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"The Believer"'s mission is to introduce readers to the best and
most interesting work in the world of art, culture, and
thought--whether that means literature, painting, wrestling,
philosophy, or cooking--in an attractive vehicle that's free from
the bugbears of condescension, mustiness, and jargony obfuscation.
Its content (including essays, interviews, comics, poetry, and
reviews) offers fresh perspectives from editors Heidi Julavits,
Vendela Vida, and Andrew Leland. Each issue includes the popular
columns "Stuff I've Been Reading," by Nick Hornby; "What the Swedes
Read" (a look at Nobel Prize-winners), by Daniel Handler; and "Real
Life Rock Top 10," by Greil Marcus. The July/August Music Issue
includes a free CD of new music curated for the magazine, the
March/April Film Issue includes a free DVD of otherwise unreleased
films, and the November/December Art Issue includes a free,
always-changing bonus item.
The "Believer" is a monthly magazine where length is no object.
There are book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and that
are very often long. There are also interviews that are very long.
We will focus on writers and books we like. We will give people and
books the benefit of the doubt. The working title of this magazine
was "The Optimist."
The Believer, a five-time National Magazine Award finalist, is a
bimonthly literature, arts, and culture magazine. In each issue,
readers will find journalism and essays that are frequently very
long, book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and interviews
that are intimate, frank, and also very long. There are intricate
illustrations by Tony Millionaire and a rotating cast of guest
artists, poems, a comics section, and regular columns by Nick
Hornby and Daniel Handler.In The Believer's fall issue, Pablo Calvi
reports on an oil pipeline that threatens Ecuadorian indigenous
populations, Alex Mar has tea with the Church of Satan's high
priest, Daniel Werb discusses harm reduction in Tijuana, and Esme
Weijun Wang explores living with schizophrenia. Other essays focus
on the anarchist who's quietly fanning the flames of our country's
insurrectionary movements and the irresistibly gothic family whose
middle son is the inspiration behind Bolano's mad-genius poet in
2666. There are poems by Kay Ryan and Kathleen Ossip, in-depth
interviews with Megan Rapinoe, Michael Schur, Jerry Stahl, Sheila
Nevins, Ronald Cotton, and Miranda July, and a special section on
the theme of silence with work by Diane Cook, Sara Novic, Stephen
Burt, Rachel Z. Arndt, Matthew Zapruder, and JW McCormack.
The Believer's mission is to introduce readers to the best and most
interesting work in the world of art, culture, and thought--whether
that means literature, painting, wrestling, philosophy, or
cooking--in an attractive vehicle that's free from the bugbears of
condescension, mustiness, and jargony obfuscation. Its content
(including essays, interviews, comics, poetry, and reviews) offers
fresh perspectives from editors Heidi Julavits, Vendela Vida, and
Andrew Leland. Each issue includes the popular columns Stuff I've
Been Reading, by Nick Hornby; What the Swedes Read (a look at Nobel
Prize-winners), by Daniel Handler; and Real Life Rock Top 10, by
Greil Marcus. The July/August Music Issue includes a free CD of new
music curated for the magazine, the March/April Film Issue includes
a free DVD of otherwise unreleased films, and the November/December
Art Issue includes a free, always-changing bonus item.
