Jonathon Keats is an artist and writer. His collection of fables, "The Book of the Unknown: Tales of the Thirty-Six," was published this year.

Jonathon Keats's Salon stories

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2009 03:20 PDT

Life is out of whack

It may drive ecologists crazy to talk about a balance in nature. But it's more necessary than ever
Wednesday, Dec 5, 2007 03:27 PST

Craig Venter is the future

The most groundbreaking science is being done outside academia and government. And the egomaniacal geneticist is leading the way.
Tuesday, Nov 20, 2007 04:42 PST

"Proust Was a Neuroscientist"

Did novelist George Eliot anticipate the ability of the brain to grow new cells? Did chef Auguste Escoffier foretell the science of the palate? Jonah Lehrer thinks so.
Thursday, Jun 16, 2005 08:28 PDT

Before Paris and Nicole

Buffalo Bill and Annie Oakley aren't just relics of the Wild West, argues "Lonesome Dove" author Larry McMurtry -- they're America's original celebrities.
Friday, May 30, 2003 12:00 PDT

The king's word

In "God's Secretaries," author Adam Nicolson tells how James I manipulated 48 translators to create the supreme achievement in the English language: The Bible.
Thursday, Nov 7, 2002 07:41 PST

"The Spinster and the Prophet" by A.B. McKillop

In the 1920s, judges ridiculed a Canadian woman who said H.G. Wells plagiarized her book, but a modern scholar finds her case convincing.
Wednesday, Sep 18, 2002 12:03 PDT

Not-so-sweet inspiration

In Francine Prose's new book "The Lives of the Muses," the woman who triumphs is the one who refuses to submit.
Monday, Aug 26, 2002 14:43 PDT

"You Send Me" by Patricia T. O'Conner & Stewart Kellerman

Two former New York Times editors explain how to express yourself correctly when writing online -- but why should we listen to them?
Wednesday, Aug 7, 2002 08:47 PDT

"After Shakespeare" by John Gross, ed.

Victor Hugo raised him in a séance, Voltaire ripped him off and Byron called him a vulgar dog. The world's great writers just can't leave Shakespeare alone.
Wednesday, May 29, 2002 07:41 PDT

The death of etiquette

For proof positive that "gracious living" is now extinct, look no further than the new revision of Amy Vanderbilt's classic guide.
Wednesday, Apr 17, 2002 12:47 PDT

Return to sender

A collection of letters to J.D. Salinger, many from well-known writers, shows how the author of "Catcher in the Rye" went from man to myth.
Wednesday, Apr 17, 2002 12:00 PDT

"Dracula's" secretary

The resurfaced manuscript of Bram Stoker's legendary vampire novel reminds us that even a hack can create an immortal tale.
Friday, Mar 1, 2002 12:33 PST

Death and the maiden

Far from an article of bondage, the corset has been an instrument of liberation.
Tuesday, Feb 12, 2002 12:38 PST

Straight from the heart

The greatest love letters of all time share some techniques with direct-mail advertising, but the letters had a higher success rate.
Thursday, Feb 7, 2002 13:11 PST

Apocalypse made easy

A top-secret U.S. government scenario for the aftermath of nuclear war reveals something truly scary -- cockeyed optimism.
Monday, Nov 26, 2001 12:32 PST

Who was Mona seducing?

What does this Renaissance temptress, seemingly impervious to changing taste, tell us about the enduring nature of our own desire?
Friday, Sep 28, 2001 12:12 PDT

The opposite of sex

Andy Warhol, ultimate icon of pop, made painting an orgy and pornography an art form. But you'll never guess what he did between the sheets.
Saturday, Aug 25, 2001 12:19 PDT

For the love of literature

Scott Fitzgerald stole Zelda's ideas, plagiarized her diaries and even pushed her into an affair. He was arguably the worst husband of his generation -- and that made him its best author.
Monday, Aug 28, 2000 12:17 PDT

War paint

Two recent books -- "The Femme's Guide to the Universe" and "On the Trail of the Women Warriors" -- explore femme fatales, latex, the invincibility of waterproof mascara and Amazons.
Thursday, Apr 6, 2000 09:00 PDT

In between life and death

The art of medical history shows the precarious position of physicians.
Saturday, Feb 12, 2000 09:00 PST

Placebo love

Valentine's Day is as romantic as a trip to the pharmacy.
Monday, Nov 29, 1999 09:00 PST

Second coming

With its hip new edition of the Good Book, Grove Press aims to save the Bible from the fundamentalists.
Wednesday, Nov 17, 1999 09:00 PST

The other woman

She is a narcissistic sex worker with no knowledge of true love.
Friday, Jul 2, 1999 09:00 PDT

Totally RIP-ed

The strange story of Lenin's embalmers and a collection of cheeky epitaphs suggest that the Reaper may not be so grim after all.
Friday, Dec 12, 1997 12:00 PST

I May Be Some Time: Ice and The English Imagination

Jonathon Keats reviews 'I May Be Some Time' by Francis Spufford

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