
Rhinozeros, a literary magazine from the early ‘60s which published only 10 issues, introduced Germany to some of America’s greatest poets.
Read MoreRhinozeros, a literary magazine from the early ‘60s which published only 10 issues, introduced Germany to some of America’s greatest poets.
Read MoreJack Kerouac, Samuel Beckett, Milan Kundera — the list of writers who worked outside their native tongues isn’t just impressive, it’s surprising.
Read MoreA few inches this way or that and we never would have had Crime and Punishment, Animal Farm, Waiting for Godot or the other literary works produced by these eight authors.
Read MoreEveryone from Galileo to Jim Morrison to countless Scrabble wordsmiths have played around with letters to form their perfect anagrams. We take literary-minded words and anagram them to find ... well, that's up to you. A deeper meaning? A hidden truth? Or just a happy coincidence?
Read MoreDid you know octopi are some of the smartest sea creatures?
Perhaps they could even master a correct granny knot.
Though I doubt even they would know how to adapt Faulker for television.
Well, if a Faulkner sitcom fails, there's always a poetic sonogram instead.
Since Beckett's written for the screen before, he could probably be of assistance.
Meanwhile, could this be the last of the Rose Reading Room at the New York Public Library?
Maybe they just need a few secret doors to keep things interesting.
It would make for a good bomb shelter for all those failed book bloggers.
Who would have plenty to occupy themselves with, what with all these fancy e-books coming out.
But how do they stack up to the best art and design books of 2011?
Denis Johnson, on the other hand, prefers poetry, particularly Donald Justice.
On a similar note, Ben Marcus talks about "trying to love and fondle" the writing process.
Let's hope Benjamin Kunkel has the same luck with his new play.
Image: Brandon Cole