“Yeah. Let’s fly to Florence and pedal to the village. It will be, I dunno, five hundred miles or so.”
books
WAGING PEACE IN VIETNAM
ALLSTON LIVING ROOM READ: WHERE QUEER STORIES AND MORE TAKE THE FLOOR
“I think it is very powerful, but also complicated. Queerness is like this big abstract concept and how do you put a border around that? And more importantly, should you?”
POP-UP ROMANCE NOVEL SHOP COMES TO BOW MARKET
"When planning inventory for this pop-up, we were careful to ensure that readers can find themselves and their fantasies in the pages."
HERE’S TO A MILLION MORE
Legendary Harvard Square comic book shop celebrates 45 years of independence
BUY ME, BOSTON: CLASSIC ADVERTISEMENT PATCHWORK PROVIDES VAST PORTRAIT OF MASS CULTURAL HISTORY
"I honestly thought that the most challenging thing would be to create this narrative of a city that doesn’t exist anymore purely with raw materials that everyone considers trash. Ads are cutting room floor. It’s like when you make a pie and you have extra dough and you make snickerdoodles out of it."
PRINT AIN’T DEAD: UPHAM’S CORNER POP-UP BOOKSTORES BRING COMMUNITY WORKS BY WRITERS OF COLOR
BOOK EXCERPT: SKETCHTASY
Reprinted with permission from the new book by Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore (Arsenal Pulp Press 2018)
INTERVIEW + EXCERPT: ‘CALL ME ANOREXIC: THE BALLAD OF A THIN MAN’
"Let’s be clear: Anorexia destroyed my career. It destroyed my love life. It destroyed everything in its path."
THE SABOTEUR: A VIVID TALE OF COURAGE IN THE FACE OF NAZI FORCE
Like so many masters of deep research and compelling narrative historical nonfiction before him, Kix leaves very little for the reader to imagine on their own. Some of the descriptions are extremely terrifying, but they’re also necessary if one is to understand the plight of the protagonist.