Stephen King Picks 10 Best Books Of 2009
Take it from your Uncle Stevie -- book lovers on your shopping list will thank you for the gift of any of these rockin' reads....
Take it from your Uncle Stevie -- book lovers on your shopping list will thank you for the gift of any of these rockin' reads....
Johann Hari | Posted 12.09.2009 | World
The internet has transformed the way we think about ourselves. The story of this decade is the story -- in all its strange sinews -- of the World Wide Web.
theroot.com | Lonnae O'Neal Parker | Posted 11.06.2009 | Books
As our discussion veered from how the quest for filthy lucre overtook evading communist sensors as an overarching concern for some Chinese filmmakers,...
nypost.com | Posted 10.21.2009 | Entertainment
Salman Rushdie has hit back at his ex-girlfriend, Pia Glenn, blasting her as a "large, radioactive bucket of stress." The acclaimed author was infuri...
nypost.com | Posted 10.20.2009 | Entertainment
SALMAN Rushdie is still obsessed with his beautiful ex-wife, Padma Lakshmi, and talks about her day and night, his ex-girlfriend tells Page Six. Stat...
Ariel Gonzalez | Posted 10.07.2009 | Entertainment
A middle-aged man who treats a 13-year-old girl like an inflatable sex doll, and who then flees justice, is a degenerate and a coward. This is Humbert Humbert, not Nelson Mandela.
Sandy Goodman | Posted 09.16.2009 | Media
A book entitled The Cartoons That Shook The World is being published without any of the cartoons in the book. It's the latest in a long series of Western reactions to violent threats to freedom of expression.
Jim Luce | Posted 08.06.2009 | New York
Our biggest accomplishment was standing up for those torn down by the TV evangelists.
Huffington Post | Katy Hall | Posted 07.15.2009 | Entertainment
Good news for shorter guys who are also rich and/or famous: more than ever you can land an Amazonian beauty. These vertically challenged men might not...
Jill Priluck | Posted 06.04.2009 | Media
Unlike the sometimes raucous, awkward web-o-sphere that is morphing into a brand-centric wonderland, the Moth wasn't noisy. It was pleasant to the ear. It still is.
Andrew Marantz | Posted 06.01.2009 | World
Each performer had ten minutes to tell a story. Not a rant, not a stand up routine, and, for heaven's sake, not a reading (no notes allowed).
AP | Posted 04.25.2009 | Media
NEW YORK — Salman Rushdie, Neil Gaiman and Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman will be among the authors featured at this spring's PEN Wo...
New York Daily News | Posted 03.11.2009 | Entertainment
He may be 61, a veteran of four marriages, and, yes, he was marked for death, but Salman Rushdie can still charm a beautiful woman. Having split with...
AP | HILLEL ITALIE | Posted 02.19.2009 | Media
NEW YORK — Nearly 20 years after being driven underground by a religious decree, he is now Sir Salman Rushdie, properly famous and free, yet sti...
The Times | Posted 02.03.2009 | Media
Salman Rushdie has a long interview with Saturday's UK Times, and buried in it is the author's comment that, after four divorces, he will never marry ...
Glynnis MacNicol | Posted 01.18.2009 | Media
I reached out to a few well-known types (Fred Armisen, Brian Williams, Arianna, to name a few) who were generous enough to offer their holiday book recommendations. Let the recommending begin!
Johann Hari | Posted 01.08.2009 | World
The Kasmhir of Salman's grandfather stands for him as an alternate Islam, a radically different way of being Muslim to the Khomeinist and Bin Ladenite head-choppers -- a religion of peace, not a religion of pieces.
Ariston Anderson | Posted 12.26.2008 | Entertainment
The MOTH was founded in 1997 by novelist George Dawes Green, who sought to recreate the experience of storytelling on a porch in Georgia, while moths flew into the light bulb.
Ariston Anderson | Posted 12.12.2008 | Entertainment
The Glamour Women of the Year Awards filled Carnegie Hall with a slew of A-listers from the art world, Hollywood, and Washington, as well as some international activists ready to inspire the audience into...change.
Ronald Maxwell | Posted 10.27.2008 | Politics
Senator John McCain has inadvertently riled some murky Alaskan back-waters. And this is a good thing, because neither book banning nor witch hunting should go unnoticed or unexposed.
Financial Times | Peter Aspden | Posted 10.11.2008 | Media
Judges for the Man Booker prize for fiction sprang their customary surprise yesterday when they omitted Sir Salman Rushdie's latest novel, The Enchant...
AP | HILLEL ITALIE | Posted 09.15.2008 | Media
NEW YORK — Salman Rushdie strongly criticized his publisher for pulling a historical novel about the prophet Muhammad and his child bride over c...
AP | JILL LAWLESS | Posted 08.11.2008 | Media
LONDON (AP) _ Author Salman Rushdie is threatening to sue a publisher over a book by a former bodyguard that he says portrays him as cheap, nasty and ...
AP | JILL LAWLESS | Posted 07.18.2008 | Entertainment
LONDON — Salman Rushdie is probably the Booker Prize's best-known winner. Now he is officially the best. Rushdie's 1981 novel "Midnight's Child...
AP | GREGORY KATZ | Posted 07.03.2008 | Entertainment
LONDON — Author Salman Rushdie slipped into Buckingham Palace on Wednesday to receive a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II that had angered many...
EW | Stephen King | Posted 12.18.2009 | Books