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Houston native Ben Moser this week won this year’s Pulitzer Prize in biography for Sontag: Her Life and Work. It’s a whopper of a book: 866 pages that dares to tackle head on one of the most demanding and difficult literary geniuses of the last century, a person described as “America’s last great literary star,” who died in 2004. Moser, a graduate of St. John’s, lives in The Netherlands with his partner, the novelist and actor Arthur Japin.

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Art+Culture

A Man Possessed

Newly minted bestselling author Johnathan Cranford has tamed his ‘sugar demons.'

Traci Ling
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You think you just have a sweet tooth, but Johnathan Cranford — middle school teacher, CrossFit coach and author — knows it’s much worse than that: It’s a sugar addiction. “I know what I’m talking about,” he says. “There was a time not so long ago when I found myself sometimes eating two pints of ice cream in a night.” 

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Wellness+Giving Back

An Absurdist’s Odyssey

With a tone of tongue-firmly-planted-in-literary-cheek self-seriousness, Mark Haber’s new novel is both convoluted and captivating.

In a recent article on LitHub, the highly regarded online literary journal, Houston novelist Mark Haber described how little-known Swiss-Colombian writer Mila Menendez Krause influenced his latest book. He writes, “I read [Krause’s] book on the sands of [Namibia’s] Skeleton Coast, completely neglecting my two sons, throwing shells and shards of broken glass in their direction to keep them at bay, to buy myself more time with a book that, once finished, took me weeks to recover from.” The piece sent literary New York into a frenzy in search for books by Krause. 

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Art+Culture