A Credible Interest in Spooks PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff Francis   
Tuesday, 06 May 2008

Ghost Hunters: William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of Life After Death
“Ghost Hunters: William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of Life After Death” by Deborah Blum
Penguin Press, 384 pages, $26

The time following the American Civil War and the beginning of World War I was a period with a power to tease the imagination like no other. This is primarily so because of a pervasive and seemingly credible interest in spooks.

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Forgetting to Add the Ingredient of Fun PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff Francis   
Tuesday, 08 April 2008
"Like you’d understand, anyway" by Jim Shepard

“Like you’d understand, anyway” by Jim Shepard
Knopf, 211 pages, $23

In 2004, I interviewed Jim Shepard over the phone about “Project X,” his novel about a Columbine-like plot.  

Shepard was probably the best writer I ever interviewed. He didn’t treat me like some perfunctory annoyance with whom he couldn’t wait to be rid of like Joyce Carol Oates or Clive Cussler, and he wasn’t in the midst of a whirlwind book tour in which interviews were so common that the answers were stock. See Amy Tan.

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Millhauser’s latest is a retread of his previous work PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff Francis   
Sunday, 30 March 2008

... and anyone who thinks that’s bad should get decked.

“Dangerous Laughter: 13 stories”


Dangerous Laughter: 13 stories
by Steven Millhauser
Knopf, 244 pages, $24 

Even avid readers are unfamiliar with Steven Millhauser.  

For the uninitiated (virtually everyone), Millhauser began his career in 1972 with the brilliant novel “Edwin Mullhouse.” Since then, he has written four novels (including 1997’s “Martin Dressler,” which won the Pulitzer Prize) and five collections of short stories. One story, “Eisenheim the Illusionist,” became the 2006 film “The Illusionist.”

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Bum trip in the Roaring ‘20s, Daddy-O! PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff Francis   
Thursday, 21 February 2008
sacco_vanzetti.gif“Sacco & Vanzetti: The Men, The Murders, and the Judgment of Mankind” by Bruce Watson
Viking, $26, 434 pages

Any generation subsequent to the Baby Boomers has had their collective heads filled with tales of the unparalleled decadence, volatile politics and social experimentation of the 1960s (and the first half of the 1970s, really), that most storied of decades.  What we’re steered away from knowing is that the 20th

Century had a decade at least comparable in its craziness and upheaval, if not more striking: the 1920s.

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Think Philip Marlowe and not “A Scanner Darkly.” PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff Francis   
Wednesday, 09 January 2008

kop.jpg“KOP” by Warren Hammond
Tor, 331 pages, $25, hardcover

The dust jacket of Denver author Warren Hammond’s debut novel, “KOP,” sports a cover one rarely sees outside of romance novels: a lifelike, vivid image of the main characters. Amid a dismal urban landscape that suggests overcrowding and squalor, a young brunette looks into the distance while a man who could pass for a meaner, somewhat broken down Pierce Brosnan leers into the shadows.

“KOP” ain’t no romance novel, though.

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