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Salon.com October 23, 2001 Jeffrey MacIntyre |
Don DeLillo America's premier novelist of ideas has long anticipated a world in which spectacle and terror would achieve totemic significance in our everyday lives... |
Salon.com August 11, 2000 Laura Miller |
The death of the Red-Hot Center From literary giants tapping out the Great American novel through multiculturalism, Kmart realism and the Brat Pack to Oprah and your book club: A short history of fiction after 1960. |
Salon.com August 16, 2001 Laura Miller |
Sentenced to death Is a snooty "sentence cult" sending the Great American Novel to hell in a pretentious purple handbasket? |
Salon.com July 24, 2002 Heather Caldwell |
Pecked Dale Peck's scathing review of Rick Moody and a dozen other writers of "postmodern drivel" has the literary world buzzing about what makes for good -- and bad -- criticism. |
Salon.com April 3, 2002 Helen Macleod |
Mirror, mirror Alas, now even the great Ian McEwan has succumbed to the dreary trend of writers writing novels about writers writing novels... |
Chemistry World September 2008 Philip Ball |
Column: The crucible We are conditioned to look at anything scientific as though we were back at school anticipating an exam, even if we find it between the covers of a novel. In my novel The Sun and Moon Corrupted, I include equations and quotes from Einstein's 1905 paper on special relativity |
Salon.com September 5, 2001 M.J. Rose |
Your ad here Dismayed authors respond to the news that a fancy jeweler paid a noted novelist to put its products front and center in her new book... |
Information Today October 8, 2009 |
EBSCO Expands Coverage With New Literary Reference Center Plus The database expands upon EBSCO's Literary Reference Center and provides additional content including more than 1,100 reference books and more than 125 literary periodicals. |
Salon.com May 28, 2002 Tom Bissell |
I'd prefer not to My list includes Toni Morrison, Henry James, Faulkner and Beckett. Why are there some great writers we just cannot read? |
Salon.com October 10, 2000 Laura Miller |
"Ghostwritten" by David Mitchell The latest, much-hyped attempt at a wild, supercharged fictional ride proves that minimalism may finally be dead, but true eccentric geniuses are few and far between... |
Salon.com April 24, 2001 Charles Taylor |
Show and tell Moviegoers and readers ought to learn to love the book and the film... |
Wired January 18, 2008 Clive Thompson |
Clive Thompson on Why Sci-Fi Is the Last Bastion of Philosophical Writing If you want to read books that tackle profound philosophical questions, then the best -- and perhaps only -- place to turn these days is science fiction. |
Salon.com May 26, 2000 Andrew Roe |
Martin Amis The man who has been called "the best American writer England has ever produced" and "the Mick Jagger of literature" once again finds himself the subject of speculation and scrutiny... |
Salon.com Graham Joyce |
Working-class monster Relatives say Martin Amis' new memoir exploits his murdered cousin, and they're right -- but not in the way they think. |
Salon.com February 27, 2002 Dorman Shindler |
The outsider Dan Simmons, whose novels range from science fiction to thrillers, talks about the feebleness of today's "serious" fiction and what we can all learn from Tom Wolfe... |
Salon.com October 16, 2000 David Bowman |
The book of Jane Jane Hamilton, author of "The Book of Ruth," talks about her new novel, Civil War reenactors and how e-mail has facilitated Midwestern adultery... |