By Rick Klaw
Published: 11/4/2009
Types: The Arts, Literature
World Fantasy Award winner Jeff VanderMeer, in the anthology New Weird, defined the 21st century’s first major literary movement. “New Weird is a type of urban … fiction that subverts the romanticized ideas about place found in traditional fantasy, largely by choosing … complex real-world mode...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 1/6/2010
Types: Cover Story, Second Story
Early in the aughts, a new creative force emerged. Worldwide political events, crystallized by the 1999 Seattle WTO protests and the terrorist attacks of 9/11, energized a self-aware readership that embraced New Weird, the 21st century’s first major new literary movement. Books such as China Miévill...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 12/16/2009
Types: The Arts, Literature
Curious about Philip K. Dick but not sure where to start? Dick produced arguably eight masterpieces: The Man in The High Castle (1962), Martian Time-Slip (1964), The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1965), Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968), Ubik (1969), Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said ...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 12/16/2009
Types: Cover Story, Second Story
Legendary sci-fi author Philip K. Dick enjoyed perhaps his most fertile creative period in the late ’50s and early ’60s, most of which he spent in Point Reyes, California, with his third wife, Anne. During this period, PKD penned 17 novels, including several of his most celebrated works: The Man in ...[MORE]
Published: 11/25/2009
Types: The Arts, Literature
At age 14, writer and illustrator David Small’s neck was sewn up “like a bloody boot,” his voice temporarily gone after surgeries to remove a cancerous growth that resulted from specious radiology treatments. His father had been his physician. His mother, distant and difficult. Small’s work Stitche...[MORE]
Published: 11/4/2009
Types: The Arts, Literature
Head in his hands, whiskey at the ready, John Finch has a problem. He’s a local employed by an occupying force, tasked with solving a double homicide — one of his, one of theirs. His own regard him as a traitor. The others, expendable. The more he discovers, the closer he gets to the end of the line...[MORE]
Published: 10/28/2009
Types: The Arts, Literature
Imagine a first novel with a nerdy gordito Dominican-born protagonist who lives in New Jersey and is steeped in the geek speak of genre fiction and untranslated Spanish. A fan boy who dreams of becoming a latterday J.R.R. Tolkien and may wind up a 30-year-old virgin (un pecado mortal si eres dominic...[MORE]
Published: 10/21/2009
Types: The Arts
Ethan Canin burst onto the literary scene in 1988 with Emperor of the Air, a short-fiction collection that he wrote while attending Harvard Medical School. The late Walker Percy hailed the work as “dazzling, at times breathtaking, at other times heartbreaking.” For a while, Canin divided ...[MORE]
Published: 10/21/2009
Types: Cover Story, Second Story
Though she dubbed him Shrub and persistently ridiculed him as “just another upper-class white boy trying to prove he’s tough,” Molly Ivins and George W. Bush grew up in the same ’hood. River Oaks was Houston’s toniest address, and their families mingled with other members of the petroleum plutocracy...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 7/29/2009
Types: The Arts, Literature, Books
During the sleazy paperback era of the 1950s, femme fatales dominated book covers. Creator of more than 600 covers, Robert A. Maguire mastered the form and crafted images throughout the decade and into the 1980s. Pop-culture historian Jim Silke surveys this prolific painter’s career in the retrospec...[MORE]
By Jess Harvell
Published: 7/29/2009
Types: The Arts, Literature, Books
The “literary” graphic novel has been both a boon and a bane to comics as an art form, given that so much of what’s been produced under the banner rarely works as comics. A comic’s narrative pleasures, when the form is really cooking, are based on visual invention as much as traditional literary mer...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 7/1/2009
Types: The Arts, Literature, Books
“[The Hap and Leonard stories] are crazy sort of folk tales mixed with reality, but it’s always the social and cultural issues and the two characters that drive the series.” — Joe R. Lansdale Joe R. Lansdale, previously best known as a pivotal figure in the blood and guts infused ’80s splatte...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 5/13/2009
Types: The Arts
Humbug will be a crusading magazine. We will tackle important important national issues such as Should the Mayflower Replica be Allowed to Land in the U.S., and Fluoridation — the Red Conspiracy. Humbug will be a responsible magazine. We won’t write for morons. We won’t do anything just to ge...[MORE]
