Jim Steinmeyer
Rains of frogs and rains of fish and strange spacecraft and spontaneous... read more
Ernest Hemingway's Cuban archives released
Ernest Hemingway’s archives, compiled during the Nobel-winning author’s 21-year residence in Cuba, were reportedly made available to scholars on Monday. The documents were stored in the basement of his home near Havana surviving decades of humidity and insects and are currently being restored and digitized by Cuban conservationists. ... read more
Paste presents An Indie Rock Alphabet Book
We're proud to announce Paste's first foray into book publishing... read more
Nami Mun
Contemporary American novels often feel like extended short stories; notes for bigger books... read more
John Niven
While No Doubt and Oasis were climbing the charts... read more
Karen Spears Zacharias
In an entertaining, yet clear-eyed manner, Zacharias calls... read more
New York Times publishes 10 Best Books of 2008 list
Last week, The New York Times unveiled its "10 Best Books of 2008" list, and seven of the selections were published by Random House imprint Alfred A. Knopf. The sweep is not exactly surprising, as Knopf sits at the upper echelon of literary publishers; but if you take this 7/10 domination and include the ownership that came with the recent restructuring of Random House, two of the remaining three are from the Knopf/Doubleday Publishing Group. ... read more
Per Petterson
When Per Petterson emerged on the American literary scene last year... read more
Paste celebrates 10 years
On Dec. 3, 1998, Josh Jackson, Nick Purdy and Jordan Feibus launched PasteMusic.com... read more
Geoff Nicholson
Geoff Nicholson’s latest encyclopedic investigation into an ordinary... read more
Mark Barrowcliffe
Around 1975, my cousins and I invented the core element of... read more
What is Chuck Klosterman's best book to date?
Vote in PasteMagazine.com's latest poll... ... read more
Twilight movie sets pre-release records
Being a teenager sucks. Being a teenage vampire? Now that's the sort of misery worthy of an obtusely titled album. But if you just happen to be an adolescent bloodsucker on a Washington peninsula poised to cash in on the (lucrative) intersection of J.K. Rowling and Stephen King, life is actually pretty good right now.... read more
Ben Greenman: Killing E-mail One Postcard at a Time
Ben Greenman wants you to write... read more
Chuck Klosterman writes 1,700 words on Chinese Democracy
Of the two speeches given at the Soldier's National Cemetery dedication in 1863, it's Lincoln's 272-word Gettysburg Address that far eclipses the memory of Edward Everett's 13,607-word firebrand oration from only moments earlier. The lesson? Terser formats capture attention. It's a fact we see reverberate through the many listicles of our lives. ... read more
Chuck Klosterman's Killing Yourself to Live going film
If the inherently morbid 6,557 mile cross-country trek in Killing Yourself to Live had one lesson for Chuck Klosterman, it was the old trope that the journey is more important than the destination. Still, the destination has been pretty nice for Klosterman; five books into his career, he's the reigning king of pop-culture addicts. He'll be adding another feather to his cap (probably a Kiss hat) soon too: Half Shell Entertainment has nabbed film production rights to Klosterman's rock memoir/romantic confessional.... read more
The Best Music, Movies, TV Shows, Books and Games of 2008
Let’s be frank: any best-of list says more about the people who assembled it than it does about a particular year... read more
Signs of Life 2008: The Best Books We Read This Year
For the second consecutive year, Paste asked a constellation of authors to share with us the books they admired most in the past year. We offer their thoughts, musings and endorsements with no further prologue—after all, you’ve got some reading to do. ... read more
Niall Edworthy and Petra Cramsie
There is the angelic. And there is the... read more
Patton Oswalt is writing a book
Like most of us, Patton Oswalt had his head in the election last week. He was a live blogger for Comedy Central Indecision, and he also turned his attention to the future of the ill-fated Republican nominee. “McCain, someday, is going to make a great novel,” he wrote on his website. “He doesn't want to be a part of it, but it’ll be one of the most readable things to come out of this dark spiral we’ve been going through for eight years." ... read more

