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T. Coraghessan Boyle, whose 1987 novel, World's End, won the PEN/Faulkner Award, is that happy anomaly: the respectable iconoclast.
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T. Coraghessan Boyle, whose 1987 novel, World's End, won the PEN/Faulkner Award, is that happy anomaly: the respectable iconoclast.
A poet finds solitude, wildlife, and inspiration at an artists colony in the California hills.
A poet laments the predominance of confessional poetry.
Writers need to think twice before using song lyrics and other copyrighted material in their works.
When, at the outset of his career, people told T. Coraghessan Boyle that he couldn't make a living as a writer, he said, "Maybe one person can, and I don't care about the rest—it'll be me."
Today our experience of the esthetic is changing, in ways that challenge poetry.
Wanted: poems, as song lyrics for high school choruses.
Two members of a writers' circle in Tulsa, Oklahoma, have started a small press to publish beautifully crafted books.
Is a subscribe-or-else virus creeping across the land?
Senator Jesse Helms sought to pass legislation to limit the authority of the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Under new legislation that limits National Endowment for the Arts funding, a ten-thousand-dollar grant for an exhibition about AIDS is recalled.
The town of Concord has approved the partial destruction of Thoreau's Walden Woods to make room for a housing development.
WritePro, developed by novelist and editor Sol Stein, teaches users how to write novel-length fiction.
Large advances for first literary novels are the start of a new trend.