Robin R. Means Coleman updates her essential text on Black horror cinema with a new volume and a new co-author
The Black Guy Dies First reads like little more than Horror Noire for the attention-deficit crowd.
A Blog About Books and Reading
A Blog About Books and Reading
The Black Guy Dies First reads like little more than Horror Noire for the attention-deficit crowd.
The chain does not store credit or debit card numbers in its system.
Victory City reads like a defiant rebuke to those who work to suppress words and ideas.
Indigo has little control over whether its system gets hacked. What it does have control over is how it responds to the situation.
For those looking for reasons to be optimistic about issues of diversity in publishing, there are a few to be found in the 2022 report.
The company is working to "understand if customer data has been accessed."
Failure is inevitable because perfection is unattainable.
Today, Arnold's ideas seem deeply unfashionable. They also seem pressingly relevant.
The novel is about nothing so much as the nature of storytelling.
The book's release seems like more than just the appearance of new work from a novelist regularly deemed one of the world's most important living writers.