What I talk about when I talk about running, by Haruki Murakami
What I talk about when I talk about running is not, strictly speaking, a book about the mental benefits of running. From…
What I talk about when I talk about running is not, strictly speaking, a book about the mental benefits of running. From…
The writer Luis Goytisolo put together an important bird when in April 2014 he had the gesture of informing us all of…
How to write a book? Ah, what a million dollar question. How to start writing a novel is something for which…
"And what the hell are you looking at?", Saber lose scolded me, looking into my eyes after having read its first hundred pages....
The art of how to write well can be a nightmarish challenge. We offer you a guide with free resources that every aspiring writer should know about.
Creative writing courses and literary workshops are a great way to learn how to write a book, novel or bestseller.
Foster Wallace embarks on a cruise to portray society, its mechanisms and, in this case, the machinery of one of the most popular vacation options in the world.
Carrie, Cujo, It, The Secret Window, The Green Mile, The Shawshank Redemption... The list of movies based on Stephen King's books is dazzling, but which are the best rated by FilmAffinity users?
Rolling Stones, Dylan, Zappa... the list of songs that the Vietnam War soldiers listened to doesn't belong exclusively to 'Apocalypse Now', 'Full Metal Jacket' or 'Good Morning Vietnam'. Michael Herr and his 'War Dispatches' is a fabulous compendium of the soundtrack of a country and an era.
Marijuana and napalm flavor. Machine Gun Roars, Jimi Hendrix and Ottis Redding. Armed with the spirit of the Capotes, Talese and Wolfe, and coincident in time with Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five, War Dispatches leaves an uncomfortable, circus-like feel.
This brave essay could also have been called La audacity by Antonio Muñoz Molina, Félix de Azúa, Javier Cercas and Fernando Savater. If that's asking too much of a title, then easier: The impudence of El País. Or also: El País, that nest of fakers. good sticks