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Henry Miller: The Genius As Leech
Wayne F. Burke   
ImageIn "The genius as Leech" Wayne F. Burke gives us an elucidative portrait of Henry Miller: "To dismiss Miller and his work, as some have, because of his misogyny or pornography or the streak of Puritanism that discolors his sexuality, is like rejecting the sky because of a cloud."
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Towards a Less Bogus Definition of Creative Nonfiction à la Apocrypha
Mark Spitzer   
outlaw bible by alan kaufman Spitzer trashes, defines, and mouths-off in a review of what he considers an uncanonical work, The Outlaw Bible of American Essays. Take umbrage at the definite article, and enjoy Spitzer's diatribe against the poor cousin of an otherwise good series.
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Googular Review: Lulu - a Kannibalin of the senses
Of Irene Bazinger   
ImageOne of the benefits of technology is its ability to bring work in foreign tongues to the monoglot masses. This is the high-point of electronic auto-translation.
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Without Title
J.P. McConalogue   
Image"Geoffrey Hill's name is dropped fashionably into conversations by aspiring students of literature and editors of high-ranking journals alike. He is promoted widely by a variety of world-brand publishers. He has been referred to as the finest living English poet..." J.P. McConalogue reviews Hill's new collection of poems.
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"Hello! Is anyone there?"
Ingela Lind   
Certain artists create worlds. One of them is Edward Hopper. For sixty years he painted what we have come to regard as American modernism—with gasoline stations, gangster suits, railroads and highways.
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"When Humanity Wins"
J.P. McConalogue   
Humanity and Time in the Poetry of Regina Derieva

Although there are many issues relating to how conceptions of time influence Derieva's style, it could be clearly noted that there is an underlying fatalism throughout the selected poems: "'What do I have to do with it?"
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© 2008 Poetry, Fiction, Non-Fiction: Projected Letters: The World's Literary Magazine
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