New York Journal of Books | Review of PROSPEROUS FRIENDS by Christine Schutt

0802120385.01._PC_SCLZZZZZZZ_“Ms. Schutt has a stark, scientific eye and an artist’s voice.”

In Prosperous Friends, Christine Schutt’s crafting of three parts minimalism and one part stream-of-consciousness with rigorous lyricism of voice results in not so much a love story as a dissection of the possibility of love.

It is the tragicomedy of Ned and Isabel Bourne and their many paramours in a new millennium setting with an Edith Wharton telling—a little hotter on the sex, but well within the boundaries of literary marriages artistically rendered.

Writers fresh out of graduate school, the Bournes travel to London, Rome, New York, and Maine, searching for some assurance of their artistic promises, emotional connections and sexual fulfillments. They explore new countries and friendships that complicate and ultimately derail the couple with debauchery and politeness—Madame Bovary on The Age of Innocence…. Read the full review at New York Journal of Books

 

OTL: Episode #269- Stories from a Chicago cab, YMTE podcast …

YMTEweb-194x300http://www.youmethemeverybody.com/category/ymte/feed/ – Google Blog Search

grab our rss feed Mike Stephen re-airs his conversation with a local cabbie/author, previews the YMTE podcast holiday recording party, and learns about the Chicago Loot Drop charity event. Dmitry Samarov� Chicago cabbie, artist, and author of Hack: Stories from a Chicago Cab. We hear about the observations and stories from Brandon Wetherbee- Host of the You, Me, Them, Everybody podcast. We check in with Brandon to see what’s up with his show and to

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OTL: Episode #269- Stories from a Chicago cab, YMTE podcast …

MMR Reviewed at NewPages

A big thank you to NewPages.com and Henry F. Tonn for reviewing MMR’s Winter Issue 2011. 

“This is a progressive journal that understands the advantages of being online, and offers the reader a number of options that are simply not available in the print format… One never knows what they are going to present each month, but that’s part of the fun…” (Read more here).

The review continues with positive focuses on Sara Amis’ “Sisyphus Explains” and Gabriel Valjan’s “La Santa Muerta,” the classics excerpt from Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, and an archival look at Gary Percesepe’s “On Stupidity.”


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