where the writers are

Bob Mustin's Blog

RSSSyndicate content
May.24.2013
  Finally - another dream made real! The link below will take you to the first GridleyReview, a re-do of last week's post on W.J. Cash's THE MIND OF THE SOUTH. Check it out at the link below, which will take you to my website. Let me know what you think.   GridleyReview    ...
Continue Reading »
May.24.2013
    I've been spreading the news around, but in case I missed you, or you missed the news, I've recorded an audio book of my latest, Sam's Place: Stories. You can buy them one at a time or as a complete book HERE (I'm betting you'll be hooked after the first file), and...
Continue Reading »
May.24.2013
    Iron Horse Literary Review, Volume 15.1, Open Issue 2013   Okay, I’m prepared to repent. I’ve dissed IHLR more than once in this blog, and while earlier issues seemed worthy of such scorn, this issue and the one prior are worth admiration and praise. Such praise follows:...
Continue Reading »
May.19.2013
  There's nothing quite as fascinating - or as hopeful - as the re-creation of an old movie or, in this case a TV series. But you never experience a good reboot, it seems, or if you do, it's a man bites dog affair.  The missus and I went to see the '09 version of this reincarnated...
Continue Reading »
May.18.2013
The Mind of the South, by W.J. Cash   This book was written some 75 years ago, and it’s amazing to me how closely Southern attitudes, the South's social structure, the personals and political cants of that time parallel those of the South today. It’s tempting to make an essay of this review...
Continue Reading »
May.18.2013
As both a writer and a book critic, I can only say to critics: Criticize, but be nice. The Telegraph     Visit my website here, and my FB Fan Page here for more on ideas and events that matter to me - and possibly to you. I'll soon be adding podcasts of selected book...
Continue Reading »
May.17.2013
      You wouldn't think of the Midwest as a hotbed of literary and creative writing - unless you've been to the Iowa Workshop, or are a fan of one of that area's fine stable of writers, such as Ron Hansen, one of my favorites. And I wouldn't have thought of literary tech...
Continue Reading »
May.16.2013
  The Millions has been a must-read blog for me for a long time, and now I notice that their biz is growing and they need help. You might fill the bill, if you're a "voracious reader."   The Millions
Continue Reading »
May.12.2013
The Orchard Keeper, by Cormac McCarthy You may become puzzled trying to categorize McCarthy’s writing style, but you won’t find it hard at all to place it in the canon of Southern literature. McCarthy eventually moved on from this subset, his most famous books taking place in the Southwest U.S.,...
Continue Reading »
May.09.2013
  Writer’s Chronicle, May/Summer 2013   This writer’s mag isn’t always thematically consistent from issue to issue, but this time I see a pattern.  In Liz Radford’s interview with artist/novelist Audrey Niffenegger we discover that Niffenegger cares not a whit about the traditional...
Continue Reading »
May.07.2013
    The Atlantic, April 2013   I'm a little late with this post, but in this day of the personality cult, we feel obliged to know, not just about issues, but about the people who make the issues. As much as I dislike this, The Atlantic has done us a favor by giving us...
Continue Reading »
May.05.2013
  Harper’s Magazine/April 2013 Once more, mag week rears its journalistic head: One thing that keeps the better magazines in business is digging into a given subject hard enough and long enough to separate spin from what’s intended, i.e., image from the deeper roots of truth. This issue of...
Continue Reading »
May.02.2013
We writers have heard for years that cinema has co-opted books. We've been taught to write in a manner that mimics cameras shots, i.e., to cinematize literature. Now a new twist appears (see link below) with Steven Soderbergh retiring from cinema and posting chapters from a novella on Twitter....
Continue Reading »
Apr.30.2013
William Zinsser's work on creative writing has influenced countless aspiring writers - up close, though his tutoring, and from afar through his long-time best-selling book, On Writing Well. Now blind and 90 years of age, he's still doing what he's always done. That should be inspiration...
Continue Reading »
Apr.25.2013
Black Dogs, By Ian McEwan I still find it odd that some (if not most) people will never re-read a book. I've just re-read this one because it was my first McEwan and I was so unfamiliar with his odd story structure that the essence of the book didn’t stay with me. But that was something like ten...
Continue Reading » 1 comment