Stephen Asma on Monsters

Stephen T. Asma, a professor of philosophy at Columbia College, took up monsters by way of natural history museums, the subject of his last book, where he found “anything from pickled fetuses in jars to bizarre twinning, things with two heads.” His latest book, On Monsters: An Unnatural History of Our Worst Fears, takes on a subject timely not just because of Halloween, but also because of the vampires and zombies appearing everywhere in popular culture. “Vampires are always sort of charming and upper class, and they’re kind of hot,” …

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Taylor Branch

Taylor Branch was born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia. He spent years chronicling the decade in which he came of age, the 1960s, when he, along with his friend Bill …

The David Bowie Myth

Marc Spitz has been writing on rock and roll and pop since 1997, when he wrote his first piece for Spin. Since then he’s written three books, including We Got …

Grenoble Café

by Jean Garrigue

At breakfast they are sober, subdued.
It is early. They have not much to say
Or with declamations fit only for whisper
Keep under pressure the steam of …

James Ellroy

James Ellroy visited Zócalo for the second time (the first was two years ago) to chat with his girlfriend Erika Schickel about his latest book, Blood’s A Rover. Before taking …

Credo

by Edwin Arlington Robinson

I cannot find my way: there is no star
In all the shrouded heavens anywhere;
And there is not a whisper in the air
Of any living …