The Brooklyn Rail

Critical Perspectives on Art, Politics and Culture

JUN 2006

The Brooklyn Rail



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Books

Leisure Scoop

by Sabine Heinlein

Books

One of my more significant childhood experiences took place at a leisurely Sunday barbecue, when an employee of my father’s asked his infant: “What does daddy do at Mr. Heinlein’s company?”

Art and the Power of Placement

by Ben La Rocco

Books

In Art as Experience, John Dewey describes form in art as, “the operation of forces that carry the experience of an event, object, scene and situation to its own integral fulfillment.”

History: Death Be Not Proud

by Alexander Nazaryan

Books

Sometimes, a single event can define an entire era, drawing on disparate strands of history to tie them together in a single unforgettable knot.

Historical Fiction: Bridging the Dream

by Corrie Pikul

Books

Watching traffic zoom through the massive, gate-like pillars of the Brooklyn Bridge, it’s hard to believe that for much of New York’s history, this simple, solid landmark was considered a pipe dream, an impossible feat of engineering.

The First Hurt Lingers Long

by Caroline Seklir

Books

Kiss me and you will see how important I am. This Sylvia Plath line could easily be uttered by any of Rachel Sherman’s characters in her debut collection of short stories The First Hurt.

In Conversation

Ned Vizzini with David Varno

by David Varno

Books

Recently the Brooklyn Rail met with young-adult author Ned Vizzini in his childhood neighborhood of Park Slope to discuss, among other things, his third book, It’s Kind of a Funny Story, a novel that channels an autobiographical story of suicidal depression through a teenaged narrator.

Page Burners: Guilt-Free Summer Beach Reads

by Nona Willis-Aronowitz

Books

New York in the summer, with its viscous air and rushing crowds, is so unpleasant that when you finally make it to the beach, you need to make the most of it.

Still Believe In The Rainbow

by John Yau

Books

More than thirty years have passed between Bill Zavatsky’s first full-length book, Theories of Rain and Other Poems (1975) and his second full-length book, X Marks the Spot.

 

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