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Archive for March, 2003

Edgar Saltus’s Imperial Orgy
by Grandma  March 18, 2003 5:24 am (No Comments)

Edgar Saltus’s work has been described as that of a man consumed by a furious hunger – a veritable bulimia – for all experiences.

He wrote over thirty books, but you will no longer find any of them in bookshops. Nearly a hundred years ago he was a popular New York writer. Saltus wrote histories and novels. His novels were erotic, decadent and shocking. His histories, of which Imperial Orgy is one, were noted mostly for their use of imagination. …


Ecclesiastes, A Book in the Bible
by Billectric  March 16, 2003 6:49 am (2 Comments)

This article addresses the Bible as literature, not as a religious text. The story told in Ecclesiastes is attributed to Solomon, one of the Kings of Israel, a son of David. Whether or not it is literal or allegorical is no more or less important than knowing which characters in On The Road represent what real life people.

Not everyone who quotes the Bible is a conservative or evangelist. Hunter S. Thompson wrote “I have stolen more quotes and thoughts and purely elegant little …


Blyler, Kerouac, and Bohemian Roads
by muse_maiden  March 12, 2003 12:47 pm (No Comments)

In 1957 Gilbert Millstein wrote his now famous review of Jack Kerouac’s On The Road: “… its publication is an historic occasion in so far as exposure of an authentic work of art is of any great moment in an age in which the attention is fragmented and the sensibilities are blunted by the superlatives of fashion (multiplied a millionfold by the speed and pound of communication).”

As far as book reviews go, it may be the most famous first paragraph of all time, …


The Last Beat Writer Gets Published
by Tom Lipsett  March 9, 2003 5:39 pm (No Comments)

I mean, I certainly spent my formative years drinking with the Beats in San Francisco in the late fifties and early sixties. I even did the bars one night with Jack when he came back for a visit. I was there the famous night Allen Ginsberg read HOWL for the first time. My main writer friend in those days was Richard Brautigan. Even our wives and babies were friends, as documented by Ianthe Brautigan in her recent book …


A Story Without a Moral, A Day in Dust
by Levi Asher  March 7, 2003 10:32 am (No Comments)

I don’t know why it has taken me a year and a half to write this account of how I spent the day of September 11, 2001. And I don’t know why I finally decided to write it down today. But here it is:

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A STORY WITHOUT A MORAL, A DAY IN DUST

For months before September 11, 2001, the date had already been a significant one for me. This was the projected release date for Bob Dylan’s new album, …