Ishmael Reed Gets the Last Laugh
America’s most fearless satirist has seen his wildest fictions become reality.
America’s most fearless satirist has seen his wildest fictions become reality.
Julian Lucas New Yorker Jul 2021 30min Permalink
A profile of Pulitzer Prize- and Oscar-winning author Larry McMurtry.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Jun 2016 30min Permalink
Two friends reside in the home of a deceased writer.
Louisa Barnes Pithead Chapel Aug 2017 10min Permalink
The author of The Junction Boys can’t tell you how many times he’s been arrested.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine Jul 2015 20min Permalink
A correspondent is thrown into an unexpected battle.
"But war is a spirit. War provides for those that it loves. It provides sometimes death and sometimes a singular and incredible safety. There were few ways in which it was possible to preserve Perkins. One way was by means of a steam-boiler. Perkins espied near him an old, rusty steam-boiler lying in the bushes. War only knows how it was there, but there it was, a temple shining resplendent with safety. With a moan of haste, Perkins flung himself through that hole which expressed the absence of the steam-pipe."
Stephen Crane Jan 1899 Permalink
On the writers, poets and beats in a reclusive California town, where residents repeatedly tear down highway signs indicating its location.
Kevin Opstedal Jack Magazine Nov 2001 25min Permalink
A profile of Maurice Sendak.
Cynthia Zarin New Yorker Apr 2006 20min Permalink
Fact-checking David Sedaris.
Alex Heard The New Republic Mar 2007 15min Permalink
A survey of the 20th century’s greatest horror writer’s afterlife of influence.
Matthew Baldwin The Morning News Mar 2012 10min Permalink
Exploring the relationship between authors and their parents.
It mattered to her that she could have, or might have, been a writer, and perhaps it mattered to me more than I fully understood. She watched my books appear with considerable interest, and wrote me an oddly formal letter about the style of each one, but she was, I knew, also uneasy about my novels. She found them too slow and sad and oddly personal. She was careful not to say too much about this, except once when she felt that I had described her and things which had happened to her too obviously and too openly. That time she said that she might indeed soon write her own book. She made a book sound like a weapon.
Colm Tóibín The Guardian Feb 2012 15min Permalink
How Timothy Patrick Barrus, a white writer of gay erotica, reinvented himself a (wildly successful) Native American memoirist.
Matthew Fleischer LA Weekly Jan 2006 35min Permalink
A profile of the writer.
Sam Anderson New York Times Magazine Oct 2011 10min Permalink
On the tangled early careers of Jonathan Franzen, David Foster Wallace, Mary Karr and Jeffrey Eugenides.
Evan Hughes New York Oct 2011 15min Permalink