'Stray Dogs' is a five-issue miniseries that's gaining major buzz for it's inventive twist on a serial killer mystery... it's all told from the perspective of a pack of cute dogs.
'Legacy' comes encased in a 400-pound steel chamber, costs $360,000, and is limited to just 36 copies.
In honor of its 30th anniversary, Michael Azerrad is bringing his 1993 Nirvana biography up to date with a “super-expanded” version.
From Fiona Apple to Wim Wenders to Edvard Munch, here's a few examples of art that's relevant (and maybe somewhat comforting) through this garbage fire of a time.
Delano Dunn talks about the major inspiration he draws from literature and history when creating his artwork, why artists should pick up a book, and what he wants his work to inspire in others.
While there are no two ways of coping during difficult times, we could learn a thing or two from artists who thrived in solitude and fortuitously produced their magnum opuses.
Since its publication, 'The Handmaid's Tale' has often found itself on lists of the most-banned books, and this new version is a protest against censorship and book bans.
The biography titled 'Charlie’s Good Tonight: The Life, the Times, and The Rolling Stones', features forewords from both Mick Jagger and Keith Richards.
'The Beach Boys by The Beach Boys' is an anthology of the band that charts their rise from Hawthorne to international fame.
Some renounce the world through their art. Others through riots and revolts. And some simply cut all ties with the world and try to live in a retail store.
'CREEM: America’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll Magazine' will premiere in August 2020 and will include interviews with Alice Cooper, Cameron Crowe, Joan Jett, Michael Stipe, Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Kirk Hammett, Thurston Moore, Peter Wolf, and more.
For months we've been secretly working on a way to represent some of the incredible content our team has put out over the past year or so and the result of that is our very first 'coffee table book' of sorts which is available at a discounted price now! It's some of our best work yet and we think it'll look great and entertain anywhere you'll put it.
After Issue 9 (August 2019) the magazine will no longer be available at newsstands, and Issue 10 will be the last to have new content.
The six-part series, which wrapped up last month, is one of the works of fiction that has best grappled with the Trump era. Its modern-day echoes really hit home.
At nearly 600 pages long, the book pulls together most of his previously published work, from song lyrics to poetry to the entirety of his posthumously published writing collections.
'The Journal of Beatles Studies,' published by Liverpool University Press, is the first journal to establish The Beatles as an object of scholarly research.
Haruki Murakami's idea is to try to lift the nation's spirits under the current coronavirus lockdown by playing some of his favorite songs and answering listener questions in a two-hour show across 39 Japanese radio shows.
The book collects, for the first time, more than 200 of Spike Jonze's personal photographs with the Beastie Boys and will be released March of this year.
The Hold Steady turns 20 this year and we got a chance to talk with Michael Hann about the new coffee table book he wrote in conjunction with the band and how he became a part of the Unified Scene.
Penguin Random House confirmed that an unpublished Gabriel García Márquez novel – titled 'En Agosto Nos Vemos' – not only exists but will be on shelves across Latin America in 2024.
Published by Z2 Comics, the 160-page edition will depict the early days of the group when Louis “B-Real” Freese and Senen “Sen Dog” Reyes “were just a couple teenage cholos from around the way.”
The Marvel Cinematic Universe is the first thing that comes to mind when many think of shared universes, but this style of world-building dates back to much earlier.
More than 40 years into his career, the spring of 2022 has become the time to examine the cinematic and cultural legacy of Nicolas Cage - from think pieces to books to a new movie where Cage plays Cage.
DeLillo tells a tale reminiscent of our current planetary stagnation with the post-modern approach of an unreliable narrator, yet, he still manages to display the penetrating gaze of a true visionary.