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Interview: Eugene Mirman

Slow learner
Much like the stand-up that has made him an alt-comedy mainstay, Eugene Mirman's first book, The Will to Whatevs (Harper Perennial), is a freewheeling mix of bemused ironies and trenchantly silly non-sequiturs.
By: ROB TURBOVSKY  |  February 17, 2009

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Slideshow: Street, studio art from Caleb Neelon

Artwork on many platforms
Artwork from Cambridge street artist Caleb Neelon.
By: CALEB NEELON  |  February 13, 2009

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Review: Rebound!

The Celtics and the busing rift
According to Boston Herald writer Michael Connelly, the deep racial wounds opened up by the Boston busing crisis of the mid '70s first began to heal when whites and blacks came together to support the Boston Celtics' championship team of 1981.
By: KEN BROCINER  |  February 13, 2009

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Interview: T. C. Boyle

On The Women and Frank Lloyd Wright
Among his many fictionalizations of the American past, novelist T.C. Boyle has remade such real-life characters as the inventor of cornflakes, John Harvey Kellogg ( The Road to Wellville , 1993), and sexual behaviorist Alfred Kinsey ( The Inner Circle , 2004).
By: CASSANDRA LANDRY  |  February 03, 2009

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Short and bitter words of love

Six Little Words
People sum up grand concepts, thoughts, and plans in six words or fewer every day — in Facebook status updates, text messages, text-message novels , iPhone or Blackberry e-mails, Twitter posts, or analog Post-Its.
By: CAITLIN E. CURRAN  |  February 02, 2009

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Review: Lark and Termite

Total immersion
"Language Immersion" is the name of a program set up by the US Army in Korea just prior to the North's invasion of the South.
By: PETER KEOUGH  |  January 29, 2009



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Spilling family secrets

Speaking Up
Shortly after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Iranian author Azar Nafisi began making a list in her diary.
By: CAITLIN E. CURRAN  |  January 21, 2009

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Anita Silvey

Women warriors
In her near-40-years working in the field of children's literature, Boston-area resident Anita Silvey has been everything from a publisher, to an editor, an author, a lecturer, a reviewer, and even a professor.
By: IAN SANDS  |  January 22, 2009

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Novel idea: Twitter fiction

Post-modernism, post by 140-character post
Inauspiciously, Tom Scharpling began his Twitter novel with a typo.
By: MIKE MILIARD  |  January 14, 2009

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Interview: Christopher Monks

Gameboy
Ever feel you should earn points for remembering to get up in the morning?
By: CLEA SIMON  |  January 15, 2009

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Review: Appetite for Self-Destruction

How the record industry killed itself
Like any good murder mystery, Steve Knopper's Appetite for Self-Destruction keeps the tension high and the action swift as the search for a culprit drags on.
By: JEFF TAMARKIN  |  January 13, 2009



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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

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Big dig

Unsworth and oil in Mesopotamia
Unsworth and oil in Mesopotamia
By: CLEA SIMON  |  January 06, 2009

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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

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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



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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

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Malcolm Gladwell's unlikely formulas for success

As Luck Would Have It
As Luck Would Have It
By: KARA HADGE  |  December 05, 2008

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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

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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

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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


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