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Annie Dillard

Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Annie Dillard published by this site and its partners.

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    Apr 29, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Bring on the aerial ant sex

    For those who think spring is all about robins arriving, or window cleaning or crocuses budding, I have two words for you: ant sex.
    For those who think spring is all about robins arriving, or window cleaning or crocuses budding, I have two words for you: ant sex. Now, I know what you're thinking: Those tiny black creatures marching relentlessly toward the sugar bowl or streaming...

    Tags: Genes and Chromosomes

  2. Nov 28, 2011 |Story| McClatchy-Tribune
  3. Literary pilgrimage to Virginia vistas is done in honor of author Dillard

    DALEVILLE, Va. — It is a tough uphill hike to Tinker Cliffs.
    DALEVILLE, Va. — It is a tough uphill hike to Tinker Cliffs. The distinctive cliffs of light-colored sandstone stretch nearly half a mile atop Tinker Mountain at an elevation of 3,000 feet along the Appalachian National Scenic Trail. The cliffs...

    Tags: Botetourt County, McAfee Incorporated, Pulitzer Prize Awards, Appalachian National Scenic Trail, Triple Crown

  4. Aug 28, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. The Saturday Read: 'Bitter in the Mouth' by Monique Truong

    In "The Writing Life," Annie Dillard advises would-be writers to find their bone, the thing that drives them to write, and to work as closely to that bone as possible. Dillard also instructs writers — with another corporeal metaphor — to work as closely along the nerve as possible.
    Special to the Los Angeles Times
    In "The Writing Life," Annie Dillard advises would-be writers to find their bone, the thing that drives them to write, and to work as closely to that bone as possible. Dillard also instructs writers — with another corporeal metaphor — to...

    Tags: Salt, Minority Groups, Children, MTV (tv network), Gays and Lesbians

  6. Nov 21, 2009 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. Chicago's Feltre School

    Chicago's Feltre School offers discussion of the great works, in a no-commitment setting.
    Chicago's Feltre School offers discussion of the great works, in a no-commitment setting. One thing to know about our book club: The discussions are intelligent without being fussy, and fun without being frivolous. Author we'd most like to meet: Yann...

    Tags: John Steinbeck, Bars and Clubs, Clubs and Associations, Dining and Drinking, Tennessee Williams

  8. Mar 21, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Off the Shelf: Trouble seeing the line between fact and fiction

    A new biography of the Polish war correspondent Ryszard Kapuscinski alleges that he frequently forged details, invented images and claimed to have witnessed events that he didn't, in fact, witness. Gerald Posner resigned from the Daily Beast after admitting that he had lifted sentences from a Miami Herald editorial, a Miami Herald blog, Texas Lawyer magazine and a health journalism blog; Posner blamed the "warp speed of the net" and his "master electronic files system."
    A new biography of the Polish war correspondent Ryszard Kapuscinski alleges that he frequently forged details, invented images and claimed to have witnessed events that he didn't, in fact, witness. Gerald Posner resigned from the Daily Beast after...

    Tags: Lawyers, Literature, Journalism, Documentary (genre), Fernando Pessoa

  10. Jan 11, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. In 'Lark and Termite,' Jayne Anne Phillips continues to explore human vulnerabilities and the lasting effects of war on memory

    Falling in love with a writer requires commitment; the long haul, thick and thin. They get old, you get old. The relationship waxes and wanes. Most readers can recall times of perfect synchronicity -- when the book was the necessary enzyme, the catalyst, the missing piece. "Black Tickets," Jayne Anne Phillips' first collection of stories, published in 1979, was, for more than one earnest English major, such a book.
    Falling in love with a writer requires commitment; the long haul, thick and thin. They get old, you get old. The relationship waxes and wanes. Most readers can recall times of perfect synchronicity -- when the book was the necessary enzyme, the catalyst,...

    Tags: Natural Disasters, International Military Interventions, Richard Brautigan, Korean War (1950-1953), Floods

  12. Sep 14, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. 'Two Marriages: Novellas' by Phillip Lopate

    Two Marriages
    Two Marriages Novellas Phillip Lopate Other Press: 272 pp., $24.95 THE publication of new fictions -- the first in more than 20 years -- by one of our most reliable men of letters is an occasion worth marking and measuring. Phillip Lopate is best...

    Tags: Dyker Heights, Cobble Hill, Fiction, Marriage, Thomas Lynch

  14. May 24, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. 'Will You Take Me as I Am: Joni Mitchell's Blue Period' by Michelle Mercer

    Will You Take Me as I Am Joni Mitchell's Blue Period Michelle Mercer Free Press: 240 pp., $24.99 When Joni Mitchell thinks about confession, two things come to mind: witch hunts and Catholic priests. To be held up as the exemplar of confessional...

    Tags: Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, James Taylor, Sylvia Plath, Kanye West

  16. Mar 22, 2010 | Los Angeles Times
  17. David Shields recommends 26 shifting nonfictions

    Jacket Copy
    David Shields, the author of "Reality Hunger," couldn't help but notice the buzz when a new biography of Polish writer Ryszard Kapuscinski, above, said he invented some of his nonfiction. It's the latest in a series of small turmoils about......
  18. Apr 29, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. Chatting with authors Janet Fitch and Denise Hamilton

    Administrator: Welcome to our online chat with Janet Fitch and Denise Hamilton. raul: hi Denise, how do you research your books? ellen Ulken: Janet, At what stage in life did you know you wanted to be a writer? Denise Hamilton: I was a Los Angeles...

    Tags: Twilight (book), Stephenie Meyer, Colleges and Universities, Hollywood (Los Angeles, California), Journalism

  20. Jun 24, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. All you need is love

    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    EVERY so often, a novel comes along that describes a relationship with such thoroughness that you almost feel better about love. Maybe, just maybe, it's a worthy use of our time alive. Annie Dillard's "The Maytrees" is such a novel. It is also a reservoir...

    Tags: Ingrid Bergman, Fiction, Children, Death, Pulitzer Prize Awards

  22. Jun 17, 2004 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. 50 best magazines

    What makes a magazine great? The writing. The ideas. The photography. The design. Sure. But more importantly, a magazine's worth depends on how it catches readers' glances, and then their hearts. Here, Tempo presents its second annual 50 Best Magazines...

    Tags: Kate Winslet, Science, Courtney Love, Periodicals, Mass Media

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