Lit Oblivion: The Cruel Songs Of Comte De Lautréamont’s Les Chants De Maldoror Comte De Lautréamont’s Les Chants De Maldoror When you’re in love with a beautiful French woman—a literary agent at a big New York City agency with a master’s (or whatever [...] Ian Wolff \ Jan 01, 2015 Read More From a 1927 edition illustrated by Frans De Geetere.
For The Love Of Books: Authors Get In Your Face For Indies First Authors Get In Your Face For Indies First Imagine my delight when I moved to Albuquerque from the Big Apple, capital of literature and all things bookish, to find an erudite [...] Ian Wolff \ Nov 27, 2014 Read More Sherman Alexie hopes you’ll HEAD to your local independent bookstore this Saturday.
Free Verse: Internationally Renowned Poet Naomi Shihab Nye Reads At The Kimo The Renaissance had its wandering minstrels; we have Naomi Shihab Nye, and on Friday, Nov. 14, from 7:30 to 9pm, the internationally renowned [...] Ian Wolff \ Nov 13, 2014 Read More Naomi Shihab Nye wanders to town this weekend. (Ha Lam)
Stage Whispers: A Trio Of New Performances Bring The Funny And The Wise In A Biblical Sense The Vortex Theatre (2004½ Central SE) brings us an irreverent and madcap look at material usually reserved for the doldrums of Sunday School. [...] Ian Wolff \ May 29, 2014 Read More Actors Neil Faulconbridge, Benjamin Liberman and Harry Zimmerman have a word or two …
Lit Oblivion: The Gods Are Crazy In Amos Tutuola’s The Palm-Wine Drinkard What kind of novel would the Brothers Grimm and William Burroughs conspire to write if they took ayahuasca—the South American hallucinogenic jungle brew [...] Ian Wolff \ May 22, 2014 Read More
Lit Oblivion: The Mind-Bending Imagination Of Felisberto Hernández’ Lands Of Memory Felisberto Hernández is one of the rare writers who, through the sheer strength of their imagination, can rewire your brain and melt your [...] Ian Wolff \ Apr 24, 2014 Read More