By Sarah Fisch
Published: 4/8/2009
Types: The Arts
Remember “books”? Those flippy rectangular things you used to spend a lot of time reading, back before the internet? Often associated with “school.” I largely lived through them, once, but now I read far fewer than I used to, particularly in the genre of the contemporary novel. Apparently the same...[MORE]
By John DeFore
Published: 3/18/2009
Types: The Arts
Please forgive the headline’s allusion to the year’s hippest TV show, but our subjects this month demand it, springing as they do from the pages of America’s seminal satirical series, MAD Magazine. Both books (published by Fantagraphics) capture sides of artists that went unexposed under the auspice...[MORE]
Published: 3/4/2009
Types: The Arts
The children’s education series Sesame Street remains a singular program in television history. On the air since November 1969, it maintains the prestige of being the first, and possibly only, show for pre-schoolers that is as educational as it is entertaining. Former Baltimore resident and Jewis...[MORE]
By B.V. Olguín
Published: 3/4/2009
Types: The Arts
In “Hedge Ghosts,” the opening poem of her first full collection, Elijah’s Farm (Pecan Grove Press, 2008), Tennessee transplant Rachel Jennings shares a familiar familial yearning: “Like anyone I wanted / elders and epic heroes / and not such ghosts as these ... ” These family ghosts, she rev...[MORE]
By D.X. Ferris
Published: 2/25/2009
Types: The Arts
Brad Warner has practiced Zen for more than 20 years. He’s become an internationally noted teacher of the spiritual discipline, but it hasn’t eliminated his problems. Staring down a divorce and pondering an affair, the punk-bassist-turned-Zen-teacher had the idea for his new book, Zen Wrapped in ...[MORE]
By John DeFore
Published: 2/11/2009
Types: Cover Story, Section Cover
A handful of books about the work and life of superhero legend Jack Kirby have been released in recent years, but few hold as much interest to me as a new tome about an artist working in his shadow. The long overdue Daniel Johnston (Rizzoli) will be an eye-opener to anyone who only knows the Texan’s...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 2/4/2009
Types: The Arts
On October 2, 1959, Rod Serling introduced his seminal anthology TV series The Twilight Zone to an unsuspecting viewing public. Unlike the plethora of similar shows conceived in that era (Tales of Tomorrow, One Step Beyond, and several others), Serling’s blend of quality production and social awaren...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 1/28/2009
Types: The Arts
Eating and reading often go well together. An entertaining book and a good meal make for a thoroughly enjoyable experience. Unless the book happens to be Charlie Huston's gruesome thriller The Mystic Arts of Erasing All Signs of Death. When his roommate tires of his freeloading, Webster “Web” Fil...[MORE]
By John DeFore
Published: 1/14/2009
Types: The Arts
For a cartoonist whose first big exposure to U.S. audiences was as well received as Epileptic, it’s a bit of a surprise to see the second English-language graphic novel by Frenchman David B. (born David Beauchard), Nocturnal Conspiracies, coming from the publisher NBM (nbmpub.com). The company has n...[MORE]
Published: 1/7/2009
Types: The Arts
With Axl Rose finally delivering his long awaited Chinese Democracy album to the public in November, interest in Guns N’ Roses is at its highest level in more than a decade. Author Stephen Davis, who gave us the definitive Led Zeppelin biography in Hammer of the Gods, now opportunistically deliv...[MORE]
By Rick Klaw
Published: 1/7/2009
Types: The Arts
Chris Roberson wisely dedicated his 14th novel to Michael Moorcock, Alan Moore, and Kim Newman, three authors who pioneered the difficult to execute non-linear, historical, time-travel adventure. Following in their perennially successful footsteps, Roberson’s End of the Century recounts three u...[MORE]
By Violet Glaze
Published: 12/3/2008
Types: The Arts
What’s wrong with Bill Clinton? How could a successful, popular, shrewd, and intelligent president allow himself to be dragged into a sex scandal so notorious it would forever overshadow all the good his administration had accomplished in his double-term tenure? That’s the question that nags at m...[MORE]
Published: 11/26/2008
Types: The Arts
Albert Camus was 46 on January 4, 1960, when the flashy open convertible that his publisher, Michel Gallimard, was driving smashed into a tree, killing them both. Camus’ afterlife is now longer than his brief but luminous existence. It has included the posthumous publication of two unfinished novels...[MORE]