An excerpt from the novel Burma, titled “Horse Crazy,” by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.
Sandra Bernhard collaborated with John Boskovitch to write her 1988 show Without You I’m Nothing. Sandra was inspired to develop material after two years traveling on the road with John and the outrageous situations they encountered.
Several diary entries chronicling three troubled months, “Diaries 1989-90” by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.
A short story, “Boat,” from the novel The Bad Ones, by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.
A short story, titled “The Hidden Anguish of the Mouseketeers,” by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.
In celebration of Small Press Month, BOMB Magazine presents a serialized audiobook of The Shanghai