What’s buzzing around the Entropy called the internet? First off, some contributor news.
Contributing Editor Megan Milks has a new collection out called Kill Marguerite and Other Stories from Emergency Press which the Huffington Post calls: “A totally awesome experimental collection!”
Contributing Editor Eddy Rathke’s new book, Twilight of the Wolves from Perfect Edge Books, releases on March 31st. It’s described as “an epic fantasy following a man cursed by a dying god’s blessing.”
We’re excited to share birthdays with Cartridge Lit which is “an online literature mag dedicated to showcasing the best lit – fiction, nonfiction, poetry – inspired by video games,” and headed up by the ever cool Justin Lawrence Daugherty (Facebook)
Walking is a Radical Act; An Interview With Iain Sinclair by Jarett Kobek is shipping now from Solar Luxuriance.
And some of the news/links/lists/facts that intensify the Entropy of existence:
Free MFA Subscription to BOMB (BOMB, 3/25)
Why Does So Much Sci-Fi Take Place in California? (Slate, 3/25)
Aldous Huxley on Drugs, Democracy, and Religion (Brain Pickings, 3/25)
The Sly, Shocking Soul of GWAR (The Atlantic, 3/24)
Can This Art Show Possibly Capture The Full Glory Of Nicolas Cage? (io9, 3/24)
Dave Mandl on Records Ruin the Landscape : John Cage, the Sixties, and Sound Recording: Performance Anxiety (LARB, 3/24)
Eye candy (Mohan Matthen, aeon magazine, 3/24)
25 Incredible Akira Kurosawa Quotes About Filmmaking (Flavorwire, 3/23)
I Sing the Body Prosthetic: On Mario Bellatin’s “Mishima’s Illustrated Biography” by Jeffrey Zuckerman (LARB, 3/23)
All origin stories are Newtonian, Part 1 of 2 by Amy Catazano (Jacket2, 3/22)
The Letters of Robert Creeley (BODY, 3/21)
“Let me drown you in milk”: The Narrative Poetry of Gro Dahle and Dolores Dorantes by Johannes Goransson (Montevidayo, 3/21)
On Actors Anonymous by James Franco (Rhys Nixon, HTMLGIANT, 3/21)
It’s Time to Rethink the Crime Genre by Blake Butler (VICE, 3/20)
How Animals See the World (Nautilus, 3/20)
Music & Literature #4 Just Released Focusing on Clarice Lispector, Maya Homburger & Barry Guy and Mary Ruefle