The Big Book of Reel Murders, Edited by Otto Penzler
/This huge book is a bonanza of finds, from the well-known to the gloriously idiosyncratic.
Read MoreAn Arts & Literature Review
This huge book is a bonanza of finds, from the well-known to the gloriously idiosyncratic.
Read MoreBy far the best thing to come of Bram Stoker’s Dracula was the comic-book mini-series back in 1992.
Read More2019’s Child’s Play remake navigates the traps of postmodern horror, and provides some interesting commentary on our political-digital moment.
Read MoreRecent books about avant-garde film critic Jonas Mekas.
Read MoreAlvarez seems to have cracked the code for how to translate these novels to the screen.
Read MoreA memoir by a celebrated filmmaker that serves more as a crash course in independent film.
Read MoreThe Boys in the Band is a groundbreaking play that premiered off-Broadway in 1968, and told the story of a group of gay men who gather for a birthday party in New York City.
Read MoreThis novelization of the 1984 blockbuster was written before the movie hit the theaters, or even before the script was completely finished.
Read MoreAn intensely engrossing biography thoroughly grounded on a staggering amount of research.
Read MoreThe latest release from Blumhouse Productions is a friendly horror movie with a cast of beautiful young people.
Read MoreThis book explores a broad range of geekish enthusiasms, from comic books to SFF movies of all types.
Read MoreA Quiet Place is yet another step toward dignifying a genre whose potential for great storytelling has been ignored, squandered, and stands ripe for fulfillment.
Read MoreDeath Wish is a movie that, though crafted as escapist entertainment, only makes us more conscious of the real world.
Read MoreThis is a gobstopper of a book, despite its subject’s short life.
Read MoreThe Post is less of a thriller and more of a moral drama.
Read MoreMargaret Atwood's novel Alias Grace is adapted into a lavish TV series.
Read MoreAt their king’s behest, four grizzled blind men approach an unidentified object. He warns them that it has lain forgotten in an unforgiving place, and is a putrid, clammy thing. They nod, not daring to remind the king which sense they lack. Standing almost nine feet tall, the object forces each man to claim his own portion.
The first man, at the object’s rear, says, “It has a knobby trunk, out of which smooth, hollow tubes run. It must be a sculpture.” Caressing its top, the second man partially agrees. “A sculpture yes, but not an object. It is a soldier, wearing a large helmet, pocked and ridged with the scars of battle.” The third man, who’s been kneeling, waves a finger. “But it is long and jagged, like the skeleton of some legendary beast.” The king smiles. The fourth man does not. He has the misfortune of standing directly in front of the thing. Before he can speak, it wraps a pair of six-fingered claws around his head. The other men hear hissing before hot blood splashes them.
Read MoreTime-lapse photography is a miraculous thing. Like a superpower, it changes our relationship to the mundane, revealing life lived at a different pace. Desolate winter, for example, can become lush spring in seconds. Likewise, a teenager can age one day a second for four years (her hair tossing as if in a storm, the minutia of her life cascading across her bedroom walls).
When lovingly executed, time-lapse footage haunts and inspires. Details blur to give us impossible perspectives. Grander patterns and unconventional theories surface in the mind. No matter the subject, we see reflected the familiar elements of life. But what dances before us does so with a strange life of its own.
Read MoreIn the back of our ninth grade class, you may or may not recall, there sat a silent, studious boy whom everyone ignored. He wasn’t chubby enough to bully. He didn’t have the acne to scatter female cliques. Even the teacher, busy with students who achieved things or had problems, left him be. Such invisibility worked in his favor. Devoted to fictitious worlds, he wrote and drew continuously. Socials and first kisses, trivialities compared with the act of creating, only wrinkled his nose. His imagination, however, intensified, as he learned to focus it through the noisy social web of the surrounding classroom.
Read MoreGeorge R. R. Martin, screenwriter, editor and epic fantasist, has so far delivered four of the seven volumes planned in his sweeping A Song of Ice and Fire saga. Book five, A Dance with Dragons, has been eagerly anticipated by fans for at least three years now. Ideally, it will arrive in time for the Spring 2011 premiere of HBO’s television series based on Martin’s books.
Read MoreAn arts and literature review.
Steve Donoghue
Sam Sacks
Britta Böhler
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Eric Karl Anderson
Olive Fellows
Jack Hanson
Jennifer Helinek
Justin Hickey
Hannah Joyner
Zach Rabiroff
Jessica Tvordi