Author Mario Acevedo discusses his literary influences, Rocky Flats and writing about dogs

Mario Acevedo is a local author whose 2007 debut novel The Nymphos of Rocky Flats introduced readers to Felix Gomez, an war veteran turned undead gumshoe, and was touted as one of the best new books by a Colorado author in the august pages of Westword that year. Since then, Acevedo has published 4 more Gomez novels, and has just recently co-authored an e-book about an international ponzi scheme called Good Money Gone. I recently met up with Acevedo, a fellow dog owner, to discuss his literary influences, his career, and the community of Colorado writers at Three Dogs Tavern, where we watched our own dogs tentatively befriend one another on the patio out front.

Colorado Book Award winners include Westword alum Harrison Fletcher

Colorado Humanities and the Center for the Book have announced the winners of the 22nd annual Colorado Book Awards from 170 entries, and “the level of talent in Colorado is astonishing,” says Christine Goff, Colorado Book Awards coordinator. The talent includes former Westword staff writer Harrison Candelarie Fletcher, whose book…

Skinny Bitch‘s Rory Freedman on Beg and her reading tonight

Most fans will know author Rory Freedman as co-author of the best-selling Skinny Bitch, a lifestyle book disguised as a diet book. Now she’s back to expand on her philosophy about animals in Beg: A Radical New Way of Regarding Animals. And to some people, it will seem radical. We…

Benjamin Percy’s Red Moon elevates werewolves to literature

With Red Moon, noted author Benjamin Percy dives into genre fiction with a story about werewolves that live among us, feared and reviled and relegated to the fringes of society. The book fuses literary muscle to a skeleton of horror to create a rare breed of werewolf novel that offers…

Westword Book Club: Comedian Adrian Mesa on searching for spirituality in literature

Reading is about more than following a narrative or learning facts, it can be a profound shared experience that culminates in the better understanding of ourselves and each other. In that spirit, welcome to the Westword Book Club, which celebrates books that inspire Denver artists. This week, Adrian Mesa, a comedian, gourmand and charming barbecue guest, discusses his favorite book, The Pilgrimage, by Brazillian novelist Paolo Coelho. The Pilgrimage concerns its protagonist’s spiritual development as he traverses the road to Santiago de Compostela, an important catholic pilgrimage site in Northern Spain.

Gonzo Museum in Aspen is going, going, gone as of April 1

The plane lands in Aspen at a quarter after four; I’m late. Outside the terminal, which doubles as a café for sharp-dressed skiers and businessmen, D.J. Watkins is waiting in his heavy-breathing ’89 Subaru Legacy. The 29-year-old Kansas native moved to Aspen five years ago, determined to preserve Hunter S…