Book City: Nicola Griffith doesn't see 'genre as an identity, but as a tool'
The UK-transplant is an award-winning author, but what does it take to get her to keep turning the pages?
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The UK-transplant is an award-winning author, but what does it take to get her to keep turning the pages?
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The best-selling author on his books, keeping other authors' voices out of his head and what he likes to read when he's not writing.
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The HistoryLink staff historian is consumed with the idea of time and how Piggle Wiggle creator Betty McDonald was so prolific.
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What the storyteller learned from tripping over journalistic rules. And what journalism could learn from his art.
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Woodland Park Zoo president Deborah Jensen's got a stack of books you should read on conservation and ecology.
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The journalist and author on the river and the writing.
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Author Lynda Mapes' new book isn't a story about dams or salmon. It's a love story to the river itself.
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The Richard Hugo House Executive Director has a taste for the lyrical. Her poetry picks and tips.
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The Earth Day founder and Bullitt Foundation president isn't just a voracious reader of environmental non-fiction. He's also an adventurer in the world of eye-opening fiction and poetic justice.
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Schools and workplaces are increasingly geared towards the chatty among us. Why Northwest parents and their kids should give more weight to silence.
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During WWII, Hirabayashi refused to obey curfew or evacuate to a Japanese internment camp. Before his death, he and his family compiled his memoirs in a new book.
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Candy-O at the Sunset, bacon oatmeal raisin cookie milkshakes, nuns, mimosas, Jack Nicholson and more
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Meet writer and artist Barbara Earl Thomas. In her house, furniture is made of books and poetry is as essential as breathing.
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Swedish pancakes, Bingo Karaoke, Salon of Shame and more. (Okay, bingo will run you $16.)
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As a new book documents, slavery, the underground railway and much more are part of the state's history.
READ MORE | 7 COMMENTSThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
From today on and throughout the summer, the Seattle Public Library combines two things Seattleites love in their new program: libraries and bikes.
Many, like Seattle's, now think of themselves as shells that can adapt rapidly to changing demands. Inspiring places to read books they are not so much anymore.
Prison gave her a lot of time to read. One book that influenced here was Marilynne Robinson's "Housekeeping," which taught her about loneliness and alienation.
"I find Gatsby aesthetically overrated, psychologically vacant, and morally complacent; I think we kid ourselves about the lessons it contains. None of this would matter much to me if Gatsby were not also sacrosanct."
How does she create such riveting books from such mundane frauds, trials and transcripts?
Thanks to the perils of the book publishing industry, the Review has very few ads. What can its life expectancy be?
Amazon's list puts Alexandria, Va, and Knoxville as the top two.
A reported $4 million advance produces a book with only a few tidbits of new information.
"While saying she was the victim of bias and mistreatment by Italian authorities, Ms. Knox also writes that her own mistakes contributed to her conviction."
Savage reviews, with barbs and some praise, a book by a gay journalist examining the way many churches deal with and ostracize gays.