Online Edition: Winter 2007/2008
This is the COMPLETE Winter 2007/2008 online edition of Rain Taxi.
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Interviews
—interviewed by Ryan Cox
Posted in our Second installment
—interviewed by Brian Whitener
Reviews
POETRY
Posted in our First Installment
Deed
Rod Smith
Smith’s Deed is the latest stop along the ongoing, expansionist railway of American innovative poetry. —reviewed by Noah Eli Gordon
It
Inger Christensen
This 1969 masterwork of experimental poetry by Danish poet Christensen depicts the beginning of life grown out of nothingness, an Oulipian kind of cosmology of life on earth. —reviewed by Douglas Messerli
Telegraph
Kaya Oakes
In her first book of poetry, Oakes details a transient and fervent existence, stemming from wayward road trips taken with her family as a child. —reviewed by Katie Fowley
Posted in our Second installment
sexoPUROsexoVELOZ and Septiembre
Dolores Dorantes
These two books combined in a bilingual edition continue Dorantes’s ongoing project of self-creation, conflating subject and object. —reviewed by Mark Tursi
Dog Girl
Heidi Lynn Staples
There is something of “Jabberwocky” in Staples’s second full collection of poetry, as she revels in homonyms and puns. —reviewed by Katie Fowley
The Burning Mirror
Kerry Shawn Keys
Keys’s art thrives on freedom of association, and this book is a fitting introduction to his work. —reviewed by Robert Murray Davis
FICTION
Posted in our First Installment
Song For Night
Chris Abani
Song for Night, Abani's powerful new novella, recounts a fifteen-year-old soldier’s voiceless journey through a hell-scape of war. —reviewed by Joel Turnipseed
Love Without
Jerry Stahl
Filled with seemingly cheap thrills that reveal unusual originality and depth, Jerry Stahl’s latest collection of short stories throws the reader into scenes of vulgar eroticism and vulnerable uncertainty. —reviewed by Anna Rockne
All Over
Roy Kesey
Dzanc Books launches their label with this debut collection of stories by a truly innovative and inventive new writer on the scene. —reviewed by Blake Butler
Dahlia Season
Myriam Gurba
Overflowing with teen angst, these fictions set in early ’90s Southern California explore the culture and desires of young Hispanic women. —reviewed by Jacklyn Attaway
Catholic Boys
Philip Cioffari
In his debut novel, Cioffari delves into a murder mystery involving a Catholic schoolboy and an intricate web of lies spun from some of the highest members of the church. —reviewed by Donald Lemke
Posted in our Second installment
Meyer
Stephen Dixon
Dixon’s latest novel chronicles the 68-year-old Meyer’s dissatisfaction with what he’s been writing and the ever-encroaching certainty of death. —reviewed by T.K. Dalton
Diary of a Bad Year
J.M. Coetzee
This nimble metafiction addresses the challenges an intellectual writer faces as he tries to convey his thoughts accurately. —reviewed by Spencer Dew
The Dog Said Bow-Wow
Michael Swanwick
Swanwick’s latest story collection shows off his impressive world-building skills and imaginative use of genre tropes. —reviewed by Kristin Livdahl
Soucouyant
David Chariandy
Subtitled “a novel of forgetting,” Chariandy’s first book is also a novel of remembering, as the narrator copes with his mother’s early-onset dementia.
—reviewed by Kristin Thiel
The New Space Opera
edited by Gardner Dozois and Jonathan Strahan
While not all the stories here glitter, those that do are worth the ticket to admission in this opera. —reviewed by Alan DeNiro
YOUNG ADULT FICTION
Posted in our Second installment
Unwind
Neal Shusterman
Shusterman imagines a near-future America after a Civil War that pitted pro-life and pro-choice factions, resulting in a horrific compromise with ramifications for disaffected youth. —reviewed by Kelly Everding
NONFICTION
Posted in our First Installment
The Neutral
Roland Barthes
In this transcription of a lecture course, Barthes brings forth the Neutral as that which “baffles the paradigm,” suspending the conflictual basis of discourse by outplaying the various binaries ordinarily imposed by language. —reviewed by Spencer Dew
9/11: The Culture of Commemoration
David Simpson
Simpson here explores the cultural matrix of sociological, juridical, and institutional segregation to examine the complex and paradoxical treatment of the events and images of September 11, 2001 and after. —reviewed by Brian Bergen-Aurand
Merton & Buddhism
Bonnie Bowman Thurston, editor
This collection of essays is a valuable contribution to Merton studies as it attempts to reconcile Merton’s fascination with Buddhism and his Christianity. —reviewed by Joel Weishaus
Beautiful Enemies
Andrew Epstein
Beautiful Enemies offers a study of friendship and postwar American poetry by focusing on three poets: Frank O’Hara, John Ashbery, and Amiri Baraka. —reviewed by Elizabeth Robinson
Vanishing America
James Conaway
Vanishing America laments the cancerous spread of development, of “nihilistic, temporarily enriching transformations” that destroy public land and wreck the cultural heritage of unique places. —reviewed by Spencer Dew
Posted in our Second installment
Hidden Dimensions
The Unification of Physics and Consciousness
B. Alan Wallace
As a physicist and Buddhist, Wallace reveals the importance of consciousness as an integral factor in the evolution and workings of our objective world. —reviewed by Kelly Everding
Foreskin’s Lament
Shalom Auslander
Frank, honest, and darkly humorous, Auslander’s memoir of escaping his Orthodox Jewish upbringing leaves no neuroses unturned. —reviewed by Jessica Bennett
Faint Praise
Gail Pool
Pool maps the decline of book reviewing in America and offers suggestions to enhance and improve the art of literary criticism. —reviewed by Marcus A. Banks
GRAPHIC NOVELS
Posted in our First Installment
The Arrival
Shaun Tan
In this stunning wordless graphic novel, a young man immigrates to a new and strange country to seek a better life for his family. —reviewed by David A. Berona
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier
Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill
Moore and O’Neill return to the extraordinary individuals whose adventures they chronicled in two previous graphic novels and expand their vision to encompass the whole history of their world. —reviewed by Rudi Dornemann
Posted in our Second installment
Therefore Repent!
Jim Munroe and Salgood Sam
In his first graphic novel, writer Jim Munroe tweaks one prominent strand of contemporary politico-religious imagination, following the story of the unfortunates who were left behind after the Rapture. —reviewed by Spencer Dew
Essex County Vol. 2: Ghost Stories
Jeff Lemire
The second volume in Lemire’s graphic novel trilogy is a moving study of isolation and regret, following the story of two brothers growing up in Essex County, Ontario. —reviewed by Donald Lemke
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Rain Taxi Online Edition, Winter 2007 | © Rain Taxi, Inc. 2007/2008
