The Questionnaire: Amy Ephron
nbsp; Do you succumb to nostalgia? No. How do you feel about your Wikipedia entry? Wish I was an admin. Lunch with any three people who ever...
nbsp; Do you succumb to nostalgia? No. How do you feel about your Wikipedia entry? Wish I was an admin. Lunch with any three people who ever...
How do you get up in the morning? I'm woken when the rock doves I tie to my wrists at night try to fly away, usually around dawn (at least by noon)...
How do you get up in the morning? Coffee, usually. Do you succumb to nostalgia? Yes, though mostly in the form of John Banville-ish ...
Is your study neat, or, like John Muir's, is your desk and floor covered in "lateral, medial, and terminal moraines"? My study, and my filing system...
How do you get up in the morning? As far as the "worldly" goes, I get up with a hot morning beverage in mind and letting the cats out in the yard...
The other thing to point out is that the Tea Party is not a working-class movement.
Your book contains what is to my mind the finest suite of acrostics ever written in English (RAINBOW).
What was fun for me was to use the trajectory of my own life, but to assign it to someone who was quite unlike myself.
A lot of filmmaking in America is nostalgia filmmaking, trying to recapture what you loved as a kid. I'm not a nostalgia freak.
I was a contract player at Universal and I didn’t know whether I was good at it or not.
I think that science fiction is my realist fiction about life in southern California.
"Elitist" is used as an all-purpose insult by both the culturally reactionary and the culturally progressive.
Like his hero Hank Williams, Townes was a mean drunk, but with a selfless, compassionate streak.
Tom Lutz talks to Misha Glouberman and Sheila Heti about their co-authored, genreless book, 'The Chairs Are Where the People Go.'
Part philosophy, part self-help, part experiment in nonfiction, part a book-length interview.
Forget about writing. There’s a debate, a conflict, a dilemma, that everyone faces.