| Recommended links... (In their own words) |
| Creative Nonfiction The journal devoted exclusively to the creative nonfiction genre. |
| Yahoo index of literary publications A superb resource |
| Harpers Magazine Harper's Magazine aims to provide readers with a unique perspective on the world. The emphasis at Harper's Magazine is on fine writing and original thought, and in its acclaimed essays, fiction, and reporting, Harper's continues to explore the issues and ideas in politics, science, and the arts... |
| William Faulkner Campfire Chat An on-line forum on one of my favorite writers. |
| Wire Home of the most adventurous coverage of electronica, avant rock, breakbeat, jazz, modern classical, global, and sounds from the outer limits. |
| Z Mag A community of people committed to social change. |
| The Economist A political, literary and general newspaper. It still does so because, in addition to offering analysis and opinion, it tries in each issue to cover the main events - business and political - of the week. |
| Publishing Houses |
| Exact Change Classics of experimental literature |
| The New Press Established in 1990 as a major alternative to the large, commercial publishers, The New Press is a not-for-profit publishing house operated editorially in the public interest. |
| Killing the Buddha Killing the Buddha is a religion magazine for people made anxious by churches, people embarrassed to be caught in the "spirituality" section of a bookstore, people both hostile and drawn to talk of God. It is for people who somehow want to be religious, who want to know what it means to know the divine, but for good reasons are not and do not. If the religious have come to own religious discourse it is because they alone have had places where religious language could be spoken and understood. Now there is a forum for the supposedly non-religious to think and talk about what religion is, is not and might be. Killing the Buddha is it. |