Teju Cole The Aerogram Book Club on Tanwi Nandini Islam’sBright Lines January 29, 2016byNeelanjana Banerjee Welcome back to The Aerogram Book Club, where Book Club editor Neelanjana Banerjee brings together writers and thinkers to discuss South Asian books of significance. Join in …Read more...
TEJU COLE + books photography playlists bio contact & links events secondary literature recently +
Which recent books by or about photographers would you recommend?A."Wall," by Josef Koudelka; "Sergio Larrain" (a monograph on the reclusive Chilean genius, who died in 2012); and "The Sochi Project: An Atlas of War and Tourism in the Caucasus," by Rob Hornstra and Arnold van Bruggen....
2 Rather, her point is that 'just as the day itself is only one part of the genre of 9/11 nonfiction books, so it should be with fiction'. 3 This desire for novelists to shift their fictional framing of September 11, in a way that places 'the day itself' into a complex ...
her point is that 'just as the day itself is only one part of the genre of 9/11 nonfiction books, so it should be with fiction'.3 This desire for novelists to shift their fictional framing of September 11, in a way that places 'the day itself' into a complex geopolitical context, ...
Teju Cole's meditative novel about a Nigerian immigrant in New York is the best, and darkest, first novel of this early year, writes critic Taylor Antrim. Read it.