



Weird Fiction Review talks with Nicholas Rombes about his influences, his transition from non-fiction to fiction writing, and knife fights.Įlectric Literature interviews Nicholas Rombes | Įlectric Literature speaks with Nicholas Rombes about Joan Didion’s Play It As It Lays. Weird Fiction Review interviews Nicholas Rombes | We talk with Nick about the love of misremembering films, northwest Ohio influences, David Lynch, and more!īOMB Magazine: Artists in Conversation with Nicholas Rombes | Īndrew Gallix talks with Nicholas Rombes about constraint as liberation, knife-wielding film scholars, and the human brain as total cinema machine.įilmmaker Magazine interview with Nicholas Rombes | įilmmaker Magazine talks with Rombes about his 10/40/70 approach to film criticism. "Like the best of Borges (Borges, another film scholar and curator of secret histories), this novel has the erudite and exegetic tone that suggests answers and solutions, while understanding that riddles don’t resonate because of their answers, but because of what they ask." He is also a a contributing editor of Filmmaker Magazine.įind out more here: The Absolution of Roberto Acestes Laing book website His writing has appeared in The Believer, Filmmaker Magazine, the Los Angeles Review of Books, n+1, and The Rumpus. He is author of The Absolution of Roberto Acestes Laing, Ramones from the 33 1/3 series, and the book 10/40/70. His work has appeared in The Believer, The Los Angeles Review of Books, and Filmmaker Magazine. In 2016 he wrote and directed to film The Removals. Nicholas Rombes is author of the novel The Absolution of Roberto Acestes Laing (Two Dollar Radio) and the 33 1/3 book Ramones (Bloomsbury), as well as the director of the feature film The Removals. To contact me, just leave a comment at any post and I will answer.Nicholas Rombes is a professor of English in Detroit, Michigan, as well as a writer of fiction, screenplays, and essays. Please use the Search field below to see if an author, book, or topic has been mentioned or discussed. The categories below are only a handful of the topics covered in this blog over the years. And check out my yearly Reading Log, where I write something about every book I read. You can see my 11 favorite posts (from more than 600) by clicking on the Top Posts tab. I now write about a broader range of books that interest me.

Sebald and the history of fiction and poetry with photographs embedded as part of the author’s original text. 'I, a lover of cinema, destroyed the films - in nothing more than a shitty little garbage can, which is funny considering the can had no idea that its insides were being burned and scalded by the. I began Vertigo in 2007 primarily as a vehicle for writing about W.G.
