Help keep Salon independent

Topic: Books (page 347)

"The Trouble With Normal": The right of gay men to screw around

Peter Kurth

Ivory Tower: Memories of an Aggie Bonfire boy

Dave Morris
Salon logo

Dear Mr. Blue: After 20 years of marriage, my husband told me he's bisexual

Garrison Keillor
Salon logo

Books log: Rwanda tale nabs British award for best first book

Matt Thorne

Blackballed: A white sports fan wrestles with racial taboos

Sallie Tisdale

Onion editor Scott Dikkers' "You Are Worthless" and "The Pretty Good Jim's Journal Treasury": Anti-humor with a touch

Emily Gordon
Salon logo

Galway Kinnell

"Eve: A Biography": A remarkable new look at the hussy who ruined our lives

Maria Russo
Salon logo

Book Bag: Claire Messud picks five pitch-black comedies

Claire Messud

Ivory Tower: Where Indian millionaires went to college

Alexander Salkever

Webmaster Borges: The wily Argentinian writer foresaw the Web

Douglas Wolk

Jacqueline Carey on mysteries: New novels ripped from the headlines

Jacqueline Carey
Salon logo

Diary of a Teacher's Last Year:

David Alford

"How Good Is David Mamet, Anyway?" And Diana Rigg? And Janet McTeer? A fearless theater critic tosses some firebombs

Andrew O'Hehir
Salon logo

Craig Offman

"The Walking Tour": A pulse-quickening collision between the pastoral and cyberspace

Virginia Heffernan

A good man is hard to write: Today's male novelists scramble after the real thing

Jonathan Miles

Ivory Tower: The dark truth about black schizophrenics

Annie Murphy Paul

Games people play: The gambling Barthelme brothers talk about their run-in with the law

Jim Hanas

"In Nevada," "24/7" and "Double Down": The harsh beauty of Nevada, the glitzy pleasures of Vegas and the thrill-ride of gambling

Jeff Stark
Salon logo

Books Log: At the Bad Sex Prize ceremony, London's literati get loose

Matt Thorne
Salon logo

Dear Mr. Blue: Am I still a good girl after my night of drunken debauchery?

Garrison Keillor

"The Unburied": Gruesome murder in a cathedral town

Adam Kirsch

Writer beware: Publishing that first novel often brings more terrors than thrills

Samantha Gillison
« Previous
Page: 347
Next »