Posted at “Stop the War coalition”: For the first time in the post-World War II era, more than 50 million people are on the move — as refugees, asylum-seekers or internally displaced. They are mostly fleeing wars and upheaval of the West’s making. Instead of building walls and fences to keep them out, imagine there […]
Whose Side Are They On? Not Nelson Algren’s
It doesn’t take much for headline writers, editorialists, reporters, columnists, sports writers, what have you, to grab the reader’s attention with a catchy phrase. Some phrases have become such favorites that you see them used over and over. But I would bet that in plenty of cases the journalists who make use of them don’t […]
Time Capsule: Algren, Burroughs, Mailer, et al . . .
UPDATE The Z Collection is available for ordering on line. My staff of thousands insisted on a plug for me: The Z Collection: Portraits & Sketches — my reflections on many of the writers and artists I have known, worked with, or written about — is being published by AC Books in New York in […]
A Little-Known Master Artist’s ‘Uncollected’ Works
The pages of Uncollected illustrate the variety of the artworks that a little-known master artist produced over the years. Most of the pieces have appeared in scattered places but have never been collected in one place — thus the title. Norman O. Mustill, who died in 2013, also produced many other works that haven’t been […]
A Look Ahead: They’re Putting on a Party and a Show
My staff of thousands informs me that the Columbia University Rare Book & Manuscript Library has acquired the Granary Books archive. So publisher and library will mark the occasion with a bit of hoopla and an exhibition that opens Sept. 8, the day after Labor Day. It’s called . . . The Book Undone: Celebrating […]
‘Freedom Is a Career’ — Obituary for Mike Lesser
By Heathcote Williams His approach to life and politics was fueled by emotion rather than the twisted logic of compliance. Finding himself born into an era when life on earth seemed daily–and increasingly–under threat, Mike Lesser’s logic was visceral. Other Angry Young Men long ago may have mellowed and somehow come to terms with a […]
The Outsider Writer on the Inside of the Outside
Charles Plymell (Charley to those who know him, Charlie to those who don’t) has been an outsider for decades, self-declared and otherwise, railing against everything that smacks of the inside — especially the arbiters of government arts grants, who have unfailingly overlooked him, even against his old friend Allen Ginsberg, whom he relentlessly excoriates for […]
Mike Lesser, R.I.P.: ‘In Conversation With a Dying Friend’
Heathcote Williams’s elegy is a meditation on death. Alan Cox reads it. The collage portrait of Mike Lesser as a young man is by Claire Palmer. The text of ‘In Conversation With a Dying Friend’ is posted for reading at IT: International Times. “ . . . my atoms will just disappear. “There’ll be a […]
Artist Bronzes Writer’s Life and Work in a Store Window
The German artist Vera Bonsen has a window assemblage currently on display in a Heidelberg storefront that bronzes the life and writings of the American expatriate poet Cody Maher. The paper hangings consist of poems, diaries, photos and so on from 30 years’ worth of manuscripts. The artifacts include hats, a pair of boxing gloves, […]
A Spanking New German Edition of ‘Royal Babylon’
And now if you just care to look this way … it’s bi-lingual, too. The dark side of the English royal family From the publisher: Did you know that Queen Elizabeth II is the largest landowner in the world? She owns 10 times more land than the recently deceased King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia. The […]
Tanguy’s Priapic Drawings (and More) at Art Basel, 2015
Spurt. Spurt. And that’s not all … EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
Carl Weissner Gets Stellar Notice in Book Podcast
In his latest podcast at realitystudio.org Jed Birmingham zeroes in on the immensely talented Carl Weissner and his cut-up novel The Braille Film. Birmingham, who met Weissner in New York and Paris, talks about what made him so memorable and how he bought the book at auction some years ago for $75, believing it and […]
Of Poetry and Fakery, Cultural Theft, and Stolen Identity
The title of Heathcote Williams’s memoir, Of Dylan Thomas and his Deaths, reflects the author’s belief that the great Welsh poet died not once but twice. He writes, “It can be said that he was to suffer no less than two deaths at American hands.” The first death, contrary to the accepted claim that he […]
A New Literary Memoir Recalls Dylan Thomas
See update. A few weeks ago I remarked that Of Dylan and his Deaths, by Heathcote Williams, was so rich in the author’s personal history and “so evocative of his first inspiration, Dylan Thomas,” that it merited attention as a masterpiece of literary investigation. (The investigative aspect of the essay involves Williams’s indignation over “the […]
Late-Breaking Book News: A Party for the Independents
Start the Presses! Announcing the 13th Annual New York City Independent Publishers Book Party (6-8pm, Thursday, May 21, 2015 @ Zieher Smith & Horton Gallery, 516 W. 20th St., NYC / 212-229-1088) EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
Chris Burden, R.I.P.
Dead at 69. I always thought he was the real deal. EmailFacebookTwitterReddit
Paul Krugman in Conversation with Jeffrey Sachs
GLOBALIZATION, TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE, AND INEQUALITY Live-streamed from The Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Program begins 32 minutes into the video. EmailFacebookTwitterReddit