Most Recent Interviews

  • » Embracing the Bull: An Interview With Lydia Lunch

    05.jpgYou have to figure out a way because there will be so many things always against you, against the individual, against someone who wants to radically create. It’s going to be the few who make a career out of complaining about everything that pisses them off, and there is only room for maybe one or two of us. I’d encourage everyone to do it, but to make a career out of it? Good fucking luck! So, in other words, do as I have done: create without a budget and find a way to get it out. You’ve just got to be stubborn. I don’t care what your age is, you’ve got to be a fucking bull. Embrace the bull. Take the bull by the horns, cut its balls off, sew them on to the fucking base of your spine and get going. It’s that easy.

    Simon Friel talks to Lydia Lunch.

  • » Derving On Weekends: An Interview With Thomas Leveritt

    2880434238_3f049e75d4_m.jpgI learned to speak in America, so maybe that’s why I prefer American writing. But also ― like the Impressionists, it seems more plein air. English writers seem to write writing: learn how at UEA, riff on EM Forster, pun, use certain set-piece phrases that haven’t generated their original brightness for centuries — clean bill of health, spreadeagled, well-heeled, hands down, etc. There’s some crack in The Exchange-Rate Between Love and Money about “the sort of novel that favours aquiline noses”. If I want to read vivid metaphor, I’m picking up Hunter Thompson, Denis Johnson, William Burroughs, Pynchon of course. I ain’t picking up no Somerset Maugham.

    Lander Hawes interviews Thomas Leveritt.

  • » Fatal passions: An interview with Lewis Crofts

    schiele1.jpgI felt that a novel was the perfect way to explore some of the ambiguities in Schiele’s story. Did he or did he not sleep with his sister? That’s a question which I never wanted to answer. As a novelist, I could simply hint at the kind of relationship they had and let the reader make up his or her mind. The novel revels in the gaps in the story, the grey areas, the fluidity. Biography tends to seek light and stability.

    Susan Tomaselli finds out about The Pornographer of Vienna.

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Most Recent Criticism

  • » Mike Philbin’s Double Vision

    bukkakeworld.jpgBut, hold on, if we’re ever so lucky, there is a form of salvation in this porno version of 1984 and it appears in the form of a kitten – not a pussy – a kitten that leads us to our Samaritan – Marianne Buckman – a non-corporeal, time/space shifting Beatrice and Mata Hari rolled into one. Bad jokes litter the text, as do sex and death, eros and thanatos, and the ghostly forms of William S. Burroughs, George Orwell, and Lewis Carroll. And all this fused with a cum-tsunami of corporate terrorism, reflections on the soul…

    By Steve Finbow.

  • » fast food nation

    lemurcover.jpgBradley’s writing is minimalist whilst providing enough narrative nutrition to sink your teeth into. With Lemur Bradley offers up quite a menu of characters, a veritable stew of displaced oddities.[His] prose is terse, his pace quick and chock-full of socio-political observations, cutting satirical switchblade swipes at how sex, marketing and murder are often, uncomfortably intrinsically linked. Only Tom Bradley would create a world where a malnourished, metal-faced meth-whore wearing little more a Cow and Chicken t-shirt is crushed beneath a “tidal wave of cellulite” while attempting to rob a diner.

    Alan K. tucks into Lemur.

  • » god is not great

    goodtobegod_.jpgThe narrative has a high quotient of vaguely laddish wackiness…Religious nuts and unpredictable cocaine runners, not to mention a deeply unfunny pair of bumbling criminals, are no longer intrinsically novel or amusing enough to sustain a story of this kind, if indeed they ever were. The central character taking this picaresque trip around a sub-Gonzo America further compounds the problem; he is the frustrated, mid-life everyman familiar from a hundred such lad-lit excursions.

    Andrew Fleming doesn’t believe in Tibor Fischer’s latest one.

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Most Recent Nonfiction

  • » The New Yorker, Collusion and All That

    ny.jpgHow can you have a cadre of poets and writers, more then less, appointed for life and not have their works blend, carryover and homogenize into the cookie cutter variety of Norman Rockwell paintings. Look once more at the monstrosity of architecture that is The New Yorker. Surely if you dally to long, you will be escorted by New Yorker drones, “thought police,” to a modern Bastille prison for subversion to the sense of esthetics so proudly bandied forward by the magazine, ad nauseam. With that said, I will show that words=equal=money and the questionable pursuit of it in The New Yorker’s fairly recent past.

    By Chris Roberts.

