Los Angeles Review of Books Quarterly Journal Fall 2013
By (Author) Marjorie Perloff
By (author) Tom Bissell
By (author) Maria Bustillos
By (author) Jacob Mikanowski
By (author) Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah
Los Angeles Review of Books
Los Angeles Review of Books
15th October 2013
United States
General
Non Fiction
Serials, periodicals, abstracts, indexes
810.5
Paperback
160
Width 190mm, Height 241mm
269g
The Los Angeles Review of Books launched in April of 2011 as a humble Tumblr, with a 2600-word essay by Ben Ehrenreich entitled The Death of the Book. The gesture was a bit tongue-in-cheek, but we meant it to be provocative, and to ask a genuine question: Was the book dying Was the internet killing it Or were we simply entering a new era, a new publishing ecosystem, where different media could coexist
Since then, weve been enormously gratified by the response that LARB has generated from readers, writers, academics, editors, publishers. We are a community of writers, critics, journalists, artists, filmmakers, and scholars dedicated to promoting and disseminating the best that is thought and written, with an enduring commitment to the intellectual rigor, the incisiveness, and the power of the written word.Today, we've created a new institution for writers and readers that is unlike anything else on the web. Our new LARB Quarterly Journal reflects the best that this institution has to bring to readers all over the world.
One question these people have continually asked us, though, is: When are you going to put out a print edition Even though weve been (and remain) committed to the internet as both a space of conversation and a place of commerce, weve always wanted to have something physical, tangible, to be able to show for our work. We never really believed that books would die, or magazines either.
The LARB website currently publishes a minimum of two rigorously edited pieces a day, and weve cultivated a stable of regular contributors, both eminent (Jane Smiley, Mike Davis, Jonathan Lethem) and emerging (Jenny Hendrix, Colin Dickey, Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah). Weve found our way to a certain tone that readers expect and enjoy: looser and more eclectic than our namesakes the New York and London Review of Books, grounded in literature but open to all varieties of cultural experience, far from the New York publishing hothouse atmosphere but not myopically focused on L.A. either.
The new LARB print quarterly will build on the best aspects of the current website. As we do now, well publish book reviews that strive to do something more than recommend or discourage a purchase; were most interested in pieces that push the form of the book review into other genres, such as memoir, polemic, or short story.
We are excited to explore the possibilities of this new format, and feel confident that the audience weve attracted over the past two years on the web will follow us. We know that our peers at Harpers, Bookforum, n+1, The Believer, and the New York and London Review of Books all of whom have expressed support and goodwill for this latest venture welcome a new voice from the West, as will subscribers. The long form literary and cultural arts review is alive and well, and now, has a new home in Los Angeles.
The Los Angeles Review of Books is a nonprofit, multimedia literary and cultural arts magazine that combines the great American tradition of the serious book review with the evolving technologies of the Web. We are a community of writers, critics, journalists, artists, filmmakers, and scholars dedicated to promoting and disseminating the best that is thought and written, with an enduring commitment to the intellectual rigor, the incisiveness, and the power of the written word.