What Was Haunting Me Was Not Myself: A Conversation with Morgan Parker
Tiffany Troy interviews poet Morgan Parker about her debut book of essays, “You Get What You Pay For.”
Tiffany Troy interviews poet Morgan Parker about her debut book of essays, “You Get What You Pay For.”
Three-quarter Moon (1989), stoneware, 17 × 21 1/2 inches, photo: Nicholas Knight. Courtesy The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum © Family of Toshiko Takaezu; Moon (1980s), stoneware, 13 × 13 1/2 inches © Family of Toshiko Takaezu
Justin Wigard reviews Stephen Graham Jones’s “The Angel of Indian Lake.”
Kate Wolf and Medaya Ocher are joined by writer and publisher Danielle Dutton, author of “Prairie, Dresses, Art, Other” as well as “Margaret the...
Dylan Adamson positions the discourses around Francis Ford Coppola’s “Megalopolis” within the director’s larger body of work.
Prof. Saree Makdisi diagnoses how the university, the police, and the media have failed our students protesting on behalf of Gazan lives.
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Kate Wolf and Medaya Ocher are joined by writer and publisher Danielle Dutton, author of “Prairie, Dresses, Art, Other” as well as “Margaret the...
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In this special episode, hosts Medaya Ocher, Kate Wolf, and Eric Newman discuss the case for and against giving up—on life, vices, dreams, creative...
Kristen Malone Poli examines the true hunger at the heart of the divorce plot.
In an excerpt from LARB Quarterly no. 41, “Truth,” Sam Sax presents lore so uncanny, it might as well be real.
David Lewis reviews the new anthology “Dark Soil: Fictions and Mythographies,” edited by Angie Sijun Lou.
Lucy Hornby discusses two recent biographies about former Chinese leaders Zhou Enlai and Hua Guofeng.
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A. J. Urquidi asks, “Who’s punk? What’s the score?” to a bunch of rad nerds at Cal State Fullerton’s PunkCon 3.
Brandon Sward wades through spectral sports audio in search of that yummy-yum at Paul Pfeiffer’s retrospective at MOCA’s Geffen Contemporary.
Brittany Menjivar forgoes turkey legs and opts instead for a taste of pulled pork and momento mori at the Renaissance Faire.
Copydesk chief A. J. Urquidi ponders urban doom loops, world peace, and sacred riffage at the Helmet and Cro-Mags show in Los Angeles.
Kate Wolf and Medaya Ocher are joined by writer and publisher Danielle Dutton, author of “Prairie, Dresses, Art, Other” as well as “Margaret the...
In this special episode, hosts Medaya Ocher, Kate Wolf, and Eric Newman discuss the case for and against giving up—on life, vices, dreams, creative...
Scholar and writer Anna Shechtman joins Medaya Ocher to discuss her book “The Riddles of the Sphinx: Inheriting the Feminist History of the Crossword...
Scholar Randol Contreras joins Kate Wolf and Eric Newman to discuss his new book “The Marvelous Ones: Drugs, Gang Violence, and Resistance in East...