  • » Sohoitis VIII: Alternative Miss World

    78-h-hts-circus.jpgI was the youngest at 17 and meant to be studying for my A levels but I wisely thought being in Andrew Logan’s groundbreaking competition was a better education and a higher qualification for life than any ordinary exam could give me. I was right in all senses, and Rebecca was too drunk for the steps and fell down half of them. I cannot tell you how glamorous the whole occasion was, backstage in the dressing rooms where fabulous creatures (I would hesitate at describing them all as humans) donned extravagant creations, where men became women and women became animals and Francis Bacon art dealer, James Birch, became a hamburger with fries.

    3:AM’s very own alternative miss world Sophie Parkin previews An Evening Of Alternative Miss World at the Portobello Film Festival.

  • » Sohoitis VII: Tell Me A Tale Of Tears

    image-thumb.jpegWas it fathers or mothers that made all those grown men cry in that back street in a Borough pub The Gladstone, the other week? Or, was it the fact that it was an old man croakily singing, forcing them to watch their own mortality rocking before them? None of those songs came near to triggering a liquid response from me, maybe because I never felt betrayed: his songs may have contained clichés of dime-a-fuck girls and drunken feckless men but they were full of truth and the small-town Southern ways of scratching at life through dirt.

    Sophie Parkin explains why Larry Jon Wilson didn’t make her cry.

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Most Recent Opinions

  • » Stuck Inn V: What Is Wrong with Sir Nicholas Serota?

    2080046683_6b372ca617_t.jpgSerota’s rationale is in his 2000 Dimbleby Lecture: “For the late twentieth-century museum director there is no more certain prospect for audience acclaim and sponsor success than those Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artists who were so reviled a century earlier.” His identification with artists who were battling in the face of disapproval from the art establishment is a completely false analogy: the art that Serota promotes is the art establishment – a multi-million pound industry of museums, arts bodies, galleries, curators, auction houses, collectors and critics. It’s just that the art establishment is now at odds with the general public instead of synonymous with it.

    Charles Thomson on Sir Nicholas Serota and the BritArt establishment.

  • » Liberty, Equality, & Fries with Gravy

    lyn.jpgIt seems there’s a smugness to Montreal hip. Even the twenty year olds profess to appreciate black-American jazz and Quebec-government-funded documentaries about white-American racism. Yet, do these fashionistas realize that the Southern slave system wasn’t so much abolished as expanded to include them, that the textile plantation big house now extends from the Rio Grande to the Arctic Sea, that beyond our privileged borders—shackled by barriers to free competition—the global masses sweat and toil to keep our teenagers sweet and spoiled with the style of the moment?

    By Lyn Fox.

  • » Blair, Brown and the Special Relationship

    na.jpgThe economic relationship between the two nations will continue to be strengthened by public and private sector borrowing. The UK is one of our largest exporters as well as a large source of tourism due to our historical link with England. Moreover, Blair has expressed loyalty to America through specific economic policies. His take on trade liberalization for example, clears the stage for Britain and other European nations to have greater domestic involvement and thus favoring U.S. interests in the European Union.

    Naheed Ali ponders the future of the special relationship after November 2008.

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Most Recent Music Writing

  • » Overwhelmingly Bearded

    au.jpgAutechre live are technically inscrutable but sonically fluid, cutting and snipping events together almost seamlessly, quite unlike the new album’s discrete pieces. The performers are lit, but barely; the main focus of the crowd’s rapture appears to be two Apple laptops, not the heads bobbing around behind them.

    Andrew Fleming on Autechre live.

  • » We Need to Talk About Kevin

    pressphoto2.jpgI am standing at the back of The Roundhouse, but during “When You Wake You’re Still In A Dream” I am starting to shake from the floor. And by the time they hit the twenty-three minute version of “You Made Me Realise”, this is the equivalent of standing under a jet plane taking off. The sound is so loud that I want to vomit, but somehow I start to wonder if Kevin Shields planned this all along? Purification via noise terrorism. I can feel every vein in my body. From the spleen outwards my head pounds, and fingers shake.

    Adelle Stripe reviews My Bloody Valentine live in London.

  • » Are You Ready For U.S. Ghost Punk Psych Jams?

    1clipd-beaks.jpgSuch is my obsession with music, a trip to NYC simply would not have been even half complete or as much fun without seeking out some live underground sounds, and this I found at local promoter Todd P’s Death by Audio night in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. In contrast to the kind-of-in-a-similar-vein Hoxton scene in London, there are less skinny jeans but more checked shirts and beards, the outfit that is almost tradition for the learned and serious underground music fan. This is totally DIY and a far cry from the usual mainstream venues.

