Surveying literature, art & culture from an altitude of 5,000 feet while traveling at 53 miles per hour
Close
  • New
  • Popular
  • Longform
Main Menu
The Art of Riot
The Art of Riot
By David Forbes
October 02, 2014

When people take to the streets to express their support or displeasure over … art?

Read More
The Yellow Peril: Asian Invasions in the Racist Literature of Yesteryear
The Yellow Peril: Asian Invasions in the Racist Literature of Yesteryear
By Benjamin Welton
October 01, 2014

At the height of dime novel and pulp magazine popularity, alarmist writers concocted — to great fanfare — racist images of Asian super villains and military takeovers.

Read More
Creepypasta: An Introduction to the Urban Legends of the Internet
Creepypasta: An Introduction to the Urban Legends of the Internet
By Robert Balkovich
October 01, 2014

Spawned on website forums and defunct blogs, today’s urban legends live online — and they’re more horrifying than you’d imagine.

Read More
How D.H. Lawrence and World War I Saved Moby-Dick
How D.H. Lawrence and World War I Saved Moby-Dick
By Eric Williams
September 30, 2014

Reconsidering the literary landscape in the wake of the Great War, Lawrence rescued Herman Melville’s now venerated novel from absolute obscurity.

Read More
One Second, Dear, Mommy’s Writing
One Second, Dear, Mommy’s Writing
By Trisha Leon
September 30, 2014

The difficulty of being both mother and author.

Read More
Literary Tourism: Bukowski’s L.A. Haunts
Literary Tourism: Bukowski’s L.A. Haunts
By Alfredo Madrid
September 29, 2014

Chasing the Dirty Old Man’s ghost through the City of Angels.

Read More
America's Addiction to Irvine Welsh
America's Addiction to Irvine Welsh
By Genna Rivieccio
September 27, 2014

Welsh is one of the few contemporary Scottish authors to have captured the attention of mainstream America. What’s the attraction?

Read More
I Saw Dobby’s Thong: What Harry Potter Burlesque Taught Me About Banned Books
I Saw Dobby’s Thong: What Harry Potter Burlesque Taught Me About Banned Books
By Abi Inman
September 26, 2014

Striptease based on J. K. Rowling’s children’s books reveals the value of literature (and more).

Read More
T. S. Eliot and the Science of Naming Cats
T. S. Eliot and the Science of Naming Cats
By Kathleen Cooper
September 25, 2014

One of the 20th century’s major poets provides keen insight into proper feline monikers.

Read More
“The Most Splendid Failure” – William Faulkner on The Sound and the Fury
“The Most Splendid Failure” – William Faulkner on The Sound and the Fury
By J. Francis Wolfe
September 24, 2014

Now hailed as a masterpiece, Faulkner's novel was initially written off by the public and the author himself. Why?

Read More
 
Featured
Eat Prey Drug: Summerland
Eat Prey Drug: Summerland
The Biggest Little-Known Influence on H. P. Lovecraft
The Biggest Little-Known Influence on H. P. Lovecraft
The Sun Don't Shine on a Moonshine Still
The Sun Don't Shine on a Moonshine Still
  • About
  • Shop
  • Privacy Policy
A Black Balloon Publication ©