The Covering Cherub: An Interview with Joshua Cohen
Joshua Cohen on the boundary between fact and fiction, the unintended comedy of being a writer, and his latest novel, ‘The Netanyahus.’
Joshua Cohen on the boundary between fact and fiction, the unintended comedy of being a writer, and his latest novel, ‘The Netanyahus.’
“Indelicacy” is a work of feminist existentialism, or existentialist feminism—searching, like Lispector, and lucid, like Camus.
Hilarious, possibly impervious, Joanna Ruocco is, of all the writers I know, the one who writes most purely in order to write—or so I’ve always imagined. I’ve long wanted to ask her about the impetus behind her wonderfully weird assort…
Collections of stories often lose steam as they go, because even stories that are great individually can sound too alike when read together. But Jeremy M. Davies’s The Knack of Doing steers far clear of this problem—almost aggressively so. His stor…
Curtis White first came to public attention as a culture critic with his best-selling The Middle Mind: Why Americans Don’t Think for Themselves (2003). Dubbed “splendidly cranky” by Molly Ivins and “absolutely indispensible” by Slavoj Zizek, The Midd…