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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

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September 19, 2009

Review of Bone Warriors

September 19, 2009/ Leah Lambrusco

In her review of Bone Warriors, Leah Lambrusco highlights the book's twists and turns, some more convincing than others.

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September 19, 2009/ Leah Lambrusco/
Monthly Cover
September 2009
September 15, 2009

Book Review: A Jello Horse

September 15, 2009/ John Madera

Matthew Simmons' novell A Jello Horse maps the fortunes of an enigmatic crew known only by their initials. John Madera reviews.

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September 15, 2009/ John Madera/
Monthly Cover
Book Review, September 2009
September 12, 2009

Review of The Demon's Lexicon

September 12, 2009/ Leah Lambrusco

In her review of The Demon's Lexicon, Leah Lambrusco illustrates this novel's supernatural effects on the reader.

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September 12, 2009/ Leah Lambrusco/
Monthly Cover
September 2009
September 05, 2009

Review of Sometimes My Heart Pushes My Ribs

September 05, 2009/ Chris Tonelli

In his review of Sometimes My Heart Pushes My Ribs, Chris Tonelli explains the mesmerism of Ellen Kennedy's prose

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September 05, 2009/ Chris Tonelli/
Monthly Cover
Poetry, September 2009
August 31, 2009

September 2009 Issue

August 31, 2009/ Open Letters Monthly

Photo by Michael George

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August 31, 2009/ Open Letters Monthly/
Monthly Cover
September 2009
August 31, 2009

Prince of a Lost Realm

August 31, 2009/ Steve Donoghue

He ruled the world of Sunday comics with a singing sword and a grin. He was Prince Valiant, and Fantagraphics lets him fight again. Steve Donoghue goes blow-by-blow.

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August 31, 2009/ Steve Donoghue/
Arts & Life
September 2009, Steve Donoghue
August 31, 2009

Tricky Shticks

August 31, 2009/ Maureen Thorson

Nixon, Bushes, and the War on Terror have been surprisingly good for poetry. Maureen Thorson releases her findings on National Anthem and Dick of the Dead.

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August 31, 2009/ Maureen Thorson/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, Poetry, September 2009
September 01, 2009

New York Trilogy

September 01, 2009/ Sam Sacks

A local, a booster, and a tourist take on New York; Sam Sacks tours the city with E.L. Doctorow, Colm Tóibín, and Colum McCann.

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September 01, 2009/ Sam Sacks/
Literary Criticism
fiction, literary criticism, Sam Sacks, September 2009
August 31, 2009

Photography Album and Q&A with Michael George

August 31, 2009/ Open Letters Monthly

Open Letters talks shop with cover photographer Michael George

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August 31, 2009/ Open Letters Monthly/
Arts & Life
September 2009
August 31, 2009

Cosmic Gobbledygook

August 31, 2009/ Marc Vincenz

Did it all start with Bjork, or was she riding an inevitable wave? The world of Icelandic pop is weird, wild, and disarmingly wonderful – let Marc Vincenz be your guide.

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August 31, 2009/ Marc Vincenz/
Monthly Cover
September 2009
August 31, 2009

‘You Gotta Get the First Beat Right’

August 31, 2009/ Brad Jones

If you don’t know The Jazz Book, then as Miles Davis would say, ‘you ain’t never gonna know.’ Brad Jones shows us the groove.

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August 31, 2009/ Brad Jones/
Monthly Cover
September 2009
August 31, 2009

Jazz Festivals and What They Play There

August 31, 2009/ John G. Rodwan, Jr.

Self-appointed jazz authorities like Wynton Warsalis weigh in on jazz festivals and the musicians who love them, and their listeners. John G. Rodwan, Jr., devoted listener, sorts the noise.

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August 31, 2009/ John G. Rodwan, Jr./
Monthly Cover
September 2009
August 31, 2009

Carmen ex Machina

August 31, 2009/ Phillip A. Lobo

The blips and whistles of Mario’s soundtrack have evolved into grand strings and horns. Phillip A. Lobo assays how real music has come to video games, and vice versa.

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August 31, 2009/ Phillip A. Lobo/
Video
September 2009
August 31, 2009

Primordial Sounds of Lost Islands

August 31, 2009/ Marc Vincenz

Music correspondent Marc Vincenz voyages to the end of the world – the windswept Faeroe Islands – and reports back on the entrancing music they make there. And the parties.

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August 31, 2009/ Marc Vincenz/
Monthly Cover
September 2009
August 31, 2009

Cracking the Music Genome

August 31, 2009/ Steve Brachmann

Your father’s FM radio can close up shop, as far as Steve Brachman’s concerned; the music you want is at your fingertips, and you hear it the way you like it, on your computer.

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August 31, 2009/ Steve Brachmann/
Monthly Cover
September 2009
August 31, 2009

Stem and Root

August 31, 2009/ John Cotter

From the forbidding North to the torrid South, the poetry debuts of Joshua Harmon and Farrah Field explore the geography of words. John Cotter gives centrality to locality.

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August 31, 2009/ John Cotter/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, Poetry, September 2009
August 31, 2009

from LA LA LA

August 31, 2009/ Sampson Starkweather

from LA LA LA, a poem by Sampson Starkweather

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August 31, 2009/ Sampson Starkweather/
Monthly Cover
Poetry, September 2009
August 31, 2009

A Fondness for Turtles

August 31, 2009/ Tuc McFarland

In Following the Water, David C. Carroll has written another paean of praise to the gentle world of pond turtles. But is he writing about a lost world? Tuc McFarland hopes not.

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August 31, 2009/ Tuc McFarland/
Monthly Cover
September 2009
August 31, 2009

Forgive Us Our Risks

August 31, 2009/ Karen Vanuska

Lydia Peelle revisits the territory of Southern fiction in her short story collection Reasons for and Advantages of Breathing, and Karen Vanuska treks the vivid terrain

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August 31, 2009/ Karen Vanuska/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, literary criticism, September 2009
August 31, 2009

The New, Improved Undead

August 31, 2009/ Deirdre Crimmins

Hot-ticket director Guilermo del Toro has co-written a vampire novel that just happens to be about 50 percent flawed. Coincidence? Zombie expert Deirdre Crimmins is on the case.

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August 31, 2009/ Deirdre Crimmins/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, literary criticism, September 2009
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