On Reza Aslan’s “Zealot”: A Symposium
Reza Aslan's "Zealot": A Symposium
Reza Aslan's "Zealot": A Symposium
Does any space remain for moral judgment?
What would George Orwell choose: ebooks or lattes?
The Los Angeles Review of Books marks the fifth anniversary of the death of Mahmoud Darwish, one of the great poets of Palestine, with "Canvas on the Wall,” originally published in 1969 when Darwish was 28 years old.
On John Fawcett's 2001 teen werewolf film 'Ginger Snaps'
Almost everything worth paying attention to these days, and just as much that’s worth ignoring, represents the collaboration between a human being and a computer.
It has not been easy for crime fiction to find a place in the great Canon of Literature Worth Everyone’s Time and Mental Capacity, but it doesn’t help that crime fiction has never entirely sorted out its own canon. If it did, Gil Brewer would definitely be on the list.
Why has Ross Thomas fallen out of favor?
Atlantic City, gambling, and murder.
On 'The Negro Speaks of Rivers' by Langston Hughes
On "Sleep No More," Punchdrunk theater company's reimagining of "Macbeth"
A remembrance of what he really stood for.
The art house theaters of Los Angeles
Guillermo del Toro’s foot fetish