Thanks to Michael Hayward who alerts us to the broadcast schedule for Sundance Channel's Portrait of a Bookstore as an Old Man, a look at Paris' legendary Shakespeare & Co.
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In his recent TEV guest review of Home Land, Jim Ruland called Sam Lipsyte the "funniest writer of his generation," and we're quite inclined to agree. We tore through Home Land in two joyful sittings and can't remember the last time we've laughed so hard. Lipsyte's constellation of oddly sympathetic losers is rendered with a sparkling, inspired prose style that's sent us off in search of all his prior work. In Lewis Miner's (a.k.a Teabag) woeful epistolary dispatches to his high school alumni newsletter ("I did not pan out."), we find an anti-hero for the age. Highly, highly recommended.
Not a great film, but the ending, when the owner shows how he cuts his hair by setting it on fire, should not be missed. You haven't seen anything this weird in quite a while, I'm sure
Posted by: Adam | October 18, 2005 at 07:28 AM
That's exactly what my own bookstore would look like...daydream...daydream...
Posted by: Pete | October 18, 2005 at 07:35 AM
Not to harp on my fetish, but check out those shelves. I see that picture and I think, yeah, that's how I'd like my house to look, provided I didn't want my wife to live in it, too.
Posted by: Tod Goldberg | October 18, 2005 at 01:03 PM