Chicago's clean, well-lighted place for writers ... The suicide of Thomas Disch has been widely noted already ... Authors are treated as rock stars at a Brazilian festival ... James Bond's irreconciliable differences ... Following on the heels of her cover review in the Times, L.A. author Rachel Kushner's Telex from Cuba is also reviewed in the Chronicle ... Laura Miller looks at Barack Obama's "taste for serious fiction" (although her notion that its "rare in the American male these days" doesn't hold up - it's pretty damn rare everywhere) ... Apropos the Booker of Booker business, Neel Mukherjee rolls his eyes at listmania ... Apparently, Richard Ford is actually a really good guy because he cried over Hurricane Katrina ... FOTEV Antoine Wilson gives Nam Le's The Boat a smart and enthusiastic reading ... The real crisis in book reviewing has to do with the fact that editors continue to publish efforts like this one ... By the time the AP gets on the story, all you can do is start measuring for coffins, but they've noted the foreclosure problems facing the great homes of American writers ... Pen pals for 57 years; you've gotta admire the OCD ... Alistair McCartney gets the latest Critical Mass Small Press Spotlight ... It appears we are dumber than a bag of rocks, and the reason? The internet, of course ... Deborah Eisenberg reviews TEV favorite Peter Nadas in the NYRB ... And, finally, a furious Maitresse is preparing her defense of Paris from the slings and arrows of Dinaw Mengestu. On attend.
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