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Another fantastic Rumpus Comic from Anne Emond!
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We’d like to know the last book you loved and why. Send us a writeup of the last book you truly loved — a little bit book review and a lot about why you loved it — along with a short bio. We’ll publish our favorites in The Rumpus blog. No length requirements, but please refrain from reviewing books written by people you know.
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HORN! REVIEWS:
Treasure Island!!!
Kevin Thomas reviews the December Rumpus Book Club selection, Treasure Island!!!, Rumpus-Comics style.
Welcome to the known universe 26 new planets (it’s been a big week for outer space).
The New York Public Library is first in the field of 3D gif making.
The new Kazakhstan subway is the classiest subway system I’ve ever seen.
Mice are much better singers than previously assumed.
I hope you all stay warm this weekend. Perhaps inside an ice hotel.
Rumpus contributor Roxane Gay details the ins and outs of starting a micropress based on the lessons she’s learned starting Tiny Hardcore Press.
“You have to be prepared to hustle. You have to be willing to promote your book, and do readings, and plan your own events because there’s no support staff at the micropress to do it for you.”
Vice interviews author Edmund White. The conversation covers porn, the perfect man, “gay-lit,” and a lot more.
“No one tries to figure out how someone ended up straight, though it takes just as much explaining as being gay. All etiological arguments are reactionary from the start.”
At The Hairpin, Esther C. Werdiger’s story, “The League of Ordinary Ladies: Keep them Googling,” illustrates her sagas of winter in-bed working, the post office, and iphone google search history.
The LA Times‘ Jacket Copy on The Rumpus’s Letters In The Mail.
Thanks Jacket Copy. We love you back!
On Sunday we published “Ten Reasons Not to Sleep with a Poet,” but today poets are striking back in the comments section (led no doubt by our pals over at The Poetry Foundation) and vocally defending why you should bed a bard.
So, what do you think? Sex with sonnetists, or do you practice abstinence when it comes to odists? Click here to join the fun.
“I give as much attention to a letter as I do to anything I write.” – William S. Burroughs. (via Jesus Angel Garcia)
Mind blowing fact of the day: President John “the Tenth President” Tyler’s grandchildren are still alive!
You know what makes international diplomacy rules way more interesting? Outer space!
By the way, have you seen NASA’s new highest resolution ever picture of the Earth?
Behold the chemobile.
It it is time to find out what the rings of tree trunks sound like.
Two articles published here last Sunday have really active comments sections. Transformation and Transcendence: The Power of Female Friendship and Ten Reasons Not to Sleep with a Poet. Thanks to Gina Frangello, our new Sunday editor. Check them out!
This isn’t happiness highlighted yesterday’s FUNNY WOMEN #74: “My Debilitating Anxiety Decodes My Unread Work Emails.” We love you back!
Author Mary Robinette Kowal will launch The Month of Letters Challenge. Write a letter every day that the post office is open. Here’s where the idea came from:
Last September, I took a month off from the internet. During my vacation, I told people that they could correspond with me by paper letter. Some people did. Some people still are. Every letter delights me. (more)
(via Edward Champion)
I’ve been told that it’s harder to make friends once you are an adult because in order to be close to someone you have to be vulnerable.
I was told this as though it is impossible for mature adults to be vulnerable. We just don’t do that. It’s not allowed. And that really, truly, made me sad. The idea is that you have to put away your inner turmoiled feelings and keep them to yourself in order to be the right kind of person. That disturbs me. …more
In the dark streets of Lhasa two summers ago, I bought a bracelet stringed with smooth skulls and wear it now habitually. …more
California native Chelsea Wolfe has returned, after her first album, The Grime and the Glow, to the aural world with Ἀποκάλυψις, pronounced “Apokalypsis.” …more
Two decades have elapsed since I first experienced D.A. Pennebaker’s vérité film Town Bloody Hall, and it’s a little over forty years since the spectacular 1971 ‘dialogue on women’s liberation’ that it records was staged. I had a VHS tape of it that I wore out and lost somewhere between the end of my teens in England and becoming a middle-aged writer in America. …more
I had the pleasure of making Jon Adams’ acquaintance several years ago when we met through our mutual friend Ryan Montbleau. Soon after, Jon moved from Boston to San Francisco, and we maintained our friendship via mail. I was happy to get a chance to talk to him on the phone so we could discuss the ten year anniversary of his Truth Serum comic, Hitler, terrorism, and suicide. …more
I grew up poor. Not too poor. My relatives in the Philippines would certainly not consider my youth as poor. But poor like I thought vacuum cleaners were luxury items. I used to sweep the carpet. …more
Goldbarth still infuses his poems with an old-fashioned, childlike wonder at the marvels of our world, along with a bemused chuckle at the ways in which we so obviously fall short of our lofty goals. …more
Will Boast’s debut story collection, Power Ballads, is tied together by a compelling and evolving drummer named Tim, who will stay with you long after you finish the book. …more
The poems are themselves stealthy, hiding but then eventually revealing themselves to the writers. Or the stealth writers, both Seaton and Ace autonomous and authentic somewhere in that collaborative voice. …more
Outside my window in Chicago it is snowing. I am overlooking a back yard that looks like a New England forest. Pine trees and garden bridges, amber soil and dirty snow. Snow that only looks that way after a January rain. …more
When you send me an email, don’t think I don’t know what you’re really saying. …more
Since the early 1980’s, the 51 year old Scottish musician/writer/provocateur Nicholas Currie, better known as Momus, has been releasing music (his latest album, Hypnoprism, was his 18th) to varying levels of critical and commercial success. Since the 1990’s, he has been blogging in various forms, most notably on his old LiveJournal called Click Opera, which Warren Ellis called “probably the best-written blog on the Anglophone web” and of which novelist Dennis Cooper said, “It doesn’t get any better than Click Opera.” …more
TERMITES
★★★★★ (1 out of 5)
Hello, and welcome to my week-by-week review of everything in the world. Today I am reviewing termites. …more
When my memoir went out of print, it was as if someone had thrown a stray puppy onto my doorstep. Dazed, mangy, with a tendency to pee on the rug, this orphaned book was something I couldn’t shoo away, or worse, put down, but also something I didn’t have any room for in my life. …more

1. If he is Catholic he will feel guilty. If he is Protestant he will feel guilty for not feeling guilty. If he is Jewish he will call his mother from bed. …more
In 1997 I arrived in Geneva to work for a year at the headquarters of a relief organization. Feeling overwhelmed by my job and lonely in a city of overworked expats passing through for two to three year stints at the United Nations or other organizations with the rather nebulous goal of “changing the world,” I made friends with a group of women. …more
For an entire decade, between 1975 and 1985, Brian Eno could do no wrong. In fact, even for the four or five years before 1975 he could do no wrong. …more
Ode to the Painter Ross Watson
Don’t imagine me as the woman
who you replicated
from the Vermeer …more