Right behind the return of Swink, the gang at n+1 is out with their sophomore issue. According to editor Keith Gessen, copies can be found locally at Skylight Books in Los Feliz, and Dutton's in Brentwood, as well as in Barnes and Noble, pretty much everywhere.
And, in news of interest to local n+1 readers, Gessen goes on to add that the issue contains at least one "bona fide masterpiece weighing in at 20,000 words ... called Babel in California, about Isaac Babel and the conference on him last year at Stanford, and the academic industry surrounding him. There's also a very strong piece, "Recent Trends in Network Comedy," by a comedy writer who lives in LA. n+1 has gone Californian, in short."
Welcome to the Golden State, boys. We've been waiting for you. Watch this space for further n+1 goodies in the weeks ahead, including a long-promised and equally long-deferred 3MI with editor Marco Roth ...
Good to see the second n + 1 is finally out there. I went looking for it last week to no avail, but I guess I'll go looking again.
Posted by: Scott | March 30, 2005 at 08:31 AM
Don’t forget the web archive featuring (among others) Ben Kunkel on Susan Sontag, Christian Lorentzen on Wes Anderson and Woody Allen, Marco Roth on Derrida, Mark Greif on the tattoo and the myth of wildness, Emily Votruba’s “Is Anal Sex Fair To Women?” and a cryptogram by Robert Coover.
Yours
J. D. Daniels
http://www.nplusonemag.com/bang.html
Posted by: J. D. Daniels | March 30, 2005 at 10:36 AM
Scott, you may find interest in the essay on literary readings given your recent comments on "branding" authors:
"The author's pysical existence in the mind of a reader is a sign of the writer's failure to do what writing propertly does, that is, to create a different world of appearances, one that makes this world so inferior that you don't want to recall yourself to it. You can measure the unsuccess of many a novel by the number of times you turn to the author photo in the back." (pg 10)
Posted by: tito | March 30, 2005 at 12:22 PM
groovy, this one's going on my blogroll.Not just because of the Votruba article either...
Posted by: genevieve | April 01, 2005 at 05:39 AM