Authors on the Web
NPR, November 20, 2012
..."He is a relentlessly restless writer — utterly contemporary and light on his feet," observes NPR critic Lawrence Frascella. In , Dyer confronts Russian visionary filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky and how his 1979 film Stalker reflects both European cinema...
NPR, November 19, 2012
..."He is a relentlessly restless writer — utterly contemporary and light on his feet," observes NPR critic Lawrence Frascella. In , Dyer confronts Russian visionary filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky and how his 1979 film Stalker reflects both European cinema...
NPR, June 7, 2012
...I had failed to do that. So there was a huge guilt at work." NPR book critic Lawrence Frascella sums up, "There is an aching desperation in this book's need to reach some sort of shattering revelation about mortality. And this determination — this...
NPR, June 7, 2012
...I had failed to do that. So there was a huge guilt at work." NPR book critic Lawrence Frascella sums up, "There is an aching desperation in this book's need to reach some sort of shattering revelation about mortality. And this determination — this...
NPR, November 20, 2012
..."He is a relentlessly restless writer — utterly contemporary and light on his feet," observes NPR critic Lawrence Frascella. In , Dyer confronts Russian visionary filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky and how his 1979 film Stalker reflects both European cinema...
NPR, November 19, 2012
..."He is a relentlessly restless writer — utterly contemporary and light on his feet," observes NPR critic Lawrence Frascella. In , Dyer confronts Russian visionary filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky and how his 1979 film Stalker reflects both European cinema...
NPR, June 7, 2012
...I had failed to do that. So there was a huge guilt at work." NPR book critic Lawrence Frascella sums up, "There is an aching desperation in this book's need to reach some sort of shattering revelation about mortality. And this determination — this...
NPR, June 7, 2012
...I had failed to do that. So there was a huge guilt at work." NPR book critic Lawrence Frascella sums up, "There is an aching desperation in this book's need to reach some sort of shattering revelation about mortality. And this determination — this...

