“I wrote 63 songs this year. They’re all about Jeter.” Just kidding. The game we love, the players we hate, and more.
From Norman Mailer to Wendy Pepper — everything on film, TV, books, music, and snacks (shut up, raisins), plus the Girls’ Bike Club.
Helping public schools, winning prizes, sending a crazy lady in a tomato costume out in public.
Monologues, travelogues, fiction, and fart humor. And hens. Don’t forget the hens.
The Tomato Nation advice column addresses your questions on etiquette, grammar, romance, and pet misbehavior. Ask The Readers about books or fashion today!
The prose is a little bit clumsy, but if you like media studies, it’s a fab read in an election year. Grab a copy if you can. My newest favorite political joke: “I’d …
The editor made a big thing out of not including “The Necklace,” which I think is a mistake; it’s probably his strongest story. These are good, but it took me a while to get …
Hilaaaaaarious. A group of people sitting around making catty comments about various movies is sometimes hard to translate to the page, but Hensley does a great job with it. His friend Tony and …
Read it in one day. It’s sort of a Sedaris/Mary Karr hybrid, but that’s not a bad thing, and it’s not derivative, I didn’t think, although it might seem like I thought that. …
Probably the best written of the S.E. Hintons, but with the least likable characters. Rusty-James is a straight-up jackass.
It’s a bit dry sometimes, but totally worth grinding through the slower spots, because it gives you a really good sense of the world at that time and the background on certain Big Moments In …
A very quick read. The writing is somewhat uneven in terms of the diction, because Stacy Horn goes back and forth between kind of parroting tough detective-speak and writing more formally and deeply about …
I’m glad it was short, because after a while, that affected Southern Gothic business gets to be a bit much. McCullers is a good writer, but does every character have to be fucked up …
It could have used tighter editing in several spots, but it’s very funny.
The authorial editorializing bugged me, right up until the end; DiLorenzo’s tendency to clutch his pearls dilutes his arguments. I will admit that I don’t particularly want to believe any of the evidence against …