Essay by Louis Gallo A history with scandalous cameo personalities* While away in grad school I sent weekly book reviews to Vieux Carre Courier, an alternative, low-budget newspaper owned by lawyer Jim Derbes and his wife, Ginny. Jim was an old friend from my early teen years. We had met, weirdly enough, over the forty […]
“Rear View,” An Essay by Louis Gallo
Filed Under: Essays Tagged With: A New Orleans Review, Alice Walker, Bill Rushton, Books, C.D. Wright, Carol Flake, David Hershkovits, David Richmond, Ellen Gilchrist, Everette Maddox, Frank Stanford, George Garrett, Hazel McKinley Guggenheim, Jason Berry, Jim Derbes, Julia Alvarez, Julie Nead, Louis Gallo, Mary Frances Berry, New Orleans, Philip Carter, Ralph Adamo, Rear View, Rebecca Gallo, Russell Rocke, Steve Singer, The Barataria Review, The New Orleans Review, The Xavier Review, Walker Percy
Laughlin: Romanticist Extraordinaire, A Memoir
By Louis Gallo Laughlin, Ghosts Along the Mississippi: An essay in the poetic interpretation of Louisiana’s plantation archictecture—One hundred photographs by the author (Bonanza Books, NY—1961) —Clarence John Laughlin, Aperture Monograph (1973) I. I’ve never believed that literature is an ideal conduit for surrealism other than in spurts such as the “Nighttown” episode in Joyce’s […]
Filed Under: Essays Tagged With: Clarence Laughlin, Louis Gallo, Louisiana, New Orleans, photography, Ralph Adamo, The Barataria Review