Millenial Diaries

Elena Mudd
Jia Tolentino (c) Elena Mudd

Those who would most enjoy Internet darling Jia Tolentino’s first collection of essays, the raved-over Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion, may be the most unlikely to find time to consume it: the social-media-obsessed millennials with shattered attention spans whose culture is so adroitly described in the book. To the idea that they’re all digital-first narcissistic illiterates, Trick offers a paper-and-ink middle finger.  

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Art+Culture

Fresh Prints!

Local Galleries Celebrate PrintHouston

5.29

Throughout the spring, nonprofit PrintMatters has presented the seventh biennial PrintHouston, celebrating the art form of printmaking with events and exhibits hosted at various locations citywide. On Saturday, Montrose’s Archway Gallery opens its contribution, a show called Ink&Image, Red … or Not, which hangs through July 2.

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Dispatches

Tales of the City

In his acclaimed debut, young author Bryan Washington introduces the world to a sometimes messy, always vibrant new Houston.

Jhane Hoang

If you haven’t heard of Bryan Washington yet, it’s time. At just 26, he’s quickly become Houston’s unofficial literary ambassador. The young author has emerged as the city’s interlocutor, a man who can traverse our widely varied and diverse demographic, and the economic and sociological landscape, and depict it all in a way that doesn’t dismiss it as just another cultural fly-over between Brooklyn and Portland. No less an observer than The New York Times says he “cracks open a vibrant, polyglot side of Houston about which few outsiders are aware.”

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Art+Culture