|
|
For the Week ofNovember 11-17, 1999
Cover: Food of Place
On the Shelf: A quartet of engaging new cookbooks. Dinner Date: Local restaurants unveil multicourse millennial menus for New Year's Eve. Veg-Mex: Meatless Mexican cooking for the holidays. Heard It Through the Grapevine: Get to the root of all things wine.
Heady Stuff: 'Being John Malkovich' is a surreal cinematic tour de farce.
SF Club Guide: Disco divas, hip-hop connoisseurs and salsa suaves to flannel-clad pinball players, jazz luminaries and more from the City by the Bay.
Stiffed Upper Lip: Today's man is drifting and drifting, cut loose from the work that once defined him, according to author Susan Faludi and the creators of 'American Beauty' and 'Fight Club.' A Beautiful Terror: Roddy Doyle's street-smart Irish killing machine doesn't give a 'shite'--but readers will. Rush of Fortune: A young woman confronts cultural conflicts in Isabelle Allende's new novel. Escaping From the Labyrinth: Robin Magowan recalls a life of leisure, verse and strife in 'Memoirs of a Minotaur.' Emotional Baggage: Nick Bantock takes readers on a richly visual tour of 10 imaginary collections in 'The Museum at Purgatory.' High Marx For Karl: Marshall Berman argues for a Marx better than the societies he begat. A Human Hitler? In 'Hitler's Niece,' the terrible leader of the Third Reich is just a man--however dysfunctional. Between the Lines: Iranian-Americans speak in verse and prose in new anthology.
|
Copyright 1994-2025 Weeklys. This page is part of Metro Silicon Valley's historical archive and is no longer updated. It may contain outdated information or links. For currently information, please go to MetroSiliconValley.com home page, e-edition or events calendar.