The Believer is a monthly magazine where length is no object. There
are book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and that are very
often long. There are also interviews that are very long. We will
focus on writers and books we like. We will give people and books
the benefit of the doubt. The working title of this magazine was
The Optimist. --The Editors
|
Believer Issue 143 - Fall 2023
Daniel Gumbiner; Contributions by Vendela Vida, Heidi Julavits, Ed Park
|
R369
R300
Discovery Miles 3 000
Save R69 (19%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
'An absolute stunner: frank, funny, self-aware, constantly
surprising ... One of the most insightful representations I've read
of what it feels like to be alive these days' GEORGE SAUNDERS
________________________ One day Heidi Julavits sees her son
silhouetted by the sun and notices he is at the threshold of what
she calls "the end times of childhood." When did this happen, she
asks herself. Who is my son becoming-and what qualifies me to be
his guide? What follows starts to feel like uncharted waters. Rape
allegations rock the university campus where she teaches,
unleashing questions of justice and accountability. Julavits begins
to wonder how to prepare her son to be the best possible citizen of
the world he's about to enter. And what must she learn about
herself in order to responsibly steer him. Looking back to her own
childhood in Maine, where she often navigated the coastline in a
small boat relying on a decades-old sailing guide, Julavits takes
us on an intellectual navigation of the self. Throughout, she
intertwines her internal investigation with a wide-ranging
exploration of what it means to raise a child in a time full of
contradictions and moral complexity. Using the past and present as
points of orientation, Directions to Myself examines the messy
minutiae of contemporary family life alongside knottier
philosophical questions of politics and gender. Through it all,
Julavits discovers the beauty and the danger of telling stories as
a way to locate ourselves, and help others find us. Intimate,
rigorous, and refreshingly unsentimental about motherhood and
parenting, Directions to Myself is a love letter to Maine and a
reckoning with the disappearance of childhood-her children's and
her own-that cements Julavits' reputation as one of the most
engaged and innovative nonfiction writers today whose work has been
called "fascinating" (Washington Post), "scathingly funny" (Los
Angeles Times), and "exquisite" (New York Times).
The "Believer"'s mission is to introduce readers to the best and
most interesting work in the world of art, culture, and
thought--whether that means literature, painting, wrestling,
philosophy, or cooking--in an attractive vehicle that's free from
the bugbears of condescension, mustiness, and jargony obfuscation.
Its content (including essays, interviews, comics, poetry, and
reviews) offers fresh perspectives from editors Heidi Julavits,
Vendela Vida, and Andrew Leland. Each issue includes the popular
columns "Stuff I've Been Reading," by Nick Hornby; "What the Swedes
Read" (a look at Nobel Prize-winners), by Daniel Handler; and "Real
Life Rock Top 10," by Greil Marcus. The July/August Music Issue
includes a free CD of new music curated for the magazine, the
March/April Film Issue includes a free DVD of otherwise unreleased
films, and the November/December Art Issue includes a free,
always-changing bonus item.
The "Believer" is a monthly magazine where length is no object.
There are book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and that
are very often long. There are also interviews that are very long.
We will focus on writers and books we like. We will give people and
books the benefit of the doubt. The working title of this magazine
was "The Optimist." --The Editors
"The Believer" is a monthly magazine where length is no object. It
features long articles, interviews, and book reviews, as well as
poems, comics, and a two-page vertically-oriented Schema spread,
more or less unreproduceable on the web. The common thread in all
these facets is that the "Believer" gives people and books the
benefit of the doubt (the working title of this magazine was the
"Optimist").
On each issue, Charles Burns's beautiful illustrations adorn the
cover; our regular raft of writers, artists, and photographers fill
the pages; and the feel of the Westcan Printing Group's gorgeous
"Roland Enviro 100 Natural" recycled acid-free heavy stock paper
warms your heart.
"The Believer" is a monthly magazine where length is no object. It
features long articles, interviews, and book reviews, as well as
poems, comics, and a two-page vertically-oriented Schema spread,
more or less unreproduceable on the web. The common thread in all
these facets is that The Believer gives people and books the
benefit of the doubt (the working title of this magazine was The
Optimist).
On each issue, Charles Burns's beautiful illustrations adorn the
cover; our regular raft of writers, artists, and photographers fill
the pages; and the feel of the Westcan Printing Group's gorgeous
"Roland Enviro 100 Natural" recycled acid-free heavy stock paper
warms your heart.
The Believer is a monthly magazine where length is no object. It
features long articles, interviews, and book reviews, as well as
poems, comics, and a two-page vertically-oriented Schema spread,
more or less unreproduceable on the web. The common thread in all
these facets is that The Believer gives people and books the
benefit of the doubt (the working title of this magazine was The
Optimist). On each issue, Charles Burns's beautiful illustrations
adorn the cover; our regular raft of writers, artists, and
photographers fill the pages; and the feel of the Westcan Printing
Group's gorgeous "Roland Enviro 100 Natural" recycled acid-free
heavy stock paper warms your heart.
