Focus: New Media Studies — November/December 2000
nina2022-07-28T22:40:51+00:00Reviews of hypertext writing and books by Richard Coyne and Fredrich Kittler, with an essay by Mark Amerika.
Reviews of hypertext writing and books by Richard Coyne and Fredrich Kittler, with an essay by Mark Amerika.
Reviews of literature in Portuguese, Italian, Polish, and Hungarian translated into English.
Jack Kerouac sought intense experience in everything he did, yet developed a reactionary stance towards the counterculture he helped create.
Reviews of notable first novels by David Kress, Emily Barton, Paul LaFarge, Alyson Richman, Marilyn Jaye Lewis, and Jan Ramjerdi.
The increasing importance of sports in American literature should not be surprising considering the centrality of organized sports to contemporary American experience.
Reviews of short story collections by Ken Kalfus, Joanna H. Woś, Lucia Berlin, Rick DeMarinis, Stephen Dixon, and Harold Jaffe.
Reviews of fiction by John A. Williams, John Edgar Wideman, Trey Ellis, and Ralph Ellison with an essay by Gabrielle Daniels.
Reviews of thematic anthologies on therapy, American identity, language, gay poetry, and Peace Corps service.
Books have shorter and shorter "shelf lives" before publishers recall them; online publishing and books-on-demand can help maintain access to these publications.
Reviews of biographies of Paul Bowles, Mary Butts, Serge Gainsbourg, Harry Partch, and Iris Murdoch.
When people want a story, they go to the movies. For prose writers, nonfiction is the area of possibility for the future.
No matter how quickly readers approach, poets breaking new ground are always three steps ahead.
The American Book Review is an award-winning, internationally distributed publication specializing in reviews of published works of fiction, poetry, and literary and cultural criticism from small, regional, university, and avant-garde presses. For over forty years, ABR has been a staple of the literary world.
Phone: (361) 248-8245
Email: americanbookreview@gmail.com
ABR is published by the University of Nebraska Press.
© Copyright 2021 - 2024 | American Book Review | All Rights Reserved