What is it that’s “invisible” in Paul Auster’s latest novel? It’s not the truth. The truth is there… somewhere … though choosing it from all the various claims and denials batted around by three different narrators and one or two other characters might be an impossible task. Or maybe it’s…
Seeing Through Auster
Truth is veiled, if visible, in Paul Auster's latest novel.
January 30th, 2010 · No Comments
Tags: Book Reviews
Sad Song
Nick Hornby says we love music more than each other.
December 31st, 2009 · No Comments
Like much of Nick Hornby’s work, Juliet, Naked is not a book about love in the traditional sense. It’s a book for those of us who are obsessively in love with music, so much in love that it defines us when so little else does. We identify with someone’s art, and…
Tags: Book Reviews
Strip Mine
Panel by panel with Patricia Highsmith
December 24th, 2009 · No Comments
Jeanette Winterson‘s review in the New York Times of Joan Schenkar’s biography, The Talented Miss Highsmith: The Secret Life and Serious Art of Patricia Highsmith draws a connection between not only Highsmith’s plot sequencing and the six-panel comic but Highsmith’s–and her characters’–personalities as well. Highsmith, who died in 1995, wrote Strangers…
Tags: The Rabbit Rants
Ware’s Well
Circular design, reoccurring family history and melancholy moods define the latest work of cartoonist Chris Ware.
November 26th, 2009 · No Comments
It’s not too late to appreciate Chris Ware’s cover and story in The New Yorker‘s November 2 “Cartoon Issue.” Young trick-or-treaters stand at doorways, their faces hidden behind white masks, while their parents wait back on the sidewalk, their faces masked in illumination from their personal communication devices. What a great…
Tags: The Rabbit Rants
Duane Moore Rides Again
The hero of Larry McMurtry's The Last Picture Show returns to sex and Texas. This time, he's followed by a rhinoceros.
November 1st, 2009 · No Comments
When we last saw Duane Moore in Larry McMurtry’s 2007 novel When the Light Goes, he was a sixty-something malcontent who had just found age-old happiness with a much younger woman. When we first saw him back in 1966, in McMurtry’s The Last Picture Show, he was a sexually confused…
Tags: Book Reviews
Duane Drain
Larry McMurtry is no John Updike (as if you didn't know).
November 1st, 2009 · No Comments
Reading Rhino Ranch, the latest installment in Larry McMurtry’s on-going Duane Moore saga that began in 1966 with The Last Picture Show, was a bit of deja-vu all over again. The last three books of the series are of a sort. The town of Thalia is still dying. Sexual frustration continues…
Tags: Book Reviews · The Rabbit Rants
Hefner’s True Love
The Playboy Founder's Lifetime Affair With Jazz
October 24th, 2009 · No Comments
Hugh Hefner may have had dozens of girlfriends over his 83 years, but his life-long love is jazz. Hefner declared his undying devotion to swing and big band music when the Rabbit interviewed him in 2008 for an inside story, “Jazz Playboy Style.” With all the recent attention, good and…
Tags: The Rabbit Rants
Jung and Foolish
Carl Jung's 1957 text The Undiscovered Self speaks to today's mad politics.
September 19th, 2009 · No Comments
What would Carl Jung say about the current state of political discourse in America? The Rabbit’s been rereading the founder of analytical psychology’s The Undiscovered Self in preparation for Liber Novus, a “new” book which records Jung’s middle age conflict or, in pop-psychology parlance, mid-life crisis. Undiscovered is one of Jung’s most…
Tags: The Rabbit Rants · Uncategorized
Insider’s Take
Gregoire Bouillier's present is a product of his past
July 8th, 2009 · No Comments
The author of The Mystery Guest explains his strange conception, his twisted upbringing and how a glimpse of a friend’s naked mother, followed by a street riot, seems to repeat itself every time he falls in love.
Tags: Book Reviews
Generation Gap
In Jay McInerney's short stories, the 1980s never end.
July 8th, 2009 · No Comments
Said of the 1960s, it’s also true of the 1980s: If you remember them you weren’t there. Reasons to forget? You worked and partied too long and hard and did too many drugs to maintain the rigorous schedule. You’ve repressed the embarrassing struggle to appear above your socio-economic status. And…
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