AltWeeklies Wire

Love in a Time of Mutant STDnew

Harvey Award-winning graphic novelist Charles Burns spent more than a decade crafting Black Hole. It is a profoundly disturbing allegory of adolescence.
Charleston City Paper  |  Jason A. Zwiker  |  01-16-2008  |  Fiction

Are You One of 'Them'?new

The title of Nathan McCall's debut novel refers both to the black residents of one Atlanta inner-city ward and the young white "urban homesteaders" who are moving in, snapping up properties, and literally changing the neighborhood's complexion.
Willamette Week  |  Kevin Allman  |  01-16-2008  |  Fiction

Pulp Pornnew

Patrick Conlon and Michael Manning's long-awaited sequel to the sexy sci-fi comic Tranceptor.
Chicago Reader  |  Noah Berlatsky  |  01-15-2008  |  Fiction

Talk is Plentiful in 'Ohio River Dialogues'new

Anyone who's ever talked deep with a small group of friends and thought it might make for art should look into William Zink's experimental novel.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Bill O'Driscoll  |  01-14-2008  |  Fiction

'The Flowers': Leaves of Sassnew

A story "that didn't have nothing to do with people or places you've ever seen," the book also lifts its seasoned author to another place in the literary order.
The Texas Observer  |  Steven G. Kellman  |  01-14-2008  |  Fiction

Winter's Talenew

There's a section of The Architects Are Here that really got to me. Reading it gave me that feeling I love -- a thundering in my head that I don't notice until I've finished the passage and my brain calms down.
NOW Magazine  |  Susan B. Cole  |  01-11-2008  |  Fiction

John MacLachlan Gray's Victorian-era Thrillernew

Like his previous forays into the genre, there's a lot more going on than the pondering of pale corpses in floppy cravats.
The Georgia Straight  |  John Lekich  |  01-11-2008  |  Fiction

Geraldine Brooks' Thrilling Yarn of Biblical Scholarshipnew

Her historical fiction, inspired by a recent real-life discovery, makes a speculative journey with the embattled Haggadah all the way back to its imagined creation in medieval Spain.
INDY Week  |  Adam Sobsey  |  01-10-2008  |  Fiction

Satan's Choicenew

This colorful, well-crafted historical tale of a bad cop and the corrupt system he served to death shows that the U.S. has been executing innocent people for a long time.
NOW Magazine  |  Howard Goldenthal  |  01-04-2008  |  Fiction

Comic Proportionsnew

Reviews of Batman and the Outsiders No. 3 and New X-Men No. 45.
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Carlton Hargro  |  12-28-2007  |  Fiction

'Refresh, Refresh' Looks at the Impact of Warnew

Fiction in the key of fear and frustration.
Shepherd Express  |  Erin Kogler  |  12-28-2007  |  Fiction

'The Feasting Season' Offers a Wine Romancenew

The food novel is a sensuous, luscious read, one foodies and fiction aficionados will be glad they got their hands on before the inevitable movie is made (how about Diane Lane and Vincent Cassel?).
INDY Week  |  Sheryl Cornett  |  12-27-2007  |  Fiction

Nicola Barker Sets a Full Table in 'Darkmans'new

What Barker accomplishes is the sort of comprehensive and wide-ranging novel that towers over the single-note memoirs, genre pieces and pink-cover chick-lit books that so outnumber it.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Justin Bauer  |  12-26-2007  |  Fiction

Nersesian Builds on the Post-Apocalyptic Genrenew

He constructs an alternate timeline, with Watergate quashed and the counterculture exiled to a replica New York built in the Nevada desert. His plot is scrambled out of The Odyssey, but it's really only an easel for the cabinet of curiosities his replica city contains.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Justin Bauer  |  12-26-2007  |  Fiction

Jonathan Messinger's Cringe-Lit and Morenew

His style in the 15 stories that make up Hiding Out doesn't change much, but each story accomplishes a lingering pang that makes them all feel like individual showcases.
The Portland Mercury  |  Kevin Sampsell  |  12-20-2007  |  Fiction

Narrow Search

Category

Hot Topics

Narrow by Date

  • Last 7 Days
  • Last 30 Days
  • Select a Date Range