Latest News: Author Archive

“This is a bracing collection of short, sharp shocks, all of which stimulate and some of which stun.” – WELCOME TO DYSTOPIA reviewed in Publishers Weekly

Tuesday, February 27th, 2018

The 45 original stories in this volume achieve their objectives laudably, presenting bleak dystopic near-futures that are firmly rooted in the here and now.

Read the full review here.

Pedro Páramo is a cautionary tale, one that should resonate in our own era of brutal strongmen and rapacious billionaires”: ARIEL DORFMAN on why reading Juan Rulfo matters today

Friday, February 23rd, 2018

According to the wishful fantasies in Rulfo’s imagination, all the power and wealth that the predators of his day have accumulated cannot save them from the plagues of loneliness and sorrow. Many Latin American authors later emulated Rulfo’s vision of the domineering macho figure who terrorizes and corrupts nations. Faced with the seeming impossibility of changing the destiny of their unfortunate countries, writers at least could vicariously punish the tormentors of their people in what became known as “novels of the dictator.”

Read the full review at The New York Review of Books.

“Don’t worry, we’re listening”: LIZA FEATHERSTONE discusses the historical socialist/corporatist tensions of the focus group with Jacobin

Thursday, February 22nd, 2018

Can you tell us a bit about how focus groups came to be?

At every turn, focus groups have been developed or further perfected to bridge a vast divide between a group of elites and the people they want to convince. We find this just as much with left-wing elites as with our current depraved ruling class.

In fact, the focus group was developed during Red Vienna, a period when the city, despite a very conservative national government, was run by socialists. The Viennese socialist leadership was very much a cultural elite — they were the intellectuals, the psychoanalysts. They had ideas about what socialism should be but were very out of touch with the working class. These elites held a lot of socially conservative views, like the working class shouldn’t have sex outside of marriage or drink, they should play team sports and listen to classical music. The working class wasn’t particularly interested in those ideas, so there was this disconnect.

Read the full interview at Jacobin.

THE DIGITAL CRITIC reviewed in Berfrois

Thursday, February 22nd, 2018

What is it about the predicament of digital writing and reading that has so many literary provocateurs abuzz? “Mies van der Rohe said, ‘The least is the most.’ I agree with him completely,’” John Cage wrote in his diary. “At the same time, what concerns me now is quantity.” Cage was becoming more concerned with social activities rather than music. He was reading Marshall McLuhan, Buckminster Fuller and Norman O. Brown. Cage was “concerned with improving the world.” He was beginning to think that “the disciplines…must now be practiced socially” (A Year From Monday, 1967).

Read the full review here Berfrois.

ALEX NUNNS, author of THE CANDIDATE, debates anti-Corbyn smears on BBC Daily Politics

Thursday, February 22nd, 2018

Alex Nunns takes on Trevor Kavanagh over the Sun’s “Czech spy” smear campaign against Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

Listen to the full debate on BBC.

“Consulting the Masses”: LIZA FEATHERSTONE discusses DIVINING DESIRE on KPFA

Wednesday, February 21st, 2018

Consumer capitalism and the focus group appear to go hand in hand. But Liza Featherstone argues that the focus group has radical origins and, in convoluted ways, points to the potential for collective input in an egalitarian society. She discusses the history of focus groups for consumer goods and electoral politics.

Listen to the full interview on KPFA.

A Lesson on Immigration from Pablo Neruda: ARIEL DORFMAN in the New York Times

Wednesday, February 21st, 2018

Chile, like numerous other countries, has been debating whether to welcome migrants — mostly from Haiti, Colombia, Peru and Venezuela — or to keep them out. Although only half a million immigrants live in this nation of 17.7 million, right-wing politicians have stoked anti-immigrant sentiment, opposed the increased rates of immigration in the past decade and directed bile especially against Haitian immigrants.

Immigration was a major issue in elections here in November and December. The winner was Sebastián Piñera, a 68-year-old center-right billionaire who was president from 2010 to 2014 and will take over in March. Mr. Piñera blamed immigrants for delinquency, drug trafficking and organized crime. He benefited from the support of José Antonio Kast, a far-right politician who has been campaigning to build physical barriers along the borders with Peru and Bolivia to stop immigrants.

Read the full piece at the New York Times.

