Animal Loneliness: An Interview With Norwegian Comics Star Jason
On waiting 10 years to be discovered, and what it means to make comics today. Plus an excerpt from Lost Cat.
On waiting 10 years to be discovered, and what it means to make comics today. Plus an excerpt from Lost Cat.
“A screaming GUACAMOLE IS AN EXTRA CHARGE comes across the sky.”
Welcome to burrito school.
Books > people.
Instead of all of the tears, you could have had… narco-terrorists! Spoiler alerts, obviously.
“Did you make this computer out of wood? Did you carve it?”
Because you’ll need to find some way to occupy your time on the beach. Also check out the must-have queer summer reads!
Take a peek at how mom and dad really feel.
And it looks AMAZING.
Doubleplusgood.
This post contains a graphic description of an existential crisis.
It takes all kinds.
Your new favorite Tumblr features contemporary writers sounding off on their “Literary Mothers.”
3… 2… 1…
Her work as a writer, critic, activist, thinker, and radical feminist spans decades, and now her best pieces are available in one must-read collection.
No, sadly it’s not a Pygmy Puff.
Spoiler: 64 years later, they’re still together and pretty happy about it.
A romantic drama about young cancer patients doesn’t seem like it would spur the same fanaticism as The Hunger Games, but The Fault in Our Stars — in particular, John Green, who wrote the YA best-seller — is proof that teenage feelings are special effects too.
Former school librarian A Case For Books asked students to write reviews. The results are adorable.
Gotta Catch-22 ‘em all.
Can you match the fake nation with the work of fiction it was featured in?
A guide to the best (and mostly free) places to channel some of the city’s greatest writers and celebrate their works.
Where words fail, ink speaks.
Peeves, gone but never forgotten.
Quoth the raven, “OI OI OI!”
Nicknamed “the Egghead and the Hourglass,” the iconic movie star and the playwright/author made a very unlikely pair.
Fall down the rabbit hole.
It’s a classic “who-read-it.”
“I’m drawn to stories that unfold as I look into them, and they are usually something I find in the margins of life rather than right in front of me.”