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Friday, March 12, 2010

Literature For Real

Rob Nixon, The Chronicle Of Higher Education

Are we witnessing the beginnings of a palace revolution, as reality genres—literature's foot soldiers—start clamoring to have their creativity treated with the seriousness it deserves?

Scarred Bodies, Entwined Souls

Richard Eder, New York Times

Out of a mathematical conceit the Italian writer Paolo Giordano has drawn a mesmerizing portrait of a young man and woman whose injured natures draw them together over the years and inevitably pull them apart.

Why Poetry And Pop Are Not Such Strange Bedfellows

Graeme Thomson, The Guardian

What is it about Yeats that is so attractive to rock stars, and why does Auden have the crowd moshing at the Forum?

Chinese And Doughnuts: A California Mystery

Katie Robbins, The Atlantic

Given California's storied history of pairing unusual ingredients with winning results—from its namesake California roll to Wolfgang Puck's smoked salmon pizza to the Korean short rib taco—perhaps it should have come as no surprise several years ago when, on a trip to LA, I spotted a sign above a small hole-in-the-wall restaurant advertising Chinese food and donuts.

How To Cook Up A Food Celebrity

Frank Bruni, New York Times

If you’re Katie Lee, start with a dollop of fame (marriage to Billy Joel), parboil a couple of cookbooks, marinate on the morning shows and serve a spec TV pilot.

Standing Up Like A Man

Michelle Rabil, Salon

What kind of a woman uses a funnel to go to the bathroom? I do, and it changed my life.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

A Verse to Self: Joan Houlihan’s The Us

Jacob A. Bennett, Critical Flame

The choice of the poet to employ the objective personal pronoun — “us” — instead of the subjective — “we” — is the first of many (mis)appropriations that may sound funny to ears accustomed to standard English, but which signal a significant, deliberate shift away from contemporary idiom.

James Hynes’s ‘Next’: A Job Interview To End All Interviews

Janet Maslin, New York Times

In James Hynes’s new novel, a middle-aged man on a one-day trip to Austin for a job interview comes full to life at long last and puts an end to his long, long phase of arrested development.

Dewey Defeat Truman

Christopher Beam, Slate Magazine

Do newspapers ever correct a speaker's broken English?

One Cubic Foot

Edward O. Wilson, photograph by David Liittschwager, National Geographic Magazine

Guess how many creatures you'll find in a cube of soil or sea.

Making Mars the New Earth

Robert Kunzig, National Geographic Magazine

What would it take to green the red planet? For starters, a massive amount of global warming.

Starbucks’ Midlife Crisis

Greg Beato, Reason

The coffee giant can’t quite accept its own customers’ tastes.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Tacos In The Morning? That’s The Routine In Austin, Tex.

John T. Edge, New York Times

When it comes to breakfast tacos, which are stuffed with fillings like eggs and bacon, Austin, Tex., trumps all other American cities.

How The 'New Feminism' Went Wrong

Charlotte Raven, The Guardian

How has it come to this? Feminists blame the sexists, Martin Amis et al, which is easy but unfair. In reality, we can't blame anyone but ourselves.

By Heng-Cheong Leong

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