Booksellers
- Amazon
- Barnes & Noble
- Bookcourt, Brooklyn
- BookPeople, Austin
- Book Soup, Los Angeles
- Borders
- City Lights Books, San Francisco
- Dashwood Books, New York City
- Flipkart, India
- Green Apple Books, San Francisco
- Greenlight Bookstore, Brooklyn
- Housing Works Bookstore Cafe, New York City
- Indie
- Lemuria Books, Jackson, MS
- McNally Jackson Books, New York City
- Newtonville Books, Newtonville, MA
- Powell’s Books
- Prairie Lights Books, Iowa City
- Skylight Books, LA
- Square Books, Oxford, MS
- St. Mark’s Bookshop, New York City
- Tattered Cover, Denver
- The Odyssey Bookshop, South Hadley, MA
- Vroman’s, Pasadena
- Walrus Books, Buenos Aires
Reading / Writing / Music series
- New York City
- Curated by Rebecca Keith and Melissa Febos, Mixer is a monthly series that showcases some of the best writers and musicians out there, whether famous or not (yet). In addition to their consistently great lineups, Mixer draws consistently great crowds. I mean, that there’s a crowd to speak of is worth seeing to believe, but that people actually pay attention and give back to the readers, well, it warms the heart. If not, buy yourself a couple drinks at the bar, and it’ll be fine.
- Jaime Clarke’s online series offers round-table conversations with a mix of poets, fiction, and non-fiction writers, alike. Jaime chooses a theme for each issue, but within that, he’ll ask each writer just about anything, and I think it’s this off-the-cuff approach that really helps his guests let down their guard in talking about themselves and their work as a much more interesting way of getting at that most dreaded and inescapable question a writer is asked: “Where do you get your ideas from?”
Friends
- Adira Amram
- Oh, to be so brilliant, so beautiful, and so f'ing hilarious.
Blogs
- The Worst Review Ever
- One can only hope their bad reviews are good enough to submit here, because, frankly, I’m not sure Anthony Lane could top the likes of “a holocaust of prose.”
Organizations
- Trust Art
- A great nation definitely deserves great art, and, likewise, great artists also deserve the likes of food, shelter, health insurance, and funding for their projects. So, if you want to make a donation to the arts--any amount, a buck, even--this is a truly great place to start. And who knows, maybe you’ll make something on your return, above and beyond doing the right thing.