Cowboys Ate Organs

This month, dip into acid, angels, and nasal pumps.

September 27, 2006

Related Stories: Elisha Cooper
Article Tools

"There's a head sticking out of my best friend," marvels new dad Elisha Cooper in Crawling (Pantheon, $19.95), a memoir tender to the bone but also blunt. ... Sex in the City is secretly a "manifesto for a certain kind of raw, rough, promiscuous, anonymous gay male sex." The writings of Barbara Kingsolver, vastly overrated, wield all the moral impact of a plastic flower. In Falling Upwards (Basic, $25), cultural critic Lee Siegel stabs sacred cows. ... An incompetent surgeon who spent ten years paralyzing and killing patients, not on purpose exactly. A female NOPD officer slaughtering the staff at a Vietnamese restaurant. True gore and good journalism bespatter The Best American Crime Writing 2006 (Harper Perennial, $14.95). ... Acid trips and mental asylums, Prague's polyglots, celestial spawn — in language as rich and layered as mille-feuille pastry, but funnier. If The Angel of Forgetfulness (Penguin, $15) is any clue, novelist Steve Stern should be tons more famous. ... Braving tornadoes; boiling liver-tongue-brain-kidney stew; putting live wasps in greenhorns' beds — revisit the frontier with Richard Slatta's intelligent Cowboy: The Illustrated History (Sterling, $24.95).

YOUR COMMENT


RECENT ARTICLES BY ANNELI RUFUS

A slain rapper's funeral is filmed, a shoplifter cleans up, and August is a special month for murderous radicals.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Vandana Shiva campaigns to protect farmers and food.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
In this month's East Bay book news, new releases tell us about dead languages and dead bodies.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008

EVENT SEARCH

Select One or More Criteria
From    To 

THIS WEEK IN ARTS & CULTURE

For the week of August 27-September 2, 2008.
Fil-Am artists question our infallibility.
By Dirk Wittenborn
By Lily Koppel
Vandana Shiva campaigns to protect farmers and food.
By David Brock and Paul Waldman
In this month's East Bay book news, new releases tell us about dead languages and dead bodies.
Eighth annual Art & Soul Festival is the Everest of multiday exhibitions in the East Bay.
Plus how to find a third partner, and tell your boyfriend you like munching carpets.
Cal Shakes nails a comedic Vanya.
How developer Rick Holliday reached out to community activist Marcel Diallo to pave the way for Central Station.

MOST POPULAR ARTS STORIES

VIEWED E-MAILED COMMENTED
In which Shawn Taylor explains the philosophy behind his provocative new book.
In this month's East Bay book news, new releases tell us about dead languages and dead bodies.
Fil-Am artists question our infallibility.
Eighth annual Art & Soul Festival is the Everest of multiday exhibitions in the East Bay.
This time you'll get it right.

THIS WEEK'S FEATURE


City Hall gadfly? Oakland municipal watchdog? Citizen journalist? Just what is Sanjiv Handa up to anyway?

SPECIAL REPORTS

The definitive guide to the East Bay.
The weekly podcast that lets you hear the music we write about.
A compendium of coverage detailing the senator's many ethical and legal challenges.

RECENT ISSUES


Aug 27, 2008

Aug 20, 2008

Aug 13, 2008

Aug 6, 2008

Jul 30, 2008

Jul 23, 2008