The Phoenix
Boston
Portland
Providence
|
WFNX Radio
Live Radio
On Demand
|
About
Blogs
Phlog
On The Download
Talking Politics
Outside The Frame
Laser Orgy
All Blogs
Editors' Picks
Editors' Picks
All Listings
News
News Features
Politics
Editorial
Flashbacks
Sports
News Blog
Cover Archive
Music
Find...
Concerts
Music Features
Reviews
Albums
Music Blog
Band Guide
Movies
Movie Features
Movie Reviews
Film Blog
Contests
Food + Drink
Find...
Restaurants
Dining
On The Cheap
Bars and Drinking
Arts & Entertainment
Find...
Theater Events
Comedy Shows
Readings
Museums & Galleries
Comedy
Books
Dance
Theater
Television
Video Games
Photos
Horoscope
Contests
Puzzles
Comics
Failure
Big Fat Whale
Hoopleville
IdiotBox
The Best
Arts
>>
Books
Ol' Dirty's dirty side
Jaime Lowe's Life and Death of ODB
Sometimes it takes an outsider to understand the inside.
By:
CHRIS FARAONE
| January 09, 2009
Big dig
Unsworth and oil in Mesopotamia
Unsworth and oil in Mesopotamia
By:
CLEA SIMON
| January 06, 2009
More sex, more Lincoln
A hefty reading season, from Jayne Anne Phillips and T.C. Boyle to Pablo Neruda
The subject of Lincoln is like catnip to publishers (and readers), but the only things missing from our winter list are actual cat books.
By:
BARBARA HOFFERT
| December 30, 2008
Year in Books: Word plays
Of werewolves and wastelands
Here, listed alphabetically by author, are 10 of the best works of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry that the Phoenix wrote about in 2008.
By:
JON GARELICK
| December 22, 2008
Review: My Vocabulary Did This to Me: The Collected Poems of Jack Spicer
Strong spirits
Spicer believed that words are magic, that they have the power to "do" good and harm to people.
By:
WILLIAM CORBETT
| December 19, 2008
Interview: Mia Kirshner
Going global
Best known for her role as The L Word 's bookish drama fiend Jenny Schecter, Mia Kirshner is very clear about one thing: to her, acting is a "day job."
By:
SHAULA CLARK
| December 09, 2008
Malcolm Gladwell's unlikely formulas for success
As Luck Would Have It
As Luck Would Have It
By:
KARA HADGE
| December 05, 2008
Sex and food and Abraham Lincoln
Gift books for every (perverse) taste
We put out a call to our contributors to suggest appropriate holiday gift books and what do we get back?
By:
PHOENIX STAFF
| December 05, 2008
Globalized
The world in comics
This season, there are two best buys when it comes to bang for your comic-book buck.
By:
MIKE MILIARD
| December 02, 2008
Interview: Jill Lepore and Jane Kamensky
Two historians pen a bodice ripper
Long-time friends Jill Lepore and Jane Kamensky didn't set out to write Blindspot, a novel complete with murder, scandal, slave stealing, and some very hot sex.
By:
CLEA SIMON
| December 02, 2008
Swedish schnapps
The Martin Beck mysteries
Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö's Martin Beck mysteries are back in a fourth American printing.
By:
WILLIAM CORBETT
| December 02, 2008
Ghost story
Toni Morrison's colonial America
Toni Morrison's colonial America
By:
RICHARD BECK
| November 24, 2008
Never Say Smile
Annie Leibovitz highlights her career
Could there be anyone cooler to have for a photography teacher than Annie Leibovitz?
By:
CAITLIN E. CURRAN
| November 19, 2008
Excerpt: The School on Heart's Content Road
One week only: an exclusive excerpt from the acclaimed author's new novel
In the cold parlor of the St. Onge farmhouse, deep in the old collapsing couch, sort of wrapped in the couch, in its waves of whimpering springs and hills of upholstery of frazzled blue nap, are 15-year-old Brianna and Gordon.
By:
CAROLYN CHUTE
| November 14, 2008
Here comes the sun
It's All Right
It's All Right
By:
JIM SULLIVAN
| November 14, 2008
Leviathan
Roberto Bolaño's 2666 may be the Great American Novel
Jorge Luis Borges wrote of the desert as a labyrinth without walls or center, unending and inescapable. That's a fair description of Roberto Bolaño's last work, the 912-page opus 2666 .
By:
PETER KEOUGH
| November 11, 2008
Interview: Art Spiegelman
Drawing conclusions
"When you don't understand a painting, you assume you're stupid. When you don't understand a cartoon, you assume the cartoonist is stupid."
By:
MIKE MILIARD
| November 13, 2008
Table of content
Jim Harrison’s road trip
Jim Harrison’s fiction and essays are built from his particular blend of earthiness and erudition.
By:
BILL BEUTTLER
| October 28, 2008
Beating a dead horse
An excerpt from And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks
I got home about 3:45 after eating breakfast at Riker’s on the corner of Christopher Street and Seventh Avenue
By:
JACK KEROUAC AND WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS
| October 22, 2008
Back Beat
At last, Kerouac and Burroughs's co-authored noir novel, And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks, resurfaces.
On a Sunday afternoon in December of 1997 I hooked up with the poet Jim McCrary at a Greenwich Village saloon.
By:
GEORGE KIMBALL
| October 24, 2008
Scarlet letters
The uptight killjoy in us
Sarah Vowell’s fifth book, The Wordy Shipmates (Riverhead) — released on October 7 — examines New England Puritans with a meticulously researched, critical-yet-comical eye.
By:
CAITLIN E. CURRAN
| October 09, 2008
<< first
...
< prev
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
next >
...
last >>
19 of 27 (results 520)
Most Popular
The Current Issue
Table of Contents
Cover Archive
Masthead
|
Authors
|
Contact us
Blogs
Where To Follow Me
Talking Politics
| March 24, 2013 at 11:09 AM
Mo Takes His Turn
March 21, 2013 at 12:59 PM
[Q&A] KMFDM's Sascha Konietzko on art, Columbine and having balls
On The Download
| March 18, 2013 at 3:22 PM
See this film series: The Belmont World Film Series @ Studio Cinema in Belmont
Outside The Frame
| March 18, 2013 at 11:00 AM
See this film: This is Spinal Tap [with post-film talk by expert from Acoustical Society of America] @ the Coolidge
March 17, 2013 at 12:00 PM
More:
Phlog
|
Music
|
Film
|
Books
|
Politics
|
Media
|
Election '08
|
Free Speech
|
All Blogs