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Showing 3539 Columns
April 14th, 2020
If you are not familiar with the wonderful world of #bookstagram on the Instagram app, let me get you caught up as quickly as I can. There are readers all over the world who have dedicated their Instagram account to posting photos of the books in their collection. Much of what you’ll find is bright, sunny book worms who love contemporary literature, mainstream or traditionally published books and Young Adult fiction.
Read Column →April 13th, 2020
I’m not surprising the world by saying, “The book is better.” I know this is not mind-blowing news, but in this case it’s news you need to hear. Not because the series of comics by Joe Hill is better, but because the comics are MUCH better. And because so many plot points carried over in the show, you really can’t watch the show first, then read the book. If you watch the show, you’ll ruin the much better experience of the book.
Read Column →April 10th, 2020
Original header images via Sofia Garza & Andrea Piacquadio Before Rian Johnson became a symbol of the last decade’s nerd cultural proxy war, he made a great neo-noir-YA film called Brick. Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a loner who still knows all the highs school cliques and uses them to help find his lost girlfriend. I relate to the character in how I interact and intersect with all the macro and micro literary scenes.
Read Column →April 9th, 2020
image courtesy Wikimedia Commons This month, Shakespeare turns 456 years old (the exact date of his birth is unknown). Anytime I hear the Bard's name, I almost always think of this English professor I had in college whose speciality was Shakespeare, and who taught a class devoted exclusively to the study of his plays.
Read Column →April 7th, 2020
Original image via Aa Dil There are a lot of ways to get cross-genre stories wrong. If you are well read in multiple genres, you are in good shape. Knowing one genre well and another just a little might work, too, but ultimately knowledge reigns supreme. You need a firm grasp on the rules of each genre before you break them and mix them together in your literary blender. If you are not familiar with the various genres you’re blending, you are playing a risky game.
Read Column →April 6th, 2020
Header image by Brad Neathery via Unsplash Poetry and country music have something in common. When you go into the record store, you can get away with, “I like everything but country. Fuck that shit.” When you go into the bookstore, you can get away with, “I like everything but poetry. Fuck that shit.”
Read Column →April 3rd, 2020
Image via mayaangelou.com Marguerite Johnson is not a name we all know and recognize. The woman behind the legacy of a more familiar name, she was so much more than a poet and writer. She lived a life of passion and love. She spread lessons learned through survival and kindness. She became a matriarch of inspiration and hope.
Read Column →April 2nd, 2020
Hello, and welcome back to Publishing 201—an occasional column in which I'll answer your questions about writing and publishing, so long as they haven't been asked and answered a million times already. There is plenty of 101-level advice out there, and thousands of writers who can repeat it, but very little has been written for writers further along in their careers or aesthetic development. If you have a 201-level question you'd like me to answer, reach out!
Read Column →April 2nd, 2020
Remember the days that you spent as a kid holed up in your room, reading the hours away? You were probably ignorant of the outside world’s goings-on, since you were too busy traveling to colorful, impossibly creative universes beyond the limits of reality — all via great children’s books.
Read Column →April 1st, 2020
Usually as March rolls into April, you’re a little more careful about anything you may see or hear, especially on the internet, for fear of falling prey to a practical joke. As harmless as pranks played on friends and families can be, they can prove irksome, as can the never-ending effort to one-up their perpetrators.
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