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Description for The Believer, Issue 114
Paperback. Editor(s): Vida, Vendela; Julavits, Heidi; Waclawiak, Karolina; Leland, Andrew. Num Pages: 128 pages, illustrations. BIC Classification: AB; GBCS. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 254 x 216. .
The Believer, a five-time National Magazine Award finalist, is a bimonthly literature, arts, and culture magazine. In each issue, readers will find journalism and essays that are frequently very long, book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and interviews that are intimate, frank, and also very long. There are intricate illustrations by Tony Millionaire and a rotating cast of guest artists, poems, and regular columns by Nick Hornby and Daniel Handler. The annual Music Issue features Karen Tongson on her namesake, Karen Carpenter, and how the particular whiteness of the Carpenters' sound took off in the Philippines; Michael Snyder on a territory in northeast India in which contemporary Christian gospel is effecting near-total cultural assimilation; Phillip Pantuso on Guyanese songbird smugglers; Stephanie Elizondo Griest on dancers who place art above everything else in their lives; and Sandi Rankaduwa on the evolution of female emcees. There will also be (among other things) a special section on unreliable songwriters; a visual examination of Italo Disco's map to humanity's apotheosis via glitter and robot sex; and interviews with Enya, the LA Phil's Deborah Borda, punk bassist Mike Watt, rapper and producer Lil B, and legendary rock muse Bebe Buell.
Product Details
Publisher
McSweeney´s Publishing
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2017
Condition
New
Number of Pages
128
Place of Publication
San Francisco, United States
ISBN
9781940450629
SKU
V9781940450629
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-2
Reviews for The Believer, Issue 114
The Believer... puts out a welcome mat for pluralism and wide-eyed curiosity... decidedly youthful, not only in their characteristic generational concerns
the habit of nonchalantly blending pop culture, literary esoterica and academic theory, for instance, or the unnerving ability to appear at once mocking and sincere
but also in the sense of bravado and grievance that ripples through their pages.
New York Times It's got people talking in the lofty reaches of the book world, and
with its high-low mix of literary and pop-culture commentary and McSweeney's pedigree
it's a magnet for younger readers.
San Francisco Chronicle Focusing on the art, not the business, of writing, Believer is smart, jaded and a bit self-indulgent, just like a good literary magazine should be.
Chicago Tribune An impassioned and sometimes precious magazine that, with its retro typefaces and eccentric illustrations, seemed to revel self-consciously in its identity as printed matter.
Los Angeles Times Without a doubt, this Believer is heaven-sent.
Washington Post
the habit of nonchalantly blending pop culture, literary esoterica and academic theory, for instance, or the unnerving ability to appear at once mocking and sincere
but also in the sense of bravado and grievance that ripples through their pages.
New York Times It's got people talking in the lofty reaches of the book world, and
with its high-low mix of literary and pop-culture commentary and McSweeney's pedigree
it's a magnet for younger readers.
San Francisco Chronicle Focusing on the art, not the business, of writing, Believer is smart, jaded and a bit self-indulgent, just like a good literary magazine should be.
Chicago Tribune An impassioned and sometimes precious magazine that, with its retro typefaces and eccentric illustrations, seemed to revel self-consciously in its identity as printed matter.
Los Angeles Times Without a doubt, this Believer is heaven-sent.
Washington Post