TRUMP U. is excerpted at Truthdig

Tuesday, February 20th, 2018

One day, I was on a podcast taking place in the Trump University offices on the thirty-second floor of 40 Wall Street. Donald Trump was participating from another office. We were talking about the real estate market, and whether it was a fire sale right now. I was panicking a little about my job, looking at the market. Trump said, “Steve, first off look where you’re at, and look who you’re with. If the real estate market is a fire sale, I’m sitting right next to you, who do you think they’re getting first?” Coincidentally, the building actually caught on fire that day. So we had to stop the podcast and get out of the building by climbing down thirty-two flights of stairs.

Read the full excerpt at Truthdig.

“Cultural boycott has proven its worth as a powerful tool for peaceful, thoughtful activists, and it looks to remain such for years to come”: JOHN OAKES discusses ASSUMING BOYCOTT and editor LAURA RAICOVICH with frieze

Friday, February 16th, 2018

In discussing what it regards as a broader pattern of misconduct, the report also details Raicovich’s role as co-editor of Assuming Boycott: Resistance, Agency, and Cultural Production (OR Books, 2017), a volume which collects articles discussing the intersection between art and global boycotts. The document claims that Raicovich did not alert the museum board to her involvement in the book’s production. The investigation alleges that many of the essays in Assuming Boycott support the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions movement, which it says ‘overtly targets the State of Israel’. The report also says that Raicovich paid one of her fellow co-editors using museum funds. John Oakes, co-publisher of OR Books (and in-house editor of Assuming Boycott) told frieze: ‘that the book has emerged as ‘evidence’ against Raicovich emphasizes how the forces of reaction are flummoxed by something they can’t jail, wall off, or otherwise eliminate by decree. Cultural boycott has proven its worth as a powerful tool for peaceful, thoughtful activists, and it looks to remain such for years to come.’

Read the full piece at frieze.

Celebrating Losar: TENZIN DICKIE on the importance of tradition

Friday, February 16th, 2018

Happy Losar! Happy Tibetan New Year 2145!

Celebrating Losar: The Importance of Tradition.


 

In Old Demons, New Deities: Twenty-One Short Stories from Tibet, editor Tenzin Dickie, who was born and raised a refugee in northern India, emphasizes how literary traditions provide communities in exile a deeper connection to their personal histories. We suggest that observing these traditions, whether as windows to another culture or mirrors of our own, further connects us to one another as well.
—OR Books


from the Introduction:

I was around twelve when I saw my first Tibetan film. I had no idea what I was seeing.

… I watched the whole thing, entranced and bewildered. It was only at the very end of the half hour, when the couple circled the tree in the recurring Indian cinematic trope of romantic love, that I finally realized with a jolt what I was watching: this was a Tibetan film, a Tibetan romantic comedy. I had never seen a Tibetan film before. There were none. There were no Tibetan films, no Tibetan short stories, no Tibetan novels. Junot Díaz says, “You know how vampires have no reflections in the mirror? If you want to make a human being a monster, deny them, at the cultural level, any reflection of themselves.” We grew up, those of us who grew up in exile but also those of us who grew up in Tibet, all of us, without reflections.

Why was that? Why did we grow up as, to use Edwidge Danticat’s phrase, “literary orphans?”

My family on both sides left Tibet when the Chinese came and followed the Dalai Lama into exile. I was born and raised in one of the Tibetan refugee settlements of north India. As a function of growing up in Tibet-in-India, a young society, an exile community trying to re-root itself in foreign soil, we were cut off from our historical past, from our historical literature and culture. Of course, for Tibetans growing up on the other side of the mountains, this break from history was imposed by the Chinese state. This separation from our literary past was compounded by the fact that modern Tibetan literature was still in its infancy. Thus, on both sides of the Himalayas, we grew up orphaned from our literature. We were missing the point of departure, the runway from which to lift off.

For a young reader, this meant a peculiar kind of abandonment and isolation—the lack of one’s reflection in the surfaces, and the depths, around oneself—an insular isolation that only makes itself known when something finally pierces it. For me, that moment was when I read Tenzin Tsundue’s beautiful poem “When It Rains In Dharamsala.” I read it, electrified, and began to write a poem. It was not just that I knew the rain in Dharamsala, it was that I knew Tsundue and he was like me. I had always been a reader, but that was the first time I thought that perhaps I could be a writer as well.

Pema Bhum, Woeser, Jamyang Norbu, Tsering Dondrup, Tsering Wangmo Dhompa, Pema Tseden, Kyabchen Dedrol, Takbum Gyal, Pema Tsewang Shastri, Tenzin Tsundue, Bhuchung D. Sonam-these are our writers now. Their works fill our shelves and their words echo our lives. Every now and then, I can catch a glimpse of myself, or someone who looks very like me, in the looking glass. It’s not a small thing that these writers-and filmmakers and artists and musicians-have given us. It’s only when art gives us entry into the lives of people like ourselves, with our loves and losses, our joys and sorrows, our hope and our despair, that we can begin to make sense of our own lives-to understand, to cherish, and to glory in our own humanity-to find divinity in it.


