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Product Code: TB19
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The Believer November 2004
FULL TEXT The Lost Symphony by Paul Collins Virginius Dabney, Confederate veteran and postmodern novelist, wrote an unreadable masterpiece in 1886. I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say by Luc Sante Buddy Bolden is one the most important figures in the invention of jazz. One night in 1902, he also inadvertently invented funk. The Topography of the Familiar by Benjamin Lytal On Walter Abish, the avatar of literary constraints, topographical stereotypes, and that good old-fashioned German “meaty anger.” FULL TEXT Funworld by Kevin Moffett Locked behind a shoulder restraint and a lap bar among the smileologists and ho-clowns of America’s amusement parks. FULL TEXT Rose Levy Beranbaum interviewed by Ben Marcus The author of The Bread Bible brings science and taste together, then bakes them—but don’t ask her husband how it tastes. August Wilson interviewed by Miles Marshall Lewis The playwright discusses blues anthropology, Bill Cosby’s tirade, and growing up in a four-woman household. David O. Russell interviewed by Eric Spitznagel A reformed satirist and writer and director of I Heart Huckabees investigates consciousness, watermelon, and hypothetical advice from Hitler. Matmos interviewed by Daniel Handler Scoring pornography, taste-testing ice cream, and musique concrete on Leno with Björk’s sometime-backup band.
Blurbs for the Home and Workplace by Meghan Daum Tool: Retractable Dog Leash by Jeff Steinbrink Light: The Blinking 12:00 by Josh Greenberg Lucy Corin’s Everyday Psychokillers reviewed by Rachel Aviv Heather Lewis’s Notice reviewed by Stephen Elliott Amanda Eyre Ward’s How to Be Lost reviewed by Heather Birrell Ray Loriga’s Tokyo Doesn’t Love Us Anymore reviewed by J. M. Tyree Sándor Márai’s Casanova in Bolzano reviewed by Christopher Byrd Kate Atkinson’s Case Histories reviewed by John Glassie Stuff I’ve Been Reading by Nick Hornby Seksopolis by Milana Vukovi? Runji? Hard Rain: a new poem by Tony Hoagland Schema: The Heaven and Hell of Specialty Magazines by Kevin Moffett Four-Color Comics: “Around Our Country” by Michael Kupperman
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McSweeney's Quarterly Concern publishes on a roughly quarterly schedule, and we try to make each issue very different from the last. One issue came in a box, one was Icelandic, and one looks like a pile of mail. In all, we give you groundbreaking fiction and much more. |
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The Believer is a monthly magazine where length is no object. There are book reviews that are not necessarily timely, and that are very often very long. There are interviews that are also very long. The Believer is printed in four colors on heavy stock paper. |
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Wholphin is a quarterly DVD magazine featuring short films, documentaries, animation, and instructional videos that have not, for whatever reason, found wide release. Recent issues of Wholphin have included films by Spike Jonze, David O. Russell, Miranda July, Miguel Arteta, Errol Morris, and Steven Soderbergh, and performances from John C. Reilly, Selma Blair, Patton Oswalt, Andy Richter, a monkey-faced eel, and many others.
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For a reduced price subscribe to McSweeney's and Wholphin, to McSweeney's and the Believer, to the Believer and Wholphin, or — yes! — to McSweeney's, Wholphin, and the Believer. |
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It’s true. We hereby announce the debut of the Small Chair, a weekly selection from all branches of the McSweeney’s family. One week you might receive a story from the upcoming Quarterly, the next week an interview from the Believer, the next a short film from a future Wholphin. Occasionally, it might be a song, an art portfolio, who knows. $5.99 (or local equivalent) gets you the app plus six months of weekly excitement—a half-year of surprises, all delivered straight to your pocket.
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