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Salon Issue 27
August 5-16, 1996

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NEWSREAL:

Friday August 16, 1996: The Dole speech: What sold and what didn't. Daily Quote: Cutting to the bone.
Thursday August 15, 1996: Hispanic Republicans: Strangers in their own land. Daily quote: Jack Kemp's magic trick.
Wednesday August 14, 1996: Serious business: The GOP's hard-line agenda lives. Daily quotes: The politics of eating. Wedding bell blues.
Tuesday August 13, 1996: The Powell speech: Feat of clay. For sale: The GOP's shopping mall. Daily quote: Radical chic, 1996.
Monday August 12, 1996: The real power in the GOP (it's not Bob Dole).
Friday August 9, 1996: Mars mania: Kim Stanley Robinson on science fiction -- and fact.
Thursday August 8, 1996: Life on Mars? A lab rat's view.
Wednesday August 7, 1996: Top dog at U.C. Berkeley digs into the deep pockets of the Far East.
Tuesday August 6, 1996: Oregon's eco-militia holds off old-growth loggers.
Monday August 5, 1996: Stoned Again: The combative filmmaker takes on all comers.

MEDIA CIRCUS:

Friday August 16,1996: Pretty boys: How Hollywood media handles hunks.
Thursday August 15,1996: The Christian Coalition is right -- The press is biased.
Wednesday August 14,1996: Pratfall: Comedy Central's Al Franken flops in San Diego.
Tuesday August 13,1996: Dancing with the condoms on the GOP fringe.
Monday August 12,1996: Selling dirt: How advertisers learned from politicians.
Friday August 9,1996: High concept: Book publishers lure Tinseltown types.
Thursday August 8,1996: Gifts for the creep who has everything.
Wednesday August 7,1996:George magazine's first fabulous fashion foray!
Tuesday August 6,1996: NBC's Olympic coverage: a horrible vision of the future.
Monday August 5,1996: Right on: The Weekly Standard waves the neocon banner.

SNEAK PEEKS:

Friday August 16, 1996: The Gangster of Love By Jessica Hagedorn (Fiction)
Houghton Mifflin, reviewed by Stephanie Zacharek
Set in the music and art scenes of the 1970s, this follow-up to Hagedorn's acclaimed "Dogeaters" follows the emotional travails of three young artists.
Thursday August 15, 1996: Tasting Food, Tasting Freedom By Sidney W. Mintz (Nonfiction)
Beacon Press, reviewed by Courtney Weaver
An academic skillfully brings anthropology, semiotics, class and politics to bear on the question:Why do we eat what we eat?
Wednesday August 14, 1996: Acts of Revision By Martyn Bedford (Fiction)
Doubleday, reviewed by Dwight Garner
This first novel, set in the U.K., is a psychological thriller about schoolboy humiliation and long-simmering revenge.
Tuesday August 13, 1996: Portrait of My Body By Phillip Lopate (Nonfiction)
Anchor Books, reviewed by David Futrelle
A new collection of essays from the author of "Against Joie de Vivre," on subjects ranging from broken relationships to "shushing" people in theaters.
Monday August 12, 1996: Into the Great Wide Open By Kevin Canty (Fiction)
Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, reviewed by James Marcus
While writing a history of the future, a surprisingly sophisticated teenage boy comes of age.
Friday August 9, 1996: The Devil Problem (and Other True Stories) By David Remnick (Nonfiction)
Randon House, reviewed by Stephanie Zacharek
Essays on subjects ranging from dueling Shakespearian scholars to Michael Jordan, from the talented New Yorker staff writer.
Thursday August 8, 1996: My Favorite War By Christopher John Farley (Fiction)
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, reviewed by Charles Taylor
A picaresque first novel about the tribulations of a young black reporter, by a Time magazine music critic.
Wednesday August 7, 1996: Finding a Form By William H. Gass (Nonfiction)
Knopf, reviewed by Phil Leggiere
With rigor and biting wit, the novelist and essayist writes on Faulkner, Wittgenstein, Beckett and the failings of the Pulitzer Prize.
Tuesday August 6, 1996: Short Stories of Langston Hughes By Langston Hughes (Fiction)
Hill and Wang, reviewed by Maud Casey
Sharp and subtle stories -- many of them long out of print -- from the noted black poet and fiction writer.
Monday August 5, 1996: Sex and the City By Candace Bushnell (Nonfiction)
Grove/Atlantic, reviewed by Christine Muhlke
Essays on the mating and dating rituals of successful Manhattanites, culled from the author's column in The New York Observer.

TABLE TALK:

Who cares how celebrities vote?
Posts of the week.

SALON REGULARS:

Servant of the Bones Tour Diary By Anne Rice

The author dances to Elvis on the big bus as she visits small-town America..

The book tour begins with a gathering in a New Orleans church.

Swamp Fever By James Carville

It's the Soundbite, stupid: Like the Ten Commandments, a good soundbite goes a long way.

Strange bedfellows: Holy rollers and tax rebels will duke it out at the Republican National convention in San Diego. Place your bets on the outcome in Table Talk.

The Awful Truth By Cintra Wilson
Our columnist explains why Olympic women's gymnastics are worse than veal.

Word by Word By Anne Lamott
Taking her first baby steps to the Internet, our columnist lands in AOL Hell.

Unzipped By Courtney Weaver
Russian Roulette: Have we picked up the revolver again? Post your dispatches in the Unzipped topic in Table Talk.

Verbivore By Richard Lederer
Our word maven stalks his presidential obsessions in this new quiz. The first to submit the correct answers wins a $25 gift certificate to Borders Books & Music.

DEATH: A SALON SPECIAL ISSUE

Introduction By Gary Kamiya
In this realm, there are only personal stories.
Plus: A brief history of Western death.

The Italian way of death By Camille Paglia
Kissing the corpse's chilly forehead in a culture of fertility, destruction and rebirth.

Farewell, Lady Decca By Alexander Cockburn
A requiem for Jessica Mitford, who made muckraking the funeral industry look fun.

The Artful Suicide of Sally Binford By Susie Bright
Why did this brilliant, healthy and hedonistic anthropologist choose to take her own life at 69?

The Salon Interview: Irvin Yalom By Fred Branfman
The existential psychoanalyst and author of "Love's Executioner" discusses the benefits of staring death in the face.

Ashes to ashes, bits to bits By Scott Rosenberg
In the Web's tombstone gardens, even the dead can be flamed.

The Eastern way of death By Sophie Majeski
We may travel far seeking a better way to die, but sometimes the answer awaits us at home. Plus: the deathbed poems of Zen masters.

My last year is my best
Jackie McEntee says her life truly began when she learned she had three years to live. Join her in Table Talk to discuss her experience.

Choose death By Fred Branfman
Absurd. Horrible. Monstrous. And yet. . .

Imaginary endings: A Salon Gallery
Five Salon artists offer their vision of the final exit.

Death: A Reading List By The Editors
Our favorite books, plus songs, movies, poetry and more.

Post Mortem: Our new Table Talk section designated for discussions about death and dying.

MUSIC:

File under Tricky By Charles Taylor
An ominous beat and vague fantasies of utopia from trip-hop artist Tricky.

The charming oddball By Gavin McNett
Perfect pop songs from pervert-creepy, acid-damaged, hyperlucid eccentric Robyn Hitchcock.

COMICS:

Tom Tomorrow: This Modern World.
Carol Lay: Story Minute
Keith Knight: The K Chronicles
Ruben Bolling: Tom, The Dancing Bug



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