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Showing 3539 Columns
October 10th, 2022
I’ve never been the biggest fan of the “spooky season.” As someone who’s more of a wuss than anything else, I can’t really stomach much in the way of horror, thrills, or general spooky content. Five years ago I actually tried to read some horror books and let’s just say it was a less-than-successful venture.
Read Column →October 7th, 2022
If you’ve set foot in a bookstore in the last few years, you’ll have noticed the signs/labels saying: “TikTok Made Me Buy it.” No? Here’s an example from an online retailer — this is the kind of metadata some publishers are adding on UK Amazon. Mentioning TikTok in the book’s title helps authors appear in TikTok-related searches and gives their books a sense of social validation:
Read Column →October 6th, 2022
Normally, limited editions are handled through specialty publishers. These publishers often approach authors directly about particular titles. The size of the print run depends on the publisher’s estimation of the title's sales potential and the popularity of the author in question. But as with everything else in publishing, a lot more authors are now going their own way.
Read Column →October 5th, 2022
Urban Legend isn’t exactly in the pantheon of horror movies that embody the late 90s. It wasn’t as self-aware as Scream, wasn’t as intense as Final Destination, and it didn’t fly under the radar as hard as The Faculty. But the one thing Urban Legend does better than the rest: It screams, bleeds, and oozes 1998.
Read Column →October 3rd, 2022
SPOILERS AHEAD The 2022 film My Best Friend’s Exorcism, adapted from the 2016 novel of the same name by Grady Hendrix, enters the much-bloated cinematic lexicon of demonic possession movies, but with much more humor and far less religious oppressiveness. (The subgenre’s progenitor The Exorcist is, first and foremost, a Catholic propaganda film that spawned countless imitators, all rife with the same black and white, good versus evil morality).
Read Column →September 29th, 2022
I still remember the rush of possibility, years ago, when I realized I’d soon be able to read literature in English — I suddenly had so many books within my reach. Much later, when I set out to read more translated books, I felt the same exact emotion: a feeling of abundance, the joy of choice, of plenty, of access.
Read Column →September 27th, 2022
In July and August, I wanted to read a group nonfiction books that had found their way to my home and share my thoughts about them on LitReactor. Which I did. After I finished those books I wanted to read some of the fiction that had come my way, which I also did, and with LitReactor’s blessing I get to tell you about these books today. I plan to move onto poetry next and I look forward to telling you about those as well. Did you hear that LitReactor? Word.
Read Column →September 26th, 2022
Truman Capote was born September 30, 1924, in New Orleans, Louisiana. His career as a writer was seemingly a thing of fate, as he infamously taught himself to read and write at a young age. He began writing short stories before moving into novels, plays, and screenplays. The last novel he wrote was arguably his most famous and didn’t originally publish as a book.
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