Each issue of "The Believer" includes essays on pop culture,
politics, art, and music, as well as lengthy interviews with
philosophers, politicians, and poets. Nick Hornby has a widely
celebrated monthly books column, and Amy Sedaris (and well-known
guest-columnists) offers an advice column comprised of hilariously
bad advice. The celebrated graphic novelist Charles Burns
illustrates the cover each month, and the magazine is littered with
illustrations by a wide range of established and emerging artists,
with regulars like Tony Millionaire, Marcel Dzama, and others.
The Believer is a monthly magazine where length is no object. It
features long articles, interviews, and book reviews, as well as
poems, comics, and a two-page vertically-oriented Schema spread,
more or less unreproduceable on the web. The common thread in all
these facets is that The Believer gives people and books the
benefit of the doubt (the working title of this magazine was The
Optimist). On each issue, Charles Burns's beautiful illustrations
adorn the cover; our regular raft of writers, artists, and
photographers fill the pages; and the feel of the Westcan Printing
Group's gorgeous "Roland Enviro 100 Natural" recycled acid-free
heavy stock paper warms your heart.
From acclaimed novelist and editor of "The Believer" Heidi
Julavits, comes a wildly imaginative novel about grief, female
rivalry, and the furious power of a daughter's love.
Julia Severn is a talented student at an elite institute for
psychics. When Julia's mentor, the legendary Madame Ackerman, grows
jealous of her protegee's talents, she subjects Julia to the
painful humiliation of reliving her mother's suicide . . . and then
launches a desperate psychic attack.
But Julia's gifts, though a threat to her teacher, prove an asset
to others. Soon she's recruited to track down a missing person who
might have a connection to her mother. As Julia sifts through
ghosts and astral clues, everything she thought she knew about her
mother is called into question, and she discovers that her ability
to know the minds of others--including her own--goes far deeper
than she ever imagined.
The Believer's mission is to introduce readers to the best and most
interesting work in the world of art, culture, and thought-whether
that means literature, painting, wrestling, philosophy, or
cooking-in an attractive vehicle that's free from the bugbears of
condescension, mustiness, and jargony obfuscation. Its content
(including essays, interviews, comics, poetry, and reviews) offers
fresh perspectives from editors Heidi Julavits, Vendela Vida, and
Andrew Leland. Each issue includes the popular columns "Stuff I've
Been Reading," by Nick Hornby; "What the Swedes Read" (a look at
Nobel Prize-winners), by Daniel Handler; and "Real Life Rock Top
10," by Greil Marcus. The July/August Music Issue includes a free
CD of new music curated for the magazine, the March/April Film
Issue includes a free DVD of otherwise unreleased films, and the
November/December Art Issue includes a free, always-changing bonus
item. The Believer is a monthly magazine where length is no object.
There are book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and that
are very often long. There are also interviews that are very long.
We will focus on writers and books we like. We will give people and
books the benefit of the doubt. The working title of this magazine
was The Optimist. --The Editors
Does Alice really hate her sister, or is that love? Was she really
enrolled in grad school, or was that an elaborate hoax? Is this
really a hijacking, or is it merely the effect of living backwards?
Following her acclaimed debut, "The Mineral Palace," Heidi
Julavits presents a quirky, compelling new novel about two sisters,
a bizarre event, and the elusive nature of truth.
