Another City: Writing from Los Angeles
By (Author) David L. Ulin
City Lights Books
City Lights Books
4th September 2001
United States
General
Non Fiction
Literary essays
818.54080979494
Paperback
240
Width 152mm, Height 203mm, Spine 22mm
396g
Thirty-seven Los Angeles authors map the scattered and diverse literary landscape of contemporary LA. Short stories, chronicles and poems by both well-established and up-and-coming young writers depict what it was like to come to LA, or what it was like to grow up there, describing the ocean and the desert, the entertainment industry and earthquakes, riots and racism, fires and freaks.
The result of Ulin's labors is ... an engaging and satisfying collection of fiction, poetry, and essays about L.A.; the book features mostly unpublished work by both established writers like Jerry Stahl (Permanent Midnight), Aimee Bender (The Girl in the Flammable Skirt) and Richard Rayner (Los Angeles Without a Map), and by less well-known ones like Russell Leong, Aleida Rodriguez and Samantha Dunn.--New York Newsday
Los Angeles has been called America's first postmodern city, and David L. Ulin's brilliantly chosen cast of extraordinary writers brings that hypothesis exquisitely to life.--Carolyn See
This regional anthology is, in the best sense, all over the map. Broad in scope and varied in style, Another City offers some of the most exciting, unpredictable writing a reader could hope for.--Bernard Cooper
David L. Ulin has assembled the literary equivalent of the Watts Towers: a dazzling dreamscape made from the most ordinary, terrifying and euphoric debris of LA life.--Mike Davis
Another City bids a long goodbye to the exile tradition of writing about Southern California that prevailed in the last century. Its contributors are Angelenos--native or born-again--who embrace L.A. as hometown and body of fate. Their collective dispatches are confessional, nostalgic, tender, harrowing, often very funny, occasionally exhibitionistic, unfailingly vivid and evocative.--David Reid, editor of Sex, Death and God in L.A.
David Ulin has lived in Los Angeles since 1991. From 1993-96 he was the book editor of the LA Weekly. He is a former Los Angeles Times critic and is an Assistant English Professor at the University of Southern California.