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Pif Magazine
ISSN: 1094-2726

Pif Magazine
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PAST REVIEWS MORE REVIEWS

Mary Jo Bang’s poem, "Ham Paints a Picture…" (Ploughshares)

Ian McEwan reads (in RealAudio) the first chapter of Enduring Love (Bold Type)

Tom Drury’s short story, "Lyris" (Atlantic Unbound)

Dorothy Parker’s poem, "Theory" (The Love Blender)

Joy Harjo’s essay, "The Flying Man" (Zyzzyva)





Here’s a short list of what I consider to be the best e-books, hypertexts, and print books expected to be released by publishers in the spring and summer months of 2000. Please keep in mind that book release dates are nebulous. These books may already be on bookstore shelves, or they may not be out until November. Enjoy!

Banks, Russell: The Angel on the Roof : The Stories of Russell Banks (Harpercollins). Listen to an interview concerning his novel, Cloudsplitter.

Bender, Aimee: An Invisible Sign of My Own (Doubleday). Author’s first novel after her widely acclaimed debut collection of short stories, The Girl in the Flammable Skirt. Read her interview on Pif.

Bennett, Barbara: Understanding Jill McCorkle (Univ of South Carolina Press). Promises to be an insightful critical study of this Southerner’s fiction.

Dove, Rita (Ed.) and David Lehman (Series Ed.): The Best American Poetry 2000 (Scribner). A "truly memorable anthology." –Chicago Tribune

Earley, Tony: Jim the Boy (Little Brown and Co.). From the author of Here We Are in Paradise: Stories comes a debut novel that "shines with all we’ve come to expect from his fine stories: graceful prose, gentle wit, compassionate spirit. This novel beautifully captures those moments in childhood that will shape and forever call back to Jim the man. I don’t know when I’ve met such an endearing cast of characters. May they live a long, long life." – Jill McCorkle

Grossman, David and Laurie Bauman Arnold: Freddi Fish the Big Froople Match (Humongous Entertainment). This small children’s book is a must have for all Grossman fans. It is one of six books to be published together by these authors.

Johnson, Denis: The Name of the World (Harpercollins). Read the first chapter of his last novel, Already Dead: A California Gothic (must apply for FREE membership at NYT to enter their site).

Lessing, Doris: Ben, in the World : The Sequel to The Fifth Child (Harpercollins). Her earlier novel, The Fifth Child, was called "a horror story of maternity and the nightmare of social collapse . . . a moral fable of the genre that includes Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and George Orwell’s 1984" (NYT).

Rucker, Rudy: Gnarl! (Four Walls Eight Windows). These science fiction stories blend Kafka-esque humor, a little auto-biography, and cutting edge yet perverse physics.

Ruppersburg, Hugh M. (ed.) and Tim Engles (ed.): Critical Essays on Don Delillo (Critical Essays on American Literature). I haven’t read this one yet, but this collection of interpretative and critical essays is expected to be outstanding.

Saunders, George: Pastoralia (Riverhead Books). My favorite stories since Julia Slavin’s debut. Saunders’ second collection uses a seemingly unreal, futuristic world to explore the emotions and dilemmas of the real. With a humorous, straight-on voice like no other author, he warms us to indecisive, eccentric losers.


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Camille Renshaw is the Editor-in-Chief for Pif Magazine.

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