'An absolute stunner: frank, funny, self-aware, constantly
surprising ... One of the most insightful representations I've read
of what it feels like to be alive these days' GEORGE SAUNDERS
________________________ One day Heidi Julavits sees her son
silhouetted by the sun and notices he is at the threshold of what
she calls "the end times of childhood." When did this happen, she
asks herself. Who is my son becoming-and what qualifies me to be
his guide? What follows starts to feel like uncharted waters. Rape
allegations rock the university campus where she teaches,
unleashing questions of justice and accountability. Julavits begins
to wonder how to prepare her son to be the best possible citizen of
the world he's about to enter. And what must she learn about
herself in order to responsibly steer him. Looking back to her own
childhood in Maine, where she often navigated the coastline in a
small boat relying on a decades-old sailing guide, Julavits takes
us on an intellectual navigation of the self. Throughout, she
intertwines her internal investigation with a wide-ranging
exploration of what it means to raise a child in a time full of
contradictions and moral complexity. Using the past and present as
points of orientation, Directions to Myself examines the messy
minutiae of contemporary family life alongside knottier
philosophical questions of politics and gender. Through it all,
Julavits discovers the beauty and the danger of telling stories as
a way to locate ourselves, and help others find us. Intimate,
rigorous, and refreshingly unsentimental about motherhood and
parenting, Directions to Myself is a love letter to Maine and a
reckoning with the disappearance of childhood-her children's and
her own-that cements Julavits' reputation as one of the most
engaged and innovative nonfiction writers today whose work has been
called "fascinating" (Washington Post), "scathingly funny" (Los
Angeles Times), and "exquisite" (New York Times).
The Believer, a five-time National Magazine Award finalist, is a
bimonthly literature, arts, and culture magazine. In each issue,
readers will find journalism and essays that are frequently very
long, book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and interviews
that are intimate, frank, and also very long. There are intricate
illustrations by Tony Millionaire and a rotating cast of guest
artists, poems, and regular columns by Nick Hornby and Daniel
Handler. The annual Music Issue features Karen Tongson on her
namesake, Karen Carpenter, and how the particular whiteness of the
Carpenters' sound took off in the Philippines; Michael Snyder on a
territory in northeast India in which contemporary Christian gospel
is effecting near-total cultural assimilation; Phillip Pantuso on
Guyanese songbird smugglers; Stephanie Elizondo Griest on dancers
who place art above everything else in their lives; and Sandi
Rankaduwa on the evolution of female emcees. There will also be
(among other things) a special section on unreliable songwriters; a
visual examination of Italo Disco's map to humanity's apotheosis
via glitter and robot sex; and interviews with Enya, the LA Phil's
Deborah Borda, punk bassist Mike Watt, rapper and producer Lil B,
and legendary rock muse Bebe Buell.
The Believer's mission is to introduce readers to the best and most
interesting work in the world of art, culture, and thought whether
that means literature, painting, wrestling, philosophy, or cooking
in an attractive vehicle that's free from the bugbears of
condescension, mustiness, and jargony obfuscation. Its content
(including essays, interviews, comics, poetry, and reviews) offers
fresh perspectives from editors Heidi Julavits, Vendela Vida, and
Karolina Waclawiak. Each issue includes the popular columns "Stuff
I've Been Reading," by Nick Hornby and "What the Swedes Read" (a
look at Nobel Prize-winners), by Daniel HandlerThe Summer Issue
features new work by Nell Zink, Alvaro Enrigue, and Gary Greenberg;
interviews with Robert Coover, Amber Tamblyn, and the New York
Public Library's Paul Holdengraber; and new poetry by Rae
Armantrout. Also in these pages, and among many other delights,
you'll find a special section on the theme of wildlife, essays on
the man after whom Jim Jones patterned himself and what it's like
to be named after a sibling who died before you were born,
examinations of the work of the artists Ray Johnson and Jimmy
Robert, and the editors' short lists for the eleventh annual
Believer Book Award and the fifth annual Believer Poetry
Award.Table of Contents:Pockets of Resistance Catherine FoulkrodHow
