Christopher Higgs

http://www.christopherhiggs.org/

Christopher Higgs recommends Tierra Whack's WHACK WORLD, Otomo Yoshihide's ANODE, Marlon James's BLACK LEOPARD, RED WOLF, and a lunch of cucumber, tomato, red onion, feta, olive oil, lemon juice, salt and pepper.

The Best Music Books?


Last month I initiated a discussion about film books.  Now I’m wondering about music books.  Following the template of the question from last time:

Which are the most inspirational five books about music ever written?

Here are my four — sadly, the scope of music books I’ve read and really enjoyed is so limited I haven’t got five that I can think of — so I’m super thrilled to get recommendations from you:

Michael Nyman – Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond
Alex Ross – The Rest is Noise
Paul D. Miller, ed. – Sound Unbound
Jerry Hopkins and Danny Sugerman – No One Here Gets Out Alive

Music / 187 Comments
August 18th, 2010 / 12:18 am

Alber, Mike. The Baby Jar (a graphic novel in bi-weekly installments)

Mike Alber is large, he contains multitudes. He is also the proud owner of a case of Crystal Pepsi from 1994. A recent graduate of Ohio State’s MFA in fiction writing, Mike has come to L.A. to sell out to the film and television industry. Also, a warning to the ladies: Mike Alber will knock you up as quick as look at you. Those who aren’t on Nuva-Ring are recommended not to make direct eye contact with the screen, instead viewing the novel through a hole punched in a shoe box.

Read now, exclusively on Hippopants

Author Spotlight / 8 Comments
August 16th, 2010 / 11:27 am

Some Stuff

Seems like someone said something somewhere about 3D books happening in about 3 years…well, it looks like these “Between Page & Screen” folks have got it going on right now!!

Have you ever checked out textsound: an online publication of sound? Their mission: “Our mission is to bring together a range of experimental soundworks from the U.S. and abroad.”

According to some dubious organization called Online PhD Programs, here are The Top Literary Studies Blogs of 2010

You gotta check out the Philoctetes Center: The Multidisciplinary Study of Imagination, which has nearly 200 videos spanning all kinds of interesting things…

Here’s one example:

“I’ll Go On: An Afternoon of Samuel Beckett”
Roundtable discussion with
Edward Albee, Tom Bishop, Alvin Epstein, Lois Oppenheim, and John Turturro

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5UF2-2kqaw&feature=channel

Roundup / 4 Comments
August 11th, 2010 / 12:01 pm

Young, Joseph. NAME: a vampire novel (2010)

Joseph Young says, “I began writing NAME, my vampire novel, on July 7, 2010 and completed the first draft on August 7, 2010. It is 20 chapters and 125 pages. I wrote NAME to pay my rent.”

John Dermot Woods is doing the cover art!

Here’s an excerpt:

He stood for just a moment, contemplating the thing that was coming. He didn’t have to do it, didn’t have to come to the girl in the red bikini and call to her. He didn’t have to listen to the voice inside her head, sounding so much like the slosh of the sea, like the spitting of blood in her throat, the inside voice that would tell him her name.

As he approached, her pink toes curled into the wet sand, he trained his mind to hers, narrowing his attention to dive below the surface of her dampened hair, into the twirled sea of her thought. He slipped into her mind like a man dropping into a nighttime wave, soundless and effortless, looking for a pearl tumbled in dark water. He swam there for only a moment, grasping the dark and shining word, Jennifer, before coming to the surface with it: Jennifer.

As he came near her, her arms settled loosely across her bikini top, he called that name. “Jennifer,” he said, waving. “Hello.”

The girl, her red bikini flashing in the dark, her hair tumbled in a curl of waves above her eyes, turned toward him. Her own name in the throat of a strange boy didn’t startle her. She opened, arms falling away from her chest, the now unprotected skin of her belly, her throat.

To preorder NAME, please make a donation of at least $10.00

Web Hype / 23 Comments
August 10th, 2010 / 1:21 pm

Lutz, Gary.

Look
what
is
finally
getting
reprinted
!!!

