Author Benjamin Hale on Braveheart, chimp sex and Kafka

We generally don’t think much about who is narrating our stories, but in the case of Benjamin Hale’s new novel, The Evolution of Bruno Littlemore, we have to. Mostly because the narrator is an ape. Hale, who grew up in and around Boulder but who currently lives in New York,…

Tonight: Drugs, daydreams and DIY at the Denver Zine Library

In the way that anything has at least its category in common with its opposite (red is the opposite of green, for example, but they’re both colors), a magazine and a zine are opposites: Where magazines tend to be slick, polished and pandering (ours excepted, of course — we never…

Last Night: Whirlwind Company, the supergroup of live poetry

Watching the Whirlwind Company deliver their energetic brand of live verse at the Mercury Café on Wednesday night felt a bit like being in the crowd for a Cream show. Indeed, taking in the combined forces of Mindy Nettifee, Brian Ellis, Jon Sands and Mike McGee — along with a…

Borders goes bankrupt: Five overhauls to right the ship

Borders filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this morning in New York, making it one more casualty of the continuing slow death of physical media. Six Colorado stores will close in the coming weeks, though none of the Denver locations. They’ve still got some time to right this thing, but it…

Local author Brenna Yovanoff goths it up for Young Adult readers

Penguin Books, eager to eclipse Twilight with a new moon of its own, sharpened its stakes and rounded up five authors of hot new fantasy titles for Young Adult readers from its various imprints, unleashing them on the world for the Breathless Reads National Book Tour, which haunts the Tattered…

One chapter book reviews: Work of Heart, chapter six

Cindi Myers used to be a newspaper reporter, and in many ways, that’s apparent in Work of Heart (how about that title, amiright?), her latest. For one thing, it’s a “reality-based romance,” which apparently means that the couple in the story is based on a real-life couple; more importantly, though,…

Mean zine chili: The end of a tasty era of terror

When I talked with back-to-back-to-back Super Bowl Chili Cookoff Champion Kevin Richards just days before the Denver Zine Library’s 5th Annual competition, the Librarian wasn’t exactly cocky, but was armed with the sort of innocent charm that says, My Nonchalance Is a Cover For My Awesomeness. Which was fair, considering…

One chapter book reviews: Hidden, chapter nine

The challenge of writing a character who is a part of a marginalized group — say blacks, Hispanics or, in the case of Tomas Mournian’s Hidden, a gay teenager — is that all too often the drama of suffering overwhelms the character’s humanity; instead of developing into believable people, these…

Talk dirty to me: Erotic Spoken Word

Time to graduate from Fabio-embossed bodice-rippers and your dog-eared library copy of Lady Chatterley’s Lover: Join your fellow Denverites as they whip out their favorite dirty reads when the Center for Sex Positive Culture joins forces with Smitten Kitten (70 Broadway) to host their first Erotic Spoken Word night, tonight…

Ladies of the Brown: The semi-secret history of a great hotel

Evalyn Walsh McLean was famous for the blowouts she threw on short notice at the Brown Palace for Denver’s society swells — ice elephants filled with caviar, Bollinger ’26, dance bands, the works. But in the depths of the Depression she took the Hope diamond to pawnshops to try to…

One chapter book reviews: Keeping Enemies Closer, chapter 24

Keeping Enemies Closer, the first novel from Littleton writer L.D. Stevens, is billed as a thriller, but it’s arguable that it’s closer to a fantasy. Not because the elements of a thriller (intrigue, plot twists, fear) aren’t there, and not because the elements of what the literary term “fantasy” implies…

Andrea Moore hopes to use PlatteForum residency for grief, but not in a sad way

For a project that centers around grief, it’s coincidentally a fitting time of year for Andrea Moore to begin her work in PlatteForum’s artist residency. An artistic jack-of-all-trades, the writer, photographer and performer moved into PlatteForum yesterday to begin her six-week residency there, during which she’ll be putting together a…

Stuff white people in Denver like

Christian Lander, author of the popular website and book series Stuff White People Like, will be at the Tattered Cover, Lodo on Thursday to promote his newest book, Whiter Shades of Pale. Unlike the broad strokes of his previous endeavors, Lander’s new book takes a closer look at the stuff…

One chapter book reviews: X-Rated Blood Suckers

Since the establishment of horror as a legit genre somewhere around the late ’70s, it’s always been almost a tradition to infuse the gore with a liberal amount of sex — and in a literary sense, few have been as shameless about those twin preoccupations than Mario Acevedo, whose credits…

One chapter book reviews: , chapter 13

As a character, the old hard-drinking, plucky-with-a-stubborn-streak-about-a-mile-wide female musician who’s getting older and washed up and needs a chance at a redemption that might just be a little closer to home than she thinks is hardly in short supply (see Gwyneth Paltrow in the upcoming Country Strong, for example). Still,…

Minor Disturbance poets get back to their roots at Yellow Feather

Denver’s Minor Disturbance youth Slam Team made history for the local poetry scene earlier this year when they appeared in Brave New Voices, the HBO special that followed the 2010 National Slam Team championships held in L.A. Denver’s team won fourth place in the global competition, but many had issues…

Poetry and contemporary art demystified at SAY WHAT tonight

Of all the expressive media, probably the most exclusive tend to be poetry and abstract art. They’re dense, demanding and heavily symbolic, and they’re hard to interpret without some background of study — all of which gives them a reputation for elitism and pretension. Still, those same qualities are what…