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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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May 16, 2009

Review of Before I Lose My Style

May 16, 2009/ Steve Donoghue

Steve Donoghue reviews the structurally bold gay novel "Before I Lose My Style".

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May 16, 2009/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, fiction, literary criticism, May 2009, Steve Donoghue
May 13, 2009

Review of The Great Perhaps

May 13, 2009/ Steve Donoghue

Steve Donoghue review "The Great Perhaps," "Joe Meno’s best book to date by several orders of magnitude."

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May 13, 2009/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, fiction, literary criticism, May 2009, Steve Donoghue
May 08, 2009

Review of Meriwether Lewis

May 08, 2009/ Steve Donoghue

Find out more about Danisi and Jackson's biography of Meriwether Lewis by reading Steve Donoghue's informing review: "but we know what kind of a book Danisi and Jackson have written: meaty, entertaining, and best of all, definitive."

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May 08, 2009/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
Book Review, history, May 2009, Steve Donoghue
May 06, 2009

Review of Into the Beautiful North

May 06, 2009/ Steve Donoghue

Into the Beautiful North, writes Steve Donoghue, is "a strong, sensitive, wonderful novel, one richly deserving of wide success."

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May 06, 2009/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
Book Review, May 2009, Steve Donoghue
April 30, 2009

May 2009 Issue

April 30, 2009/ Open Letters Monthly

Photo by Joe Sacks

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April 30, 2009/ Open Letters Monthly/
Monthly Cover
May 2009
April 30, 2009

Grovely! Grovely! Grovely! and all Grovely!

April 30, 2009/ Bryn Haworth

The late Roger Deakin celebrates his beloved trees one last time in Wildwood, and Bryn Haworth gladly finds himself within a dark forest.

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April 30, 2009/ Bryn Haworth/
Arts & Life
May 2009
April 30, 2009

The Crowing of Corncrakes

April 30, 2009/ Lianne Habinek

The Decemberists seem benign enough, but their songs are blood-dimmed with rape, drownings, and even cannibalism. The body count rises on their new release The Hazards of Love, but Lianne Habinek also discovers fresh wellsprings of feeling.

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April 30, 2009/ Lianne Habinek/
Arts & Life
May 2009
April 30, 2009

Doubling Up on a Pair of Losers

April 30, 2009/ Robert Latona

Jerry Siegel and Miguel Cervantes: each created an immortal literary character (Superman and Don Quixote, of course), but what else could they possibly have in common? Taking his cue from Gerard Jones’ Men of Tomorrow, Robert Latona says: more than you think.

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April 30, 2009/ Robert Latona/
Arts & Life
May 2009
April 30, 2009

Strange New Worlds

April 30, 2009/ Steve Donoghue

J.J. Abrams’ long-awaited Star Trek reboot has hit theaters, and Steve Donoghue looks into whether it carries on a proud legacy, or else overturns it.

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April 30, 2009/ Steve Donoghue/
Arts & Life
May 2009, Steve Donoghue
April 30, 2009

Rom Zom Com

April 30, 2009/ Deirdre Crimmins

Exiled to the basement, pelted with garbage, and unlucky in love: zombies have it rough in S.G. Browne’s new novel Breathers. Dierdre Crimmins lends a sympathetic ear (figuratively, of course).

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April 30, 2009/ Deirdre Crimmins/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, literary criticism, May 2009
April 30, 2009

Ten Questions for Sarah Ruden

April 30, 2009/ Steve Donoghue

Sarah Ruden, the latest and greatest translator of Vergil’s Aeneid, offers a funny and fascinating glimpse inside the classicist’s world in this Open Letters interview.

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April 30, 2009/ Steve Donoghue/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, May 2009, Poetry, Steve Donoghue
April 30, 2009

The Empire Strikes Back?

April 30, 2009/ Greg Waldmann

Edward Lucas, in The New Cold War, puts a modern face on the hoary geopolitical struggle between the Russian bear and the American eagle. Greg Waldmann sorts the players and evaluates the stakes.

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April 30, 2009/ Greg Waldmann/
Politics & History
May 2009
April 30, 2009

From Moving Day

April 30, 2009/ Maureen Thorson

new poetry from Maureen Thorson

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April 30, 2009/ Maureen Thorson/
Poetry
maureen thorson, May 2009, Poetry
April 30, 2009

Postal Worker? Poodle?

April 30, 2009/ John Cotter

Poet’s poet Lyn Hejinian has turned poet’s novelist in Lola, half of her new collection Saga/Circus. John Cotter circles its sagacity.

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April 30, 2009/ John Cotter/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
John Cotter, literary criticism, May 2009, Poetry
April 30, 2009

Joshua Redman Makes His Move

April 30, 2009/ John G. Rodwan, Jr.

Joshua Redman’s new album Compass makes some daring allusions to the all-time titans of jazz; John G. Rodwan, Jr. listens to hear how Redman borrows from those pastmasters and how he departs from them.

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April 30, 2009/ John G. Rodwan, Jr./
Arts & Life
arts and life, John G- Rodwan Jr, May 2009
April 30, 2009

Roots Into Entrails

April 30, 2009/ Karen Vanuska

A Nazi picaresque wouldn’t seem to be a likely read, but Karen Vanuska reviews a new reprint of Jakov Lind’s 1962 World War II novel Landscape in Concrete and finds its grim, absurd power undimmed by the years.

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April 30, 2009/ Karen Vanuska/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, Karen Vanuska, literary criticism, May 2009
April 30, 2009

Trouble Shooting: Video Games into Movies

April 30, 2009/ Phillip A. Lobo

You’d think any brand of movie that could produce Super Mario Bros. would have no advocates left, but you’d be wrong! Our gaming expert Phillip A. Lobo diagnoses the problem to date and charts a new path for video game movies.

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April 30, 2009/ Phillip A. Lobo/
Arts & Life
arts and life, May 2009, Phillip A- Lobo, video games
April 30, 2009

Uncle Livy

April 30, 2009/ Steve Donoghue

Steve Donoghue’s “Year with the Romans” turns its eye upon Titus Livius, who either wrote poetical history or historical poetry, depending on who you ask.

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April 30, 2009/ Steve Donoghue/
Ancient Rome
ancient rome, May 2009, Steve Donoghue, translation
April 30, 2009

Son Retour?

April 30, 2009/ Jan van Doop

In 1911, the unthinkable happened: the Mona Lisa was stolen from the Louvre. R. A. Scotti tells the story in The Vanished Smile, and Jan van Doop has some ideas of his own.

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April 30, 2009/ Jan van Doop/
Arts & Life
arts and life, Jan Van Doop, May 2009
April 30, 2009

Grace

April 30, 2009/ Nivedita Gunturi

Jeff Buckley’s famous father and early death insured him a cult status in the pop culture pantheon. Nivedita Gunturi uncovers the music behind the myths.

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April 30, 2009/ Nivedita Gunturi/
Arts & Life
arts and life, May 2009, nivedita gunturi
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