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Ellison is considered by many to be one of the most important literary figures of American literature in the 20th century. His existential novel Invisible Man is about race, identity and alienation. It was published in 1952 to critical acclaim and won the National Book Award the following year. In cooperation with Oklahoma City University, […]
We’re no. 10!
Oklahoma is No. 10, rounding out the top offender list with a high school graduation rate of 73.9 percent, shows a study from 247WallSt.com. Per-student expenditure is the eighth lowest in the nation at $9,075. Our overall score was a 64.2, a D. The silver lining here is that somehow, we also scored an A […]
The Best Film You’ve Never Seen: 35 Directors Champion the Forgotten or Critically Savaged Movies They Love Robert K. Elder
Luckily for Elder and his readers, theres plenty more. A companion of sorts to Elders 2011 book The Film That Changed My Life, the Chicago Review Press paperback operates on several levels, from learning tool to reference guide to Netflix queue-filler. As with the earlier work, the author leans on 35 directors to build its […]
Nice Guys Don’t Work in Hollywood: The Adventures of an Aesthete in the Movie Business Curtis Harrington
Unlike so many Tinseltown true tales, Nice Guys Dont Work in Hollywood doesnt begin with a tumultuous childhood. Although the only child grew up in the throes of the Great Depression, Harringtons upbringing was happy. He found escape (and influence) in the stories of Edgar Allan Poe, the pages of Esquire magazine and the flicker […]
Hopper: A Journey into the American Dream Tom Folsom
Folsom traces the life of Dennis Hopper through its four distinct phrases: Kansas farm boy, Method actor/James Dean worshipper, pharmaceutical madman, comeback kid. That he had a fourth at all continues to amaze me, especially after reading all the details. The kinder, gentler Hopper was hardly one to shy away from admitting his battles with […]
Heroic hangover
Brian Winkeler, a writer, and Robert Wilson IV, an artist, were patrons of New World Comics, 6219 N. Meridian. Store owner Brian Berlin thought the two should meet. Soon after a fateful lunch outing, the plot and characters for Knuckleheads, a quirky series of their own, was born. Winkeler said they loosely adapted the concept […]
The Man Who Created Halloween Irwin Yablans
This self-published paperback is his story emphasis on The Man, not Halloween. The making of that 1978 now-classic movie is only a small part of the autobiography, which covers his entire life. Luckily, Yablans is an engaging storyteller whos full of amusing anecdotes some of which are intentional (John Wayne declaring his wish […]
Spooky scribes
If Alice thought Wonderland was bad, then Zombieland would have had her begging to be hassled by a disgruntled patch of daisies again. Author Gena Showalters new series, The White Rabbit Chronicles, begins with Alice in Zombieland, a novel based on Lewis Carrolls adventurous heroine. Showalter, an Oklahoma City native, is the best-selling author of […]
‘Time’ bandit
Avid readers keeping up with the current paranormal-fantasy scene will recognize Sherrilyn Kenyons name. With 60 published books across multiple series and more than 50 of those titles landing on the New York Times best-seller list the popularity of her work is undeniable. But Kenyon is not one to rest on her laurels, […]
