- Publisher:Beaux arts magazine
- Location:Paris
- Subject:Art, modern
- Publication Date:2002
- Illustrations:Yes
- Pages:240 p.
What is art today ? Qu’est-ce que l’art aujourd’hui ? (livre bilingue) – $345
Surfer’s Journal Vol. 17 #6 – $250
First Person: Donald Takayama, By Scott Hulet, Remember the Future, By Richard Kenvin, B-Roll, Greg Weaver Photography 1969-1971, As Told to Scott Hulet, Turning Faroese, Story and Photos by Yassine Ouhilal, Nature Boys, By Tommy Leitch, More Side Orders, By Kimo Hollinger, Anchored, An Intergenerational Surf Trip, Photography by Jeff Hornbaker Volume 17 NO. 6 – Winter ’08
Surfer’s Journal Vol.12 #4 – $250
A Semi Search for Nowness: Ceylon, Paris, and Morocco by Thomas Campbell and Dan Malloy, Call Them All: Data Gathering for Surfing’s Ultimate Encyclopedia by Nathan Myers, The Camel Concept by Yasha Hetzel, 25 Years Past Deadline by Kevin Naughton, Same Old Glimpse of Paradise: Bali Expat Tim Watts by Leonard Lueras, All Access: Joel Tudor and Michael Halsband’s Surf Book by Scott Hulet, Complementary Lines: The Beachfront Sculptures of Andy Neumann by Craig Angell. Plus… Velzyland beatdowns, Salvadoran orphans, a photo portfolio from the 20-somethings, an inside look at the Greenmount Superbank.Volume 12 NO. 4 – Fall ’03
NEW LEFT REVIEW 56. OBAMA EN MANASSAS – $145
Witness – Modern Writer as Witness – $275
Published by the Black Mountain Institute. 2007
Fiction
Alan Cheuse, Ben in Amboy
Halina Duraj, Terrible Driver
Atar Hadari, The Flute
R. Jess Lavolette, Yasukuni Incident
Jim Meirose, The Good Mother
Carrie Messenger, In the Pines
Matthew Modica, Road Through Erlemagh
Paula Morris, Red Christmas
Josip Novakovich, Dutch Treat
Jess Row, The World in Flames
Robert Wexelblatt, Steppe Story
Evan Morgan Williams, Tumble Me Like a Shell in Shallow Waves
Poetry
Sally Ball, For Doctor Joshua Sonett / Eight- to Twelve-Hour Surgery
Aaron Bannister, Position / Crabs
Marina Colasanti, Afternoon in an Empty House
Eduardo Chirinos, Poet’s House
Linda Nemec Foster, Tableaux: Poland
Shmuel HaNagid, Prayer on the Battlefield / In the Cup Are My Portions
Emmy Hunter, The Moment of Exchange / Continually Approaching Mount Fuji / Bangkok
Christina Hutchins, Die Rote Jacke / From the Hold
Karen Kevorkian, Put Down That Heavy Kettle / The One-Windowed Room
Ko Un, An Outcry
Dana Levin, Sun Sutra
Ngo Tu Lap, Darkness
Eric Pankey, Trace / Blackbirds, Crows, Grackles, and Ravens
Lee Felice Pinkas, Constitution
Lia Purpura, from King Baby
Reginald Shepherd, And This She Knows / Narcissus Before the Rain
Dawn Tefft, In the House of the House of Miniatures
Lesley Wheeler, Horror Stories
Jerry Williams, Love and Oncology
Nonfiction
Tim Bascom, Community College
Kathleen Zamboni McCormick, Holy Cards
Circumference Poetry in Translation – $175
- Publisher: Circumference (2008)
Bombay Gin 35:1 – $230
- Publisher: The Naropa Press (February 1, 2009)
Granta 90: Country Life – $175
One of the world’s oppositions used to be: rus versus urbs, country v town, ale v claret, fields v houses, nature v artifice, starlight v lamplight. But does that division still persist? Does the truly rural still exist? This issue of Granta has dispatches from the greenery. Country life: dispatches from what’s left of it. Featuring Robert Macfarlane, Barry Lopez and Kathleen Jamie, with fiction from Richard Powers and
In this issue
Ian Jack: Motley Notes
Craig Taylor: Return to Akenfield
Richard Powers: The Seventh Event
Barry Lopez: Waiting for Salmon
Kathleen Jamie: Airds Moss
Tim Adams: Fantastic Mr Fox
Matthew Reisz: When Grandmama Was Young
Doris Lessing: The Death of a Chair
Robert Gumpert: Blight
Liz Jobey: Showtime
Helen Simpson: Constitutional
Robert Macfarlane: Nightwalking
Jeremy Seabrook: The End of the Provinces
Studs Terkel: Pounding a Nail
.
Granta 91: Wish You Were Here – $195
This issue of Granta includes Simon Gray in Barbados, rocking in his pram, smoking, remembering Alan Bates; Saïd Sayrafiezadeh on his father’s irritating dreams of human perfection; Ismail Kadaré at the Great Wall of China (and Life); plus bulletins on our changing climate.
In this issue
Ian Jack: Motley Notes
Simon Gray: Wish You Were Here
Saïd Sayrafiezadeh: When Skateboards Will Be Free
Karen E. Bender: The Visiting Child
Robin Grierson: Family Pictures
Simon Garfield: The Error World
Ismail Kadaré: The Great Wall
Geoff Dyer: White Sands
Frederick Tuten: The Ship at Anchor
Plus: The Weather Where We Are
Margaret Atwood, John Borneman, Urvashi Butalia, James Hamilton-Paterson, Maarten ’t Hart, Thomas Keneally, James Lasdun, Javier Reverte and Rodrigo Rey Rosa
Granta 92: The View from Africa – $195
Africa is too large and diverse for generalizations. It has fifty-four nations, five time zones, at least seven climates, more than 800 million people and, according to the latest diligent research, maybe fourteen million proverbs. South Africa and Burkina Faso have as much in common as Spain and Uzbekistan. And yet people do generalize; Africa has become the continent of moral concern. This issue of Granta contains fresh voices from Africa, in all their differences, as well as memoir and reportage which reflect the past and present of its people.
In this issue
John Ryle: Introduction: The Many Voices of Africa
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: The Master
Moses Isegawa: The War of the Ears
Kwame Dawes: Passport Control
Segun Afolabi: Gifted
Binyavanga Wainaina: How to write about Africa
Geert van Kesteren: The Ogiek
Ivan Vladislavic: Joburg
Adewale Maja-Pearce: Legacies
Nadine Gordimer: Beethoven Was One Sixteenth Black
Helon Habila: The Witch’s Dog
Daniel Bergner: Policeman to the World
Santu Mofokeng: The Black Albums
Lindsey Hilsum: We Love China
John Biguenet: Antediluvian










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