-
Brand New
Back in the Archives…
-
Taggies
- America
- apocalypse
- apocalypse fiction
- art
- awkward
- book review
- books
- boredom
- change
- childhood
- children
- classic literature
- classics
- coming of age
- contemporary
- contemporary fiction
- contemporary poetry
- death
- debut
- emotional weight
- fantasy
- female perspective
- feminism
- fiction
- fragments
- frames
- funny
- gender
- global warming
- growing up
- guilt
- historical fiction
- history
- inventor
- iraq war
- knowledge
- language
- lens
- loneliness
- lonely
- loss
- love
- memory
- nature
- new york city
- nihilism
- novel
- pain
- perspective
- philosophy
- poetry
- postmodernism
- power
- power dynamics
- prose poetry
- readers
- reading
- reading process
- reality
- religion
- retrospective
- second person
- short stories
- stream of consciousness
- supernatural
- translation
- travel
- urban space
- violence
- war
- women
- women's issues
- writers
- writing
- writing process
Tag Archives: fragments
You and Three Others are Approaching a Lake
You and Three Others are Approaching a Lake is a collection of poetry by Anna Moschovakis, © Coffee House Press 2011
Posted in Book Review
Tagged anna moschovakis, argument, book review, cantos, coffee house press, contemporary poetry, death, emmanuel levinas, essay, fragments, poetry, power, process, reading process, reality, scientology, thesis, violence, wittgenstein
Leave a comment
The Fifty Year Sword
The Fifty Year Sword is a novel or a graphic novel or a prose poem. It is fiction. It is written by Mark Z. Danielewski, © Pantheon Books 2012
Posted in Book Review
Tagged book review, contemporary fiction, contemporary poetry, East Texas, epic poem, epic poety, Ergodic literature, fiction, fragments, frames, ghost story, ghosts, graphic novel, imagery, loneliness, novel, poetry, postmodernism, prose poem, prose poetry, supernatural, visual poetry, voice
Leave a comment
Spurious
Spurious is a novel by Lars Iyer, © Melville House 2011
Posted in Book Review
Tagged academics, apocalypse, beckett, blanchot, book review, contemporary fiction, fiction, fragments, funny, kafka, knowledge, nihilism, novel, philosophy, postmodernism, questions
2 Comments