Web Hype / 21 Comments
August 9th, 2010 / 5:47 pm

Behind the Scenes & HTMLGIANT Features

Some Thoughts On Book Reviews


Today I have been thinking about book reviews as tentacles of the book being reviewed, as an extension of the book, an addition to it. Like a book is a blog post and a review is the comment stream. Each blog post shares a symbiotic (parasitic?) relationship with its comment stream – unless, of course, you disable the comment stream, in which case you disallow the formation of direct extensions — of course someone could always do their own blog post linking to your post thereby forming an extension at their own site. In a way, thinking this way calls into question the notion of authorial sovereignty, which is to say: according to an older type of model, I write a book and therefore I am the author and I control the object — whereas in a newer type of model, if I write a book (or a blog post) the reviews (or the comment stream) can easily overtake the book (blog post) thereby pushing my role into the background and replacing it with whatever creation those extraneous appendages (comment streams) create, which is to say that my authority over the text gets taken out of my hands. But that’s not really where I want to go with this post. I don’t want to argue that a book review can somehow surpass the book being reviewed, because the whole reason I got on this mental pathway is because I have recently read a few book reviews that I thought were stand out pieces of literature in their own right – not better than the work being reviewed, but on par with it, as if the review was in some ways a productive extension of the book, a part of the book written by someone else…

READ MORE >

77 Comments
August 6th, 2010 / 4:25 pm

12 Books Officially Dropping in the Fall, Eagerly Anticipated By Me

Alissa Nutting – Unclean Stories of Women and Girls (Starcherone)

Christian Hawkey – Ventrakl (Ugly Duckling Presse)

Steve Katz – Time’s Wallet (Counterpath Press)

Scott Snyder & Stephen King – American Vampire (Vertigo)

Matt Bell – How They Were Found (Keyhole)

Eileen Myles – Inferno (a poet’s novel) (O/R Books)

Yasushi Inoue – Tun-Huang (NYRB)

Mike Young — Look! Look! Feathers (Word Riot)

Patrick Somerville — The Universe in Miniature in Miniature (Featherproof)

Suzanne Buchan — The Quay Brothers: Into a Metaphysical Playroom (University of Minnesota Press)

Sam Pink – Person (Lazy Fascist Press)

The Complete Works of Marvin K. Mooney (Sator Press), which, if purchased in the month of August, will come with a personalized, hand-written prose explosion from Marvin K. Mooney himself

Uncategorized / 17 Comments
August 4th, 2010 / 10:31 pm

Shipley, Gary J. Theoretical Animals. (2010)

Was I able to understand this book? – No.

Did I think it was an enriching reading experience? – Yes, absolutely. It’s beautiful. I want to roll around in it. I want to swing from its branches.

— from David F. Hoenigman’s review in 3AM Magazine

Available now from BlazeVox

Author News / 15 Comments
August 2nd, 2010 / 12:23 pm

Doxsee, Julie. Objects for a Fog Death. (2010)

Objects for a Fog Death is a series of odes to images and objects, and to the “you” responsible for distancing these images and objects from mortal relationships. With this distance comes a profound desire and a heightening awareness of earthly proximity. Through the accompanying hypnagogic verses, oceans quiet the voice while disorientation hurls it into a temporary place—hovering overhead or shying away in the murk. Is a river an object? Is fog an object? Or for that matter, is fog a place? Behind this book lies a call for rescue from confinement and immobility, from the ineffability of touch. Out of this fog springs forth the coeval shriek of something that will not be reduced to love. Available now from Black Ocean.

Samples after the jump…

READ MORE >

Uncategorized / 13 Comments
July 29th, 2010 / 2:38 pm


Have you been reading Kate Zambreno’s selections this month over at Everyday Genius? Fuck-an-A, they’ve been great! All women and all language badassery!  I mean, I’m accustomed to EG consistently bringing the awesome, but I think July has been my most favorite month so far. Highlights: Rebecca Loudon, Vanessa Place, Danielle Dutton, Janice Lee, but seriously, all month it has been one great piece after another. You should check out the backlog. Good job Kate. Good job Adam.

Uncategorized / 20 Comments
July 28th, 2010 / 7:04 pm