Spencer Dew's Songs of Insurgency
Reviewed by Benjamin Buchholz
"As a reader you might choose to enjoy scenes of violence that read like retellings of violence, vicarious experience layered on vicarious experience. If so, read Tom Clancy. But, in Songs of Insurgency, little episodes of fantasy and horror, of real life excess layered over academia, capture the numbing cycle of repeated media immersion, this perpetuation of a mythology of cleanliness in war (and in life generally) that most have never experienced but often considered, seen on CNN, on the front pages of Newsweek, embroidered in our collective American unconsciousness and embedded in our language . . ." [READ MORE]
Ken Rumble's Key Bridge
Reviewed by Joseph Harrington
"It’s like a guidebook to Washington written by Robbe-Grillet. D.C. is “the center”; there’s an important city of some sort, but there’s no there there – and Rumble knows it, even if the talking heads don’t. . . . Race, class, “current events,” and history are always present in Key Bridge, just offstage – which, in fact, is often how they function for upper-middle-class white people, for whom “the police are an island/ you can choose not to visit.” [READ MORE]
“I am old and I leave my keys in the refrigerator. I look out the window at
the moon and imagine that we’ve never been there. Not a single, damned one
of us.”
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Happy Happy Rock day! Happy Rock is a book of stories by Matthew Simmons,
seen at left wearing a shirt that’s about Michigan or something. If you
have ever...






