World Emergency: On the Fictions of Zac Smith and Mark Baumer
Two offbeat talents who capture the pulsing crux of living in our capitalist wasteland.
J. T. Price’s fiction has appeared in The New England Review, Post Road, Guernica, Fence, Joyland, The Brooklyn Rail, Juked, Electric Literature, and elsewhere; nonfiction, interviews, and reviews with the Los Angeles Review of Books, BOMB Magazine, The Scofield, and The Millions. He is repped by Jonathan Agin at the O’Connor Literary Agency. Visit him at www.jt-price.com.
Two offbeat talents who capture the pulsing crux of living in our capitalist wasteland.
A new essay by J. T. Price from the High/Low issue of the LARB Quarterly Journal, No. 29.
David Bowman’s posthumously published magnum opus is a sprawling roman à clef about midcentury America.
J. T. Price talks to Alex Gilvarry about his novel "Eastman Was Here" and Norman Mailer.
With "Made for Love," there can be no disputing that Alissa Nutting is funny as hell.
J. T. Price remembers Paddy Chayefsky and Sidney Lumet's landmark film.
Peter LaSalle follows the literal footsteps of Borges, Flaubert, Malcolm Lowry, and Nathanael West, though he has a way of veering off-course.
When the mega-hit TV show they starred in had aired its final episode, Andy Griffith and Don Knotts maintained their friendship.