You've reached this page in error. Try reading the latest posts below.
February 2007
New Scholarly Book on Gaddis
Paper Empire: William Gaddis and the World System, a collection of essays edited by Joseph Tabbi Rone Shavers is due out this month (via the Gaddis discussion group).
Page 1 of 1 pages
links saved, etc.
me posting elsewhere
You'll find me posting at the
Words Without Borders Blog
find stuff at this site
- tags:
- don quixote
- pen world voices festival
- dependent children of independent bookstores
- william gaddis
- the paris review
- cervantes
- thomas pynchon
- roberto bolano
- rilke
- william h. gass
- zbigniew herbert
- osvaldo golijov
- paul muldoon
- laird hunt
- coffee
- daniil kharms
- fence magazine
- witold gombrowicz
- national slowetry month
- flann o'brien
- translation
- gotham book mart
- words without borders
- anna deveare smith
- etgar keret
- proust
- steve reich
- electric literature
- bea
- cesar vallejo
- shakespeare
- joan didion
- seamus heaney
- ecolibris
- lydia millet
- john o'brien
- jorge luis borges
- wiki
- brooklyn
- john ashbery
- death of print
- russia
- william faulkner
- seven last words of christ
- ralph ellison
- mark strand
- samuel beckett
- russell edson
- susan sontag
- community bookstore
- heights books
- terezia mora
- glyn maxwell
random longer posts/reviews
Recent Comments
One of the reasons I publish online!
– L. Lee Lowe
on “Would He Do it Again?”
Last year Derrick Brown did living room readings. I don’t think anyone there had ever read his poetry; I had barely been introduced a few days before. http://vimeo.com/6013960
Compared to any staged, stacked or emceed poetry reading, well, it was kind of like learning you hadn’t ever had good sex.
Granted, he’s a more engaging poet than many, and he reads poems that should be read aloud, like they should sound. I still think that a lot of the intimacy would have been lost in any a more austere setting.
As a listener, it had a profound and searing impact; if I could speak for the non-poetry-reading kind, I’d say they could not help but connect with this living poetry that was funny and sad and sweet and took you somewhere.
– Emily
on “Would He Do it Again?”
Awesome! I always loved Sontag’s ‘Notes On Camp’. Lucid and concise.
http://e6n1.blogspot.com/
– Eeleen Lee
on “Not an Intellectual, but a Writer, a Reader, and a Dreamer”