More horror fiction should have footnotes. Bennet Sims’s A Questionable Shape has forever connected the footnote to the concept of the undead, and I seem to recall a few turning up across John Langan’s nestled narratives. Matthew Cheney’s Changes in the Land features a few as well, which is understandable given that one of its characters is, in fact, an academic. “A horror novel with an academic at its core?” you may ask. “What’s so frightening about that?”
Morning Bites: Matthew Cheney’s Playlist, Penguin Cafe Returns, César Aira’s Latest, and More
In our morning reading: a playlist from Matthew Cheney, writing by Ann Beattie, and more.
Morning Bites: Matthew Cheney’s Latest, Interviewing Marlon James, Jim Ruland on John Wray, and More
In our morning reading: reviews of books by Matthew Cheney and John Wray, an interview with Marlon James, and more.
Afternoon Bites: Yaa Gyasi Interviewed, Justin Torres Nonfiction, Janice Lee on Fritters, Karen Russell, and More
In our afternoon reading: interviews with Yaa Gyasi and Karen Russell, nonfiction from Justin Torres and Janice Lee, and much more.