Once a year, the LA Weekly puts together its WLS - Weekly Literary Supplement (would that it were weekly!) - and they usually do quite a fine job, making up for piss-poor literary coverage the rest of the year.
This year's issue focuses on first fiction, including, but not limited to:
... novels, short fiction and memoirs by an array of new authors, from the Nigerian-born Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, whose Purple Hibiscus has been shortlisted for Britain's prestigious Orange Award, to Marc Bojanowski and his existential potboiler The Dog Fighter.John Powers traces the evolution of the writer from first work to masterwork, exploring the nature of the literary beast and examining the struggles of those who seek to tame it.
Noted author Jeffrey Eugenides (The Virgin Suicides and Middlesex) reflects on the power and poison of Oscar Wilde's first (and only) novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray, in a piece that serves as the introduction to the new Modern Library edition of the book.
Novelist Michelle Huneven talks with New York Times editor Luisita Lopez Torregrosa about her memoir, The Noise of Infinite Longing, a "gorgeously written" account of Torregrosa's life in Puerto Rico and beyond.
Jonathan Gold explains why we love to hate Plum Sykes, the Vogue writer whose slender first novel, Bergdorf Blondes, pulled in a $600,000-plus payday from Miramax Books.
I thought it was 4 times a year.
Posted by: ARC | May 27, 2004 at 12:09 PM
Hmm. You might well be right. (You usually are.) Maybe it just feels like once a year.
Posted by: TEV | May 27, 2004 at 01:38 PM