    Kate Picard pays a visit to Williamsburg’s Death By Audio.

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Most Recent Fiction

  • » 9 Girls Called Joan

    2915523125_7686a22d87_o.jpgLike most people I meet, I have an auntie called Joan. My auntie Joan looks like Elton John, but how Elton John looks when he looks like Mark Twain. The three of them look like the crew of a small boat that probably doesn’t even need a crew at all, this boat is probably so advanced in technology that it drives itself, cleans itself, and thinks for the three Elton John/Mark Twain/Auntie Joan lookalikes. The boat begins to feel confused, it malfunctions in a puff of smoke that used to be modern technology, and those people first on the scene are finding it hard to piece together where Elton ends and Joan begins, and they don’t even believe that Mark Twain exists.

    Emily Josephine McPhillips’s story has been selected by Niven Govinden as part of NOISE Festival 2008.

  • » Writer’s Block: A Story

    gayhavana.jpg“You read my book didn’t you? The Quiet American? About the domino effect.”
    “Yes, yes. I’ve read you’re damn book.”
    “Did you buy it new?”
    “It was a gift.”
    “From the publisher or a friend.”
    “Who the hell cares?”
    “I want to know whether I earned a royalty off you.”
    Ernest fumbled for his wallet.
    “Here’s fifty pesos.”
    “Devalued to nothing by tomorrow.”

    By Jonathan Woods.

  • » The Big Pineapple

    jr.JPGNong was wearing a see-through negligee and two cigar-butt nipples swung free and easy. She also had a nice ass, but overall was slightly out of proportion, short legs, thick ankles, long nose etc. And beneath the layers of make-up I discerned a bad case of acne. She took me by the hand and squeezed tight. I caught a whiff of semen and condoms, ‘You go Queensland baby, go Big Pineapple, all people say really fun time!’

    Now I knew what had to be done. The oracle of the bordello had spoken.

    By Joseph Ridgwell.

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Most Recent Flash Fiction

  • » I Meant to Surprise Her, Atlanta Apartment Hunting, and Broken Leg

    jamieiredell.jpgChafe won the toss and I had broken a leg. I kept falling every few feet when I walked. Chafe tossed me again, this time into a pickup’s bed, which took me to the hospital. Inside I cried for morphine because I craved the high; I was too drunk to feel any pain. The doctor said, “You’re so wasted, I’m not giving you anything.”

    By Jamie Iredell.

  • » The Revolution

    virginiakonchan.jpgI walked in and set my bottle on the table, half-expecting to see walls covered with field charts of butterflies pinned to cork, migratory instinct stilled. Hello, I said, into the dim hallway off the main room. My muscles twitched. I walked into the kitchen, opened his refrigerator, peered inside. A freestanding carton of juice, cluster of tomatoes on the vine. You came, he said suddenly, walking into the room. I turned, embarrassed. He looked only at my face, as if the length of my skirt or the style of my hair were of no consequence. I was relieved, because they weren’t.

    By Virginia Konchan.

  • » True Love When You See It

    fredzackel.jpgEvery monster you kill, it’s a home run. Your butt against her butt gives you both three-sixty coverage. Gotta be touching, though; that’s trust. And don’t step off the road. On the grass, you’re theirs. Don’t let them drag you into the corn, corn high enough to hide the scarecrows, yellow eyes amid the fireflies. Maybe if you each live through this, you were meant for each other.

    By Fred Zackel.

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Most Recent Poetry

  • » Two Poems

    mail1.jpgwe shall all have minds of winter
    we shall take into consideration the oyster shell ground
    the various scars of snow across our fuselage

    We who are unremarkable salute you
    as we go drowning
    we who offer mauve shades of late
    snow cone stained watercolor snow
    the marks of man and dog
    late afternoon late
    bleeds into the face of
    our mutual moon.

    By Margarita Shalina.

  • » Cowboy

    daveo.jpgIt was the west that won,
    the rest are just people scurrying around
    under the light bulb filament sun,
    one hundred four degrees in the shade
    almost boiling the lemonade of the kid
    who ran in to tell his mom
    the libertines had come to town

    By David E. Oprava.

  • » Three Poems

    1559501103_l.jpgIn the dead of night I wake up sometimes
    to a right thumb who’s watching its sisters;
    they’re trumpeting an invisible four-keyed brass horn and
    pinkying the pitches

    sleepwalkers can’t hear.
    Piano fingers
    winkling a ballet of synchronized swimmers
    making tiny waves in the lightless water—nothing feels
    like bedrooms whose blinds hate their own impairment.

    By the great Donari Braxton.

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