What better way to celebrate the New Year than with the first English-language anthology of contemporary Tibetan fiction. For a limited time, take 40% off Old Demons, New Deities with coupon code LOSAR.



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“A cabal of charlatans”: The Real Deal reviews TRUMP U.

Wednesday, February 14th, 2018

When self-described real estate expert Stephen Gilpin first arrived in Manhattan, he was a Quaalude-popping blue jeans model. To make ends meet, he attended house parties of the wealthy, a handsome face for hire. It was dull work, and to distract himself Gilpin would contemplate the makings of the grand homes of his hosts. It was then, sometime in the 1990s, that Gilpin visited Trump Tower, where he was dazzled by “the sixty-foot high waterfall.”

“What an impressive place!” he writes. “I could feel the power and smell of money.”

Gilpin’s first book, “Trump U: The Inside Story of Trump University” is a chronicle of how one man went from posing for Levi Strauss to proselytizing for property at Trump University, the for-profit education venture launched in 2005 by Donald Trump. The book is Gilpin’s attempt to restore a reputation sullied by years of allegations about fraudulent practices at the business. But it’s also an indictment of one of the president’s most prominent ventures, one that was shut down after just five years, led to a $25 million settlement and continues to shape his public image.

Read the full review at The Real Deal.

Autostraddle names WOMEN OF RESISTANCE one of its 65 queer and feminist books to read in 2018

Wednesday, February 14th, 2018

Read the full early 2018 queer and feminist book preview on Autostraddle.

A Valentine’s Day meditation from LOVE IN THE ANTHROPOCENE

Tuesday, February 13th, 2018

What is love in the anthropocene?

In this book of five linked stories, philosopher Dale Jamieson and novelist Bonnie Nadzam investigate love amid the human despoliation of our planet: love emerges as what defines us, and may well save us.


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from Love in the Anthropocene, the Coda:

Across cultures, languages and centuries, love has shown itself as a flux of shifting beliefs, feelings, ideas, actions, and cultural meanings rather than as a timeless concept with a universal essence. In its various forms and manifestations, it is the subject of centuries’ worth of painting, music, and poetry, and some of the world’s major religious traditions claim it as their focal point and common ground. It has inspired war, peace, civil and human rights movements, and is the subject of intellectual inquiries ranging from history, philosophy, and sociology to psychology, neuroscience, and biology. Love takes diverse objects including friends, parents, partners, pets, children, places, nature, and countries. Most of us care deeply about having love, losing it, getting more of it, wondering whether we give enough of it, struggling to understand what it is, when it is healthy and appropriate, and on and on and on. For many of us, love is a central preoccupation of our lives. Everything else can seem a waste of time.

Most of us would say that love is constant, whatever else it is; fair weather love is no love at all. And we would insist that the beloved—whether partner, parent, child, or pet—is irreplaceable. We may come to love a second partner, child or pet, but these are distinct loves, each with their own story, not just another installment in our own domestic lives.

Hovering in the background behind these declarations of all-important, constant, irreplaceable love, is the often inchoate recognition that any particular love of ours is radically contingent, even though what love demands seems highly specific to the one we love. . . .

What makes loving so hard to understand and even harder to practice? The novelist-philosopher Iris Murdoch points to an answer when she writes, “Love is the extremely difficult realization that something other than oneself is real.”


Spend this Valentine’s Day—where else—in the good and constant company of some eco-futurist fiction and philosophy! For a limited time, take 40% off Love in the Anthropocene with coupon code CODA.*


Further Reading



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“Now, more than ever, we have much to learn from Beckett”: the Los Angeles Review of Books on SAMUEL BECKETT IS CLOSED

Tuesday, February 13th, 2018

By breaking rules of genre and narrative, by embracing experimental form, Coffey’s work raises questions about how contemporary artists might work to resist the status quo through a subversive, fragmentary style that makes it impossible for us to look away from our political reality. Now, more than ever, we have much to learn from Beckett.

Read the full review at the Los Angeles Review of Books.

“Before there was Rush Limbaugh and Fox News, there was Pat Robertson and The 700 Club”: a review of THE GOSPEL OF SELF

Monday, February 12th, 2018

Before there was Rush Limbaugh and Fox News, there was Pat Robertson and The 700 Club. That is this book’s thesis in a sentence.

