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Library Love: America’s Athenaeums

April 7th, 2014

Several months ago, I was wandering around Portsmouth, New Hampshire when I walked by a brick building with its doors swung open to visitors. Deciding to look inside, I discovered one of the most beautiful libraries I’d ever seen. The books on the shelves were bound in old leather, and covered topics from botany to nautical lore. Portraits lined the walls, and the smell of parchment permeated the air. Not a bad find for what started out as a Starbucks run. 

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Footnotes: The Weird, Horrific Birthplace of 'True Detective'

April 3rd, 2014

Marty Hart and Rust Cohle are the new poster boys for many things: obsession, nihilism, turning empty beer cans into little aluminum creeper men. If you look up, they're even poster boys for this column, surely the most significant accomplishment yet for these backwoods Louisiana cops. Among all other things, however, Marty Hart and Rust Cohle — as well as True Detective creator Nic Pizzolatto and the dark, twisted fantasy he created for HBO — are the new poster boys for the weird and the horrific.

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Tom Spanbauer: A Primer, and A Review Of His Latest Novel, 'I Loved You More'

April 2nd, 2014

I've been planning to write this for months, and I've done everything I could to put it off. The reason for that is because I am afraid to write it. No matter what I write, I'll never get across the thing about Tom Spanbauer's writing that touches me so deeply.  The sensation of reading his books is that, while you're reading them, it's like he's placed his hand on your chest, the warmth and pressure and intimacy of it reassuring you that you are alive, and you are not alone. 

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Five Great Literary Pranksters

April 1st, 2014

Poetry Association of America initiating controversial program Fly-Over Poetry Drones. Watch / listen for us over your house in April! —Joyce Carol Oates, via Twitter @JoyceCarolOates

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UPDATED WITH WINNER - LitReactor's Flash Fiction Smackdown: March Edition

March 31st, 2014

Flash fiction: A style of fictional literature marked by extreme brevity. Welcome to LitReactor's Flash Fiction Smackdown, a monthly bout of writing prowess. How It Works We give you inspiration in the form of a picture, poem, video, or similar. You write a flash fiction piece using the inspiration we gave you. Put your entry in the comments section. One winner will be picked and awarded a prize.

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Incest Is Best: A Look at One of Society's Greatest Taboos as Presented in Fiction

March 31st, 2014

Alright, sports fans. It's time to get ready! The return of the Game of Thrones series on HBO is nigh upon us. Season 4 is set to take flight (like a dragon - get it??) April 6, and based on the trailers (and the fourth book in Martin's series), it's set to be a good one. There will be battles fought, undead creatures slain, and plenty of mayhem. We'll see Tyrion, Joffrey, Sansa, Jon Snow, and...and...and... ...Oh, yeah. Cersei and Jaime Lannister, too.  Ugggghhhh...

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5 Good Comics That Leveled Up To Greatness

March 28th, 2014

The titles on this list all got the basics of great comics-making down with ease. They’re all well written and have stunning art. They also all have that perfect synergy between writing and art that makes for the best comics. They tell compelling stories and manage to engage and entertain in a scant 22 (or so) pages. But each of these books also have something else. Something unique that helps them level up and become unforgettable.

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Who Is The Winter Soldier?

March 28th, 2014

The next villain Captain America will be facing on the silver screen is so badass they named the movie after him. Even though he’s a relative newcomer and mostly unknown outside of comics, Marvel could not have picked a better second-movie antagonist. The mysterious Winter Soldier has everything we love in a bad guy—he’s a powerful killer cyborg with pale skin, dead hollow eyes and a black facemask.

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How to Judge Books (Real or Imaginary) by Their Covers

March 27th, 2014

Everyone knows you’re not supposed to judge a book by its cover… What this column presupposes (to borrow a favorite movie line – itself associated with a pretty rad book cover) is, maybe you should?

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Culling the Classics: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

March 26th, 2014

I must still be high on that St. Patrick's Day excitement, because I couldn't think of anything I'd rather read this month than James Joyce. However, one does not simply read Ulysses or Finnegans Wake, so I decided to start with something that you (and I) would be more likely to pick up and finish.

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