Posted inCulture

Happily Never After?

Bend poets explore “fractured” fairy tales and Myths

What’s the big deal about fairy tales? In recent years the onslaught of princesses, wicked witches and big bad wolves in pop culture has overwhelmed TV and book markets, stacking up other-worldly entertainment to audiences of all ages. With serial television offerings like “Once Upon A Time,” “Grimm,” and “Sleepy Hollow,” joining countless film releases […]

Posted inCulture

Disguise, Dissimulation and Cunning

Local author Steven Berg’s “Errand Runner”

In the spring of 1972, Step Bronstad steps into line at a Military Entrance Processing Station, “surrounded by dozens of other young men about to begin an odyssey that would likely place most of us in the war-torn jungles of Vietnam.” When he is hustled into an interrogation room, forced to answer questions about his […]

Posted inCulture

You Can’t Handle the Truth

Outspoken Sibel Edmonds publishes second revealing novel

Oregon author and Bend resident, Sibel Edmonds, known as the “most classified woman in the U.S.,” will not be silenced. She’s the subject of several government-asserted State Secrets Privilege Orders, and the U.S. Congress has been indefinitely gagged and prevented from taking up her case through unprecedented retroactive classification orders issued by the Department of […]

Posted inCulture

The Nameless Nurse

Lois Leveen explores Shakespeare’s comic relief in “Juliet’s Nurse”

I’ll never forget one particular moment in my high school English class. We were reading Romeo and Juliet, a rite of passage for bored, lusty, American teenagers everywhere. When I made the offhand suggestion that perhaps the author might have reconsidered the “love at first sight” premise, and instead offered a bit more relationship development […]

Posted inCulture

The Manliest Men

Peter Heller’s sophomore novel, “The Painter”

Peter Heller, best-selling author of “The Dog Stars,” wowed Bend audiences last year when he visited the community as part of The Deschutes County Public Library’s “Novel Idea” program. His sophomore novel, “The Painter,” offers yet another moving narrative, and one that is sure to appeal to the outdoorsy, artistic, life-on-the-fringes reader, a demographic which […]

Posted inCulture

Living in Dystopia

The future gets a harsh reimagining in “Good House”

In the near future, envisioned by debut author Peyton Marshall, genetic profiling is employed to segregate the population into those prone toward crime and violence, and those who aren’t. In this plausible—if distant—reality, the world has asked and answered the question, can we truly control the future? Although Marshall has coopted themes from the wildly […]

Posted inCulture

“Crooked River” Country

An interview with author Valerie Geary

Valerie Geary’s gorgeous debut novel, “Crooked River,” is a haunting coming of age ghost story that follows sisters Ollie and Sam, set in Central Oregon. The Source recently sat down with Valerie to explore how “Crooked River” came to life. Source Weekly: In “Crooked River,” the Central Oregon landscape almost serves as a secondary character […]

Posted inCulture

Young Adult Gothic Romance

Local Author April Genevieve Tucholke churns out darkness and beauty for young readers

In her debut young adult novel, “Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea,” April Genevieve Tucholke (pronounced two-HALL-key) weaves together a crumbling seaside estate, a handsome and mysterious stranger and a bookish young girl ready to be swept off her feet in the time-tested manner of all great gothic romances. The result is a […]

Posted inCulture

Writing Westward

An interview with Jess Walter

Jess Walter is the bestselling author of “Beautiful Ruins,” a novel that dominated “best of” lists in 2012 and continues to charm readers of every stripe. His latest work, a collection of short stories called “We Live in Water,” illuminates the hard knocks experienced by Pacific North Westerners with stories that his friend, Central Oregon […]

Posted inCulture

Screaming Stella, Then Writing About It

Two Oregon Book Award Winners in Bend

From recently named Oregon Book Award winners come two vibrant books in the nonfiction and young adult genres. Elena Passarello’s collection of essays, “Let Me Clear My Throat,” takes as its subject the whys and hows of voice—a deconstruction of the ways in which sounds express and shape who we are. Kari Luna’s debut novel, […]

Sign up for newsletters

Get the best of The Source - Bend, Oregon directly in your email inbox.

Sending to:

Gift this article