The Paranoid Style: J. Hoberman’s “Army of Phantoms”
The most detailed year-by-year look at Hollywood during the first decade of the Cold War ever published.
The most detailed year-by-year look at Hollywood during the first decade of the Cold War ever published.
Jesse Ball, publishing dystopia, and the triumph of marketing.
The book is shot through with this kind of awareness and sensitivity, and examples of healing presence.
When Lappé speaks, we listen.
An introspective departure from Shafak's fiction, Black Milk takes on the challenges women writers face in reconciling independence with motherhood.
An instructional manual on resisting oligarchic oppression, and a brief for the value of staying in shape to look your best in spandex.
In the best SF, the extrapolated dimension is like an elaborately constructed aircraft; the metaphoric is its shadow on the ground.
A folk tale that leads in delightfully unpredictable directions.
That the essayist’s persona is as constructed as any other author’s ought to be obvious. But until Carl Klaus, few seemed aware of it.
Serres reveals that pollution is not merely a by-product of industrialization, but a fundamental human, indeed animal, activity.
Cain is mainstream now, but no less shocking.
He pulled out a cherished hardcover edition of The Dice Man... This book, he said, is hilarious. More than that, it can change your life. Read it.
"We will all be destroyed whether we like it or not. I say let's like it."