to Send Things to Germany Nell ZinkThe Divine Inspiration of Jim
Jones Adam Morris"Abstract Expressionism": a new poem Andrew
NurkinThe Confidence Man Gary Greenberg"Shooting Possums from the
Back Porch of Roger's Bar": a new poem Michael McGriffWhat's in a
Necronym? Jeannie VanascoA Common Language Kristina
ShevoryDescending Night Elisabeth Donnelly(Untitled) Mary
Mann"Comics" edited by Alvin BuenaventuraEl Vocho: A Familiar
Subject Alvaro EnrigueWhat the Swedes Read Daniel HandlerThe
Eleventh Annual Believer Book Award: Short ListRobert Coover
interviewed by Aaron Shulman"Canary": a new poem Rae
ArmantroutSchema: Top 100 US Drug Brand Names Shoshana AkabasThe
Fifth Annual Believer Poetry Award: Short ListPaul Holdengraber
interviewed by Lane KoivuJimmy Robert interviewed by Jude
StewartSymposium: A discussion on (mostly) books as they relate to
the theme of wildlife.Tim Sheedy on the orangutan, Donna Kozloskie
on the rising floodwaters, Megan Pugh on a poetic doomsday
prophecy, Monica Westin on vegetal being, and Bijan Stephen on
spillover.Elizabeth LeCompte interviewed by Hillar LiitojaAmber
Tamblyn interviewed by Rachel MatlowCharles Yu interviewed by Lev
Grossman
|
The Art Issue (Paperback)
Heidi Julavits, Andrew Leland, Vendela Vida
|
R293
Discovery Miles 2 930
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
The Believer's mission is to introduce readers to the best and most
interesting work in the world of art, culture, and thought--whether
that means literature, painting, wrestling, philosophy, or
cooking--in an attractive vehicle that's free from the bugbears of
condescension, mustiness, and jargony obfuscation. Its content
(including essays, interviews, comics, poetry, and reviews) offers
fresh perspectives from editors Heidi Julavits, Vendela Vida, and
Andrew Leland. Each issue includes the popular columns Stuff I've
Been Reading, by Nick Hornby; What the Swedes Read (a look at Nobel
Prize-winners), by Daniel Handler; and Real Life Rock Top 10, by
Greil Marcus. The July/August Music Issue includes a free CD of new
music curated for the magazine, the March/April Film Issue includes
a free DVD of otherwise unreleased films, and the November/December
Art Issue includes a free, always-changing bonus item.
The Believer is a monthly magazine where length is no object. There
are book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and that are very
often long. There are also interviews that are very long. We will
focus on writers and books we like. We will give people and books
the benefit of the doubt. The working title of this magazine was
The Optimist. --The Editors
The "Believer"'s mission is to introduce readers to the best and
most interesting work in the world of art, culture, and
thought--whether that means literature, painting, wrestling,
philosophy, or cooking--in an attractive vehicle that's free from
the bugbears of condescension, mustiness, and jargony obfuscation.
Its content (including essays, interviews, comics, poetry, and
reviews) offers fresh perspectives from editors Heidi Julavits,
Vendela Vida, and Andrew Leland. Each issue includes the popular
columns "Stuff I've Been Reading," by Nick Hornby; "What the Swedes
Read" (a look at Nobel Prize-winners), by Daniel Handler; and "Real
Life Rock Top 10," by Greil Marcus. The July/August Music Issue
includes a free CD of new music curated for the magazine, the
March/April Film Issue includes a free DVD of otherwise unreleased
films, and the November/December Art Issue includes a free,
always-changing bonus item.
The "Believer" is a monthly magazine where length is no object.
There are book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and that
are very often long. There are also interviews that are very long.
We will focus on writers and books we like. We will give people and
books the benefit of the doubt. The working title of this magazine
was "The Optimist." --The Editors
The Believer is a monthly magazine where length is no object. It
features long articles, interviews, and book reviews, as well as
poems, comics, and a two-page vertically-oriented Schema spread,
more or less unreproduceable on the web. The common thread in all
these facets is that the Believer gives people and books the
benefit of the doubt (the working title of this magazine was the
Optimist).
On each issue, Charles Burns's beautiful illustrations adorn the
cover; our regular raft of writers, artists, and photographers fill
the pages; and the feel of the Westcan Printing Group's gorgeous
Roland Enviro 100 Natural recycled acid-free heavy stock paper
warms your heart.
|
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