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Book Features Archive

January 17, 2005
Teen Novelist: Amanda Marquit

To the litany of ever-younger literary phenoms you can now add Upper East Sider Amanda Marquit.

January 10, 2005
Old School

Louis Auchincloss is the last of the gentlemen novelists. What happens to a moral realist when the world alters around him?

January 3, 2005
New York Word: Dave King

The Ha-Ha has gotten the sort of shop-talk buzz and early reviews (“a writer to watch”) that tend to greet wunderkinds in their twenties.

December 13, 2004
Ask A Bookstore Owner

I’m sort of on a Murakami kick. I was thinking it would be great to set him up in a Ford Explorer and have him tour the highways and byways of America

December 6, 2004
Measuring The National Book Awards On The Gala-Meter

The National Book Awards, Vibe Awards, and Academy Awards fashion, controversy, and vibe compared.

December 6, 2004
Q&A with Gotham Scribes Pete Hamill and Tama Janowitz

Pete Hamill is a hard-boiled tabloidist turned sentimental novelist-historian; Tama Janowitz, who hung with Warhol and skewered the eighties art scene in Slaves of New York.

November 1, 2004
Kitty Kelly Answers the Critics

The Bush biographer defends "The Family: The Real Story Of The Bush Dynasty"

November 1, 2004
The Finalists

Yes, the five finalists in fiction for the National Book Awards seem a little obscure this year.

November 11, 1996
Meet Your Neighbor, Thomas Pynchon

While scholars speculated that he had lost his mind, or taken to the road, the world's most successful media fugitive, author of Gravity's Rainbow, and The Crying of Lot 49, has been living quietly among us. A literary investigation.

September 5, 1988
Slave of New York

Jay McInerney is back with another nightlife novel.

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