In our afternoon reading: interviews with Rachel B. Glaser and Stephen King, fiction from Sasha Fletcher, an excerpt from Victor LaValle’s new novella, and more.
Morning Bites: Ottessa Moshfegh, Stephen King’s Corgi, Mairead Case Nonfiction, Terry Riley Interviewed, and More
In our morning reading: Sarah Gerard interviewed Ottessa Moshfegh, Geeta Dayal interviewed Terry Riley, new writing from Mairead Case and Eleanor Kriseman, and more.
Afternoon Bites: Louisville Punk Flyers, Jeff VanderMeer and Vernon Reid, “Swan Feast” Reviewed, Postmodern Stephen King, and More
In our afternoon reading: notes on Louisville punk flyers, Jeff VanderMeer and Vernon Reid in conversation, a review of Natalie Eilbert’s new book, where Stephen King and Don DeLillo overlap, and more.
Afternoon Bites: Marlon James Interviewed, Cookie Mueller, Raymond Pettibon Baseball Cards, Will Oldham, and More
Checking in with Marlon James, thoughts on Will Oldham’s discography, a review of Martin Amis’s new novel, a new book about Cookie Mueller, and more.
Morning Bites: Slint Documentary, Remembering Peter Matthiessen, Patton Oswalt on Stephen King, Theremin Playlist, and More
A look at the Slint documentary, Jeff Jackson talks with Two Dollar Radio’s Eric Obenauf, a theremin playlist, notes on a lifetime of reading Stephen King’s fiction, and more.
Afternoon Bites: BKBF Recaps, Joshua Ferris Interviewed, “Doctor Sleep” Reviewed, Girl Trouble Reissued, and More
K Records makes with the postpunk reissues, Colin Dickey reports from the Arctic Circle, Kathryn Schulz on Stephen King’s latest (and horror fiction in general), and more.
Afternoon Bites: Larry David on “Clear History,” Neil Gaiman’s Video Game, “The Ice Storm” Architecture, and More
Why The Long Walk should be a movie, news of the video game that Neil Gaiman is creating, Larry David interviewed, Blake Butler meets the pretzel burger, and more.
Afternoon Bites: Cinematic John Banville, Dagmara Dominczyk, Art Train, Gerard Way Talks Comics, and More
Sequels to horror classics you probably won’t see, Gerard Way talks about his comics work, a John Banville novel is adapted for the screen, and much more.