareven

9. Memories of the Future by Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky

10. The Discoverer by Jan Kjaerstad

11. Agaat by Marlene van Niekerk

12. On Late Style by Edward Said

13. The Teeth May Smile but the Heart Does Not Forget by Andrew Rice

14. Head in Flames by Lance Olsen

15. The House on Salt Hay Road by Carin Clevidence

16. About a Mountain by John D’Agata

17. Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Roadtrip with DFW by David Lipsky

18. Translation as Stylistic Evolution: Italo Calvino Creative Translator of Raymond Queneau

19. Jakob von Gunten by Robert Walser

20. Everything by Kevin Canty

21. Halls of Fame: Essays by John D’Agata

22. Your Face Tomorrow: Fever and Spear (Vol. 1) by Javier Marias

23. The Literary Conference by Cesar Aira

24. Wars, Guns, and Votes: Democracy in Dangerous Places by Paul Collier

25. Correction by Thomas Bernhard

26. Running Away by Jean-Philippe Toussaint

27. The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story by Frank O’Connor

28. C by Tom McCarthy

Your Face Tomorrow: Dance and Dream (Vol. 2) by Javier Marias

30. Miral: A Novel by Rula Jebreal

31. Writing and the Body by Gabriel Josipovici

32. The Names by Don DeLillo

33. Atlas of the European Novel 1800-1900 by Franco Moretti

34. Speak, Nabokov by Michael Maar

35. The Clown by Heinrich Boll

36. Group Portrait With Lady by Heinrich Boll

37. Billiards at Half-Past Nine by Heinrich Boll

38. Your Face Tomorrow Volume 3 by Javier Marias

39. Pedigree by Georges Simenon

40. A Mighty Fortress: A New History of the German People by Steven Ozment

41. All Souls by Javier Marias

42. The Ambassador by Bragi Olafsson

43. Practicing New Historicism by Catherine Gallagher and Stephen Greenblatt

44. Luka and the Fire of Life by Salman Rushdie

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