安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Biblioklept
I kinda sorta lost a big chunk of May this year, and some of the books that arrived at Biblioklept World Headquarters slipped through the cracks Here, the cliche slipped through the cracks means got piled up in the wrong pile Ainsley Morse’s and Geoff Cebula’s translation of Konstantin Vaginov’s Goat Song was one of these slipped-crack-wrong-pile titles
- About – Biblioklept
Biblioklept was founded in AD 2006 by Edwin Turner Reviews, rants, and riffs on books (and things that aren’t books) Interviews with authors, artists, filmmakers, publishers
- Read Gordon Lish’s Edit of Raymond Carver’s “What . . . - Biblioklept
Posted on March 2, 2011 March 1, 2011 by Biblioklept Boy oh boy this is great (yes, I am that kind of nerd) A few years ago The New Yorker published an early draft of Raymond Carver’s short story “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love,” which was originally titled “Beginners ”
- A Modern Euphemism Which Softens the Ugly Word Book-thief - Biblioklept
Biblioklept, a modern euphemism which softens the ugly word book-thief by shrouding it in the mystery of the Greek language So the French say, not voleur, but chipeiir de livres The true bibliomaniac cannot help feeling a tenderness for his pet fad, even when carried to regrettable excesses
- A few sentences on every Thomas Pynchon novel to date - Biblioklept
Today, 8 May 2021, is Thomas Ruggles Pynchon's 84th birthday Some of us nerds celebrate the work of one of the world's greatest living authors with something called Pynchon in Public Day In the past I've rounded up links to Pynchon stuff on Biblioklept and elsewhere Last year, that weird pandemic year, I finally finished…
- Joseph Heller’s Handwritten Outline for Catch-22 - Biblioklept
Biblioklept May 15, 2013 1:42 pm Reply I’ve read the first twenty pages of Good as Gold like maybe five times, and they seem promising, but I always get distracted by something else Like Like
- Huxley vs. Orwell: The Webcomic – Biblioklept
Stuart McMillen's webcomic adapts (and updates) Postman's famous book-length essay, Amusing Ourselves to Death, which argues that Aldous Huxley's vision of the future in Brave New World was ultimately more accurate than the one proposed by George Orwell in 1984 (Via)
- Biblioklept – Biblioklept
June 3, 2025 Biblioklept Leave a comment Ann Quin’s third novel Passages (1969) ostensibly tells the story of an unnamed woman and unnamed man traveling through an unnamed country in search of the woman’s brother, who may or may not be dead
|
|
|