Writer and journalist Jennifer Egan is interviewed at Mother Jones.
Poet Justin Bigos is the reader's choice of Ploughshares. I am not at all surprised, but thoroughly pleased to see this. Nice to see my Warren Wilson pal make good.
The June issue of Words Without Borders looks at international queer writing.
The list of 2010 grant recipients from the PEN Translation Fund offers an exciting peek at what's to come.
Rock critic Jim DeRogatis, who I love from "Sound Opinions," takes up shop at his new music blog. Bookmark it immediately.
Meanwhile, The Paris Review has also launched into the blogosphere. Dare we suspect a "Art of the Blog" interview series in the landmark magazine?
What are the journalistic standards--if any--for photography and images?
What does it mean to break up with a book?
Michael Lewis changes his mind.
The not-so-secret life of Samantha Bee.
Junot Díaz -- fiction editor of The Boston Review and Pultizer-winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (which I just finished and have much to write about) -- has been elected to the Pulitzer Prize Board.
"Sarah Palin's grab for feminism."
Ian Thomson wins the Ondaatje prize for The Dead Yard. Phrases like "corrupted Eden" and "underbelly of Jamaica" emerge.
Carlos Ruiz Zafón picks the top ten gothic novels of the twentieth century. I love that Angela Carter is on there -- one of my favorite writers -- for her collected short stories (decidedly not meeting the 'novel' criterion of the list). Also, while I haven't read the book yet, #10 on the list was made into a brilliant Swedish vampire movie that haunts me to this day.
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