Tag Line Contest


Posted at 12:00 on Mar 8th
By Duncan Barlow
I'd like to thank everyone who has sent in serious slogans this month. We're extending the contest for a bit longer, so please keep your ideas coming. Remember, you'll get two books out of it. Just go to the contact section of our site and send us your suggestion. It's that easy. Reading the real suggestions as well as the jokes has been interesting. I'd like to list a few of the entries:

1. Books, Motherfucker Books!
2. Tomorrow's Library Today
3. Books Worth Reading
4. If Books are Dead then We are Necrophiliacs!
5. Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow
6. A Star by which to Read
7. We Sell Books

Also, we've posted PDF and web versions of interviews with Eric E. Olson and David Gruber in our "Resources" section. I would recommend reading the interviews to gather a bit of insight as to their writing process as well a conversation entry point for papers, reviews, or reading groups. We will have reading guides posted before too long as well.
Slogan Contest | Eric E. Olson and David Gruber Interviews

Featured Books


Downstream from Trout Fishing in America: A Memoir of Richard Brautigan By Keith Abbott

In Downstream from Trout Fishing in America: A Memoir of Richard Brautigan, Keith Abbott paints a portrait of Richard Brautigan as a lovable and whimsical friend. Abbott explains the writer’s dedication to the art of fiction and his quest to break beyond the pop culture, hippie label that haunted him until his suicide in 1984. Brautigan’s tight prose inspired authors such as Haruki Murakami and his experimentation with the line won him accolades from authors like Ishmael Reed, Raymond Carver, and Michael McClure. His work is highly influential and Abbott draws a clear connection between Brautigan’s life and his writing. This book is essential for anyone who is interested in the work of Richard Brautigan. Raymond Carver writes, "Truly the best thing I've ever seen written of the man."


The Procession of Mollusks By Eric Olson

If Fletch took Lovecraft to see a movie and it turned out to be a double feature—'Slugs: muerte viscosa' and 'The Monster that Challenged the World'--this post-genre romp is what might have been extracted from their post-movie dreams. This is a smart, funny, and (most importantly) irreverently weird book.
—Brian Evenson, author of The Open Curtain and The Wavering Knife.


Sleepers' Republic By David Gruber

In David Gruber’s Sleepers’ Republic nature is dreaming, and we are its dreams. Time is slowed down or speeded up: “suddenly, the sun / gives way to stars.” And: “What we knew moves sudden / without warning / throwing us to the ground / an emptiness in the sea / The air above us filled with fruit.” It may be that love “offers the opposite of a kiss,” yet Gruber’s upended universe is nonetheless an exhilarating medium in which the reader can both swim and breathe.
— John Ashbery author of Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror and Notes from the Air




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