For those unfamiliar, The 700 Club is a show on the Christian Broadcasting Network that has been on the air since 1966, serving as that network’s flagship program. It presents itself as a news program, yet often features commentary with a heavy evangelical Christian bent on many of its stories. Pat Robertson, a longtime face of the Religious Right, has always been its star. You may remember him for his statements such as blaming 9/11 on feminists, saying Haiti made a pact with the Devil, and calling Muslims Satanic.

And yet, according to The Gospel of Self: How Jesus Joined the GOP, whether these statements had any basis in fact has always been less important than how they help shape the worldview of millions of people who watch his program every day. The factual nature of these commentaries comes in second to the truth that people who identify as evangelical believe, which in turn will cause them to vote for certain people and support or oppose certain causes and issues.

Read the full review at Coffee House Contemplative.

“A kind of ball that is not a ball.” A conversation with MICHAEL COFFEY exploring Samuel Beckett’s relationship to political violence, at Slought

Tuesday, February 6th, 2018

Read here.

“I’m Very Good at Sex.” DESPERATELY SEEKING SELF-IMPROVEMENT in the Literary Review

Tuesday, February 6th, 2018

Read here.

“Make the socialist arguments.” ALEX NUNNS is interviewed in The Clarion

Tuesday, February 6th, 2018

Read here.

“Focus groups make us feel our views matter – but no one with power cares what we think.” LIZA FEATHERSTONE in The Guardian

Tuesday, February 6th, 2018

Read here.

GOSPEL OF SELF is “highly recommended for anyone who wants a deeper understanding of how evangelical Christianity played—and continues to play—such a prominent role in today’s political landscape.”

Thursday, February 1st, 2018

Read here.

RICCARDO MANZOTTI continues his conversation with Tim Parks in the New York Review of Books

Tuesday, January 30th, 2018

Read here.

“This book will help the reader find some answers,” says a review of GOSPEL OF SELF in Patheos

Tuesday, January 23rd, 2018

Read here.

Pamela Anderson speaks at the WOMEN, WHISTLEBLOWING, WIKILEAKS launch

Tuesday, January 23rd, 2018

Watch here.

Shelf Awareness reviews SWORDS IN THE HANDS OF CHILDREN, saying its “story of emotional and moral development in this environment is intimate.”

Tuesday, January 23rd, 2018

Read here.

“A publishing experiment survives and grows”: OR BOOKS is profiled in Publishers Weekly

Monday, January 22nd, 2018

Founded in 2009 by John Oakes and Colin Robinson, OR Books was designed to be a new kind of publisher. Its business model was based on bypassing bookstores, using print-on-demand technology (printing a book only when it has been purchased), and the web to sell its books and e-books directly to consumers.

Although the OR Books model “actually works,” Oakes said, both publishing veterans acknowledge that they have changed their minds about bookstores—especially independent retailers. “A general trade publisher needs independent bookstores; they are essential to our well-being,” Oakes said. Robinson agreed: “Selling direct gives us the ability to publish quickly and the margin is very good, but to reach a wide audience you need to be in stores too.” Bookstore sales now represent 20%–30% of OR Books’ total revenue, and they are growing, Oakes said. E-books, he added, are about a third of most titles’ sales—more for tech books and less for other categories.

Read the full article at Publishers Weekly.

“America’s Role in El Salvador’s Deterioration”: RAYMOND BONNER in The Atlantic

Monday, January 22nd, 2018

When Donald Trump said this month he would end temporary protected status for almost 200,000 Salvadorans, the number of immigrants standing to lose protections under this president approached the 1 million mark. This includes people, like those from El Salvador, that now stand to be deported to countries where their lives could be in danger. El Salvador has one of the world’s highest homicide rates—due in no small part to the policies of the country now trying to expel them.

Read the full piece at The Atlantic.

The New Inquiry calls DIVINING DESIRE “a fascinating history.”

Friday, January 19th, 2018

Read here.

“The evidence of this collection is that America is indeed broken, and has been broken for a very long time.” Counterfire on TALES OF TWO AMERICAS

Thursday, January 18th, 2018

Read here.

The Irish Times calls THE DIGITAL CRITIC “accessible and comprehensive at once.”

Thursday, January 18th, 2018

Read here.

An excerpt from THE DIGITAL CRITIC appears in Review 31

Thursday, January 18th, 2018

Read here.

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