Pete Lit

Literary pretendings, off-the-cuff insights and the occasional rant.

« One Book, One Chicago | Main | Olympics For Sale, Part 2 »

Truth


August 31, 2004 in Current Affairs | Permalink

Comments

Reading

  • Jane Addams: Twenty Years at Hull-House [BIO]

Listening

  • The Clean: "In the Dreamlife You Need a Rubber Soul" [BIO]

Writing

  • "Mahalia"
    (Midwestern Gothic)
  • "Tangled in Wishes"
    (Journal of Microliterature)
  • "The Last Final Copy"
    (On the Clock: Contemporary Short Stories of Work)
  • "Conned and Bruised"
    (A Twist of Noir)
  • "One Son Resists"
    (Green Lantern Press)
  • "Clean and Bright"
    (Joyland)
  • "Button"
    (Shoots and Vines)
  • "Alleys Are the Footnotes of the Avenues"
    (Shoots and Vines)
  • "Moonlight"
    (decomP)
  • "Quit These Hills"
    (Big Pulp)
  • "Mercy Day"
    (RAGAD)
  • "Deep in the Northwoods"
    (Wheelhouse Magazine)
  • "Howard Holds Court"
    (Birmingham Arts Journal)
  • "Waiting On a Train"
    (RAGAD)
  • "Power"
    (The Clarity of Night)
  • "Guaranteed"
    (Spillway Review)
  • "Big Question"
    (Boston Literary Magazine)
  • "This Time"
    (55 Words)
  • "Immortality"
    (THE2NDHAND)
  • "Freewheeling"
    (Dogmatika)
  • "The Fixer"
    (Gapers Block)
  • "Ralph's Last Call"
    (The Angler)
  • "Can't Be Happy Today, But Tomorrow"
    (Skive Magazine)
  • "Mighty Casey"
    (Zisk)
  • "Ectoplasm"
    (Storyglossia)
  • "Captions Without Photos"
    (Gapers Block)
  • "Blown"
    (Writer's Resource Center)
  • "Have A Pleasant Commute On Metra"
    (This is Grand)
  • "The Retreat"
    (monochrom)
  • Published Here:
    "The Copper Responds"
    "One Evening in St. Paul"
    "The Lovely Miss Underwood"
    "Insomnis"
    "We Do Not Approve"
    "The Ghoul's Evening Visit"
    Various Microfiction

More Me

  • Self-Deprecating Bio
  • Photo Gallery
  • Old Home Page
  • Email Me: pete_anderson [at] comcast [dot] net

My Women

  • Booga J Reads
  • Stamping Online
  • Homeschooling Maddie

Friendly Links

  • Brown Bear Software
  • Beth Janicek
  • Gapers Block
  • Bookslut
  • Maud Newton
  • Return of the Reluctant
  • Bookninja
  • Books for Breakfast
  • Ben Tanzer
  • Nick Ostdick
  • Richard Grayson
  • What To Wear During an Orange Alert?
  • Murmurings to the Masses
  • bighappyfunhouse.com
  • Fading Ad Campaign

Distant Worthies

  • Last Plane to Jakarta
  • Ben Katchor: Hotel & Farm
  • The Onion
  • Salon.com
  • Center for American Progress
  • MoveOn
  • Utne
  • The Nation
  • AlterNet
  • TomPaine.com
  • NewPages
  • Tom Tomorrow - This Modern World
  • Ted Rall - Political Cartoon

Web Ring

  • « chicago blogs »

Archives by Category

  • Books
  • Chicago Observations
  • Current Affairs
  • Fiction (my writings)
  • Memoir
  • Music
  • Personal
  • Photography
  • Zines

Archives by Month

  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011

Search Site

Google
Web
Pete Lit

Recent Reads

  • David A. Taylor: Soul of a People: The WPA Writers' Project Uncovers Depression America
    Great subject matter, less than great presentation.

  • Peter Orner: Esther Stories
    Solid story collection of lonely lives.

