The parts are better than the whole in Lethem’s textured if scattershot latest (after The Arrest), an episodic look at crime in a Brooklyn neighborhood from the 1930s through 2019. The first chapter, ...
Novelist Lethem (Brooklyn Crime Novel)shares an entrancing collection of stories and essays celebrating visual art. The author, who flirted with painting in college before “plung[ing] into the etheric ...
Seon Fraser, 26, of Monkey Mountain, Region 8 and Theron Sandwell, 18 of Paramakatoi, Region 8 – both porters – have been charged in connection with an alleged attempt to commit a felony against a ...
A: I have seen some of those videos as well. My reaction is that if someone is stealing from your porch, they should not be able to complain if if turns out to be a booby trap. I also read, if the ...
The two men accused of conspiring to murder Lethem businessman Dwayne Grant yesterday pleaded not guilty before acting Chief Justice Navindra Singh at the High Court in Demerara and are set to go on ...
When a plate drops or a glass smashes, you're annoyed by the mess and the cost of replacing them. But for some physicists, the broken pieces are a source of fascination: Why does everything break into ...
In 1970, a 45-foot, 8-ton sperm whale washed ashore near Florence, Oregon. The Oregon State Highway Division decided to dispose of the carcass using dynamite. Florence will celebrate the 55th ...
Fifty-five years ago, a dead sperm whale washed ashore near Florence — and what happened next became one of the most infamous moments in state history. Engineers from the Oregon Highway Division, ...
Jonathan Lethem's new book, "A Different Kind of Tension," is a collection of 30 stories from his 35-year career. The stories are described as genre-bending, speculative, and imaginative, often with ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. L.A.-based Exploding Kittens and founder Elan Lee add a big dose of “fun” into “fundamentally changing a business ...
His new collection draws from his ambitious practice of the form over nearly four decades. By Leo Robson Leo Robson writes for New Left Review and The London Review of Books. His novel, “The Boys,” is ...