Reviews
Showing 597 Reviews
Showing 597 Reviews
December 6th, 2011
I tend to be the type of reader who prefers the “minor” works of major authors. Stephen King, Neil Gaiman, Joyce Carroll Oates, etc. I’m a far bigger fan of their short stuff as opposed to their novelistic endeavors. (Okay, I’m bullshitting a little when it comes to King. What can I say, I’m a crackhead for the guy’s books.) I don’t know why. All three of the aforementioned novelists have written more than a few classics, but for one reason or another I gravitate towards the stuff that you can chow down in one sitting.
Read Review →November 30th, 2011
Dubbed "The Swedish Stephen King" by lazy writers everywhere, John Ajvide Lindqvist is a bit of an oddity. Prior to becoming a wordmonger, he spent time in the trenches as both a conjurer (that's "magician" to you A-merkins) and a stand-up comic. Thankless professions, both. Sick of having his occupation marginalized, he decided to try his hand at something infinitely more respectable—writing scary stories.
Read Review →November 22nd, 2011
You might find this hard to believe, but The Angel Esmeralda is 75 year-old author Don Delillo's first ever collection of short stories. How can that be, you ask? According to THIS article, it's because he hasn't written very many of them. In fact, Scribner editor-in-chief Nan Graham says she's been mulling a Delillo collection for over ten years now, there's just never been enough material to warrant one.
Read Review →November 18th, 2011
I’ve been a fan Stephen King since I was in high school, and I’ve somehow managed to read every book he’s ever written. Being he's one of the most prolific authors ever, that’s no small feat. His latest tome is 11/22/63, an 849-page novel about time travel and the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Hooked already, aren’t you?
Read Review →November 11th, 2011
When it comes to the act of reading, I'd classify myself as a sipper. I prefer to savor the flavor of words, not toss them down my eye-gullet like some boorish medieval peasant. So knowing I had to read and review Murakami's mammoth 1Q84 in ten days was the literary equivalent of frat party peer pressure. It's like gulping down a fine wine while a group of rowdy knuckleheads cheer you on. Only, instead of demanding that you chug, they are chanting, "Iki! Iki!"
Read Review →November 9th, 2011
Reading Ready Player One is not a trial. Weighing in at a manageable 372 pages, Ernest Cline’s debut novel zips us right along through an entertaining story, and his affection for geek culture, the 1980s, and a good old fashioned adventure tale is readily apparent. However, Cline’s book ultimately disappoints. It’s not a bad effort, but Ready Player One is unsatisfying in a way that is much more of a letdown than out and out trash like The Da Vinci Code or a Zack Snyder film could ever be.
Read Review →November 7th, 2011
Back when there was still a sense that the internet was competing with print (i.e., in the days before print essentially became a paper supplement to websites), there were certain beliefs about web film critics. We were considered over enthusiastic, our style too colloquial, our reviews too long, our relationships with filmmakers (who identified with us as fans rather than academics) too chummy. Perhaps worst of all, we sought to elevate genre trash to the level of important art.
Read Review →November 3rd, 2011
Writing thrillers is a tough business.
Read Review →November 2nd, 2011
Richard L Brandt’s biography of Amazon.com and its founder, Jeff Bezos, will not win any prizes for literary excellence. One Click is a third-person biography that veers between failed but earnest attempts at rhetorical distance and gushing Toastmaster-esque entrepreneurial fanwank; it’s a “clip-job”, collated and collaged from journalistic coverage of the subject and other extant sources.
Read Review →October 25th, 2011
Rock and roll was born in the 1950s. It got downright sassy in the 60s, pounded its chest and roared in the 70s and went way over the top in the 80s, leaving everyone channeling their inner Peggy Lee and asking, “is that all there is?”
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