  • Jim Thompson: Savage Night
    A hitman's compelling tale and surreal fate.

  • Ben Katchor: The Cardboard Valise
    Weird and wonderful graphic novel from the best one going.

  • Aharon Appelfeld: The Iron Tracks
    Grim, joyless yet quietly powerful story of memory and revenge.

  • Sholom Aleichem: Selected Stories
    Delightful tales of Eastern European Jews of a now-distant yet vivid past.

  • Isaac Bashevis Singer and Richard Burgin: Conversations with Isaac Bashevis Singer
    Stimulating discussions on literature and humanity.

  • Bohumil Hrabal: Too Loud a Solitude
    Thoughtful, philosophical, funny and tragic novel about the power of the written word. Stunning.

  • Alan Heathcock: Volt
    Strong, sometimes brutally real collection of short stories set in small-town America.

  • Thomas Hardy: Jude the Obscure
    Love versus marriage, happiness versus obligation, scholarship versus real life.

  • Jason Fisk: Salt Creek Anthology
    Suburban story cycle of mostly empty lives.

  • Charles Dickens: Great Expectations
    Fine but overlong story of ambition, resignation and redemption.

  • Ben Tanzer: You Can Make Him Like You
    Funny, thoughtful novel of looming fatherhood.

  • Per Petterson: Out Stealing Horses
    Quietly intense, impeccably narrated, simply beautiful.

  • Nelson Algren: Nonconformity: Writing on Writing
    Passionate book-length essay on writing, artistic freedom and championing the downtrodden.

  • Sebastian Barry: The Secret Scripture
    Beautiful prose doesn't quite save the structural and narrative flaws of this otherwise promising novel.

  • Len O'Connor: A Reporter in Sweet Chicago
    Interesting memoir of the longtime Chicago journalist.

  • Scott Phillips: Rut
    Dysfunction and corruption reign in a forlorn Colorado town.

  • Stona Fitch: Senseless
    Tense, disturbing thriller of political extremism and one man's fight for survival.

  • Sinclair Lewis: Elmer Gantry
    Entertaining satire of religious ambition and hypocrisy - but more of a polemic than a novel.

  • Austin Kleon: Newspaper Blackout
    Innovative, fun collection of found poetry, all created by blacking out newspaper articles.

  • Jamie Iredell: Prose. Poems. A Novel
    Lyrical portrait of a dissolute life, glimmering slightly at the conclusion.

  • Corey Mesler: The Ballad of the Two Tom Mores
    Lust, murder and dark hilarity consume a fictional Arkansas town.

  • Mel Bosworth: Grease Stains, Kismet and Maternal Wisdom
    Boy meets girl, heartbreak unexpectedly does not prevail.

  • George Ade: In Babel: Stories of Chicago
    Wonderful collection of short stories, originally published as newspaper columns.

  • Ring Lardner: The Portable Ring Lardner
    Terrific collection of novellas, short stories and satirical essays.

  • Finley Peter Dunne: Mr. Dooley Remembers
    Fine collection of the final essays of the great humorist, along with twelve classic Mr. Dooley columns.

  • Andrew Ervin: Extraordinary Renditions
    Strong, sharply-written debut about three intersecting lives in Budapest.

  • Studs Terkel: Working
    Lively, compelling, indispensible oral history of Americans talking about their jobs.

  • O.E. Rölvaag: Giants in the Earth
    Magnificent epic of South Dakota pioneers.

  • Seamus Heaney (translator): Beowulf
    Modern, flowing verse interpretation of the great epic poem.

  • Walt Whitman: Leaves of Grass
    Whitman's love song to America, best enjoyed in small doses.

  • Stendhal: The Red and the Black
    Long, plodding disappointment.

  • Chinua Achebe: Things Fall Apart
    Good but less than essential novel of African tribal life, tradition versus modernity.

  • READINGS 2001-11



Add me to your TypePad People list
Syndicate this site (XML)
Powered by TypePad
Member since 07/2003