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Online Edition: Fall 2004

Features

Postcard from Paris: Frank

Frank, the longest-running Anglophone literary magazine in Paris, is a journal of contemporary art, literature, and culture offering a vibrant mix of perspectives from the Americas, Europe, and Africa. It keeps afloat through the ingenuity of its publisher, a man who came to Paris with a dream.


Reviews

FICTION

Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell
Susanna Clarke

It all begins with a simple question—"Why was there no more magic done in England?"—and a fantastic and witty history explodes with a Big Bang.

Checkpoint
Nicholson Baker

The publication of Baker's latest novel generated as much controversy and official nervousness as might have been expected from a novel by a prominent author about two men discussing the potential assassination of George W. Bush.

Oblivion
David Foster Wallace

One of the great things about Oblivion, the new collection of stories from David Foster Wallace, is that it absolutely would not get a passing grade in your typical writing workshop.

Ilium
Dan Simmons

Dan Simmons's first foray into science fiction since his epic Hyperion saga, Ilium stretches across over four thousand years in an astounding display of writing and ideas, not only about the potential future, but the potential past.

The Anchor Book of New American Short Stories
edited by Ben Marcus

An excellent gathering of contemporary American short fiction guaranteed to wake the reader from whatever stupor they happen to be in.

GRAPHIC NOVELS

Transmetropolitan:
One More Time

Warren Ellis, Darick Robertson, Rodney Ramos, et al.

A comic about a gonzo journalist in a grim but not quite dystopian future, Transmetropolitan has managed to be unique in a field where uniqueness is more often aspired to than achieved.

Planetes
Makoto Yukimura

Set 70 years in the future, this manga series explores an Earth that is neither utopic or apocalyptic, but rather muddles through with short-term solutions to long-term problems—sans wacky aliens, giant robots, or beautiful android maids

MIXED GENRE

Haze
Mark Wallace

In this collection of essays and poems, Wallace presents an inquisitive view of organizational and individual elements of poetry and expression.

POETRY

The Unsubscriber
Bill Knott

By shtick, trick, or lick, Knott elicits illumination by shaking up our complacency in his newest full-length collection of poems.

Alaskaphrenia
Christine Hume

In her second book, Hume plumbs the cold depths of human consciousness, never letting her readers forget their mortality.

Dog Island and Other Florida Poems
Laurence Donovan

This posthumously published volume by a poet and printmaker offers a sustained meditation on an earthly paradise.

What Is This Thing Called Love?
Kim Addonizio

Despite all of the drugs, booze, and sex in Addonizio's fourth book of poems, the collection becomes a fascinating sort of love poem for the speaker's daughter.

War and Peace
edited by Leslie Scalapino

The second of Scalapino's anti-war anthologies attempts to turn toward the wreckage, taking as its impetus the living in war of Tolstoy's novel.

NONFICTION

I'll Be Your Mirror
The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews

Edited by Kenneth Goldsmith

Could Andy Warhol have been as superficial as he appeared? Both admirers and detractors of the controversial artist will find material to support their positions in this hefty collection of interviews.

The Bells in Their Silence
Travels Through Germany

Michael Gorra

Modeling his book after Goethe's Italian Travels, Gorra attempts to explore the deep contradictions of Germany, wondering if travel narrative is still possible after Buchenwald.

Emancipating Pragmatism
Michael Magee

Magee links the work of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Ralph W. Ellison, Frank O'Hara, and Amiri Baraka to the avowed classic pragmatists John Dewey and William James.

The Mommy Myth
Susan J. Douglas and Meredith W. Michaels

The Mommy Myth provides a powerful antidote to every "mom" who professes to want do to nothing more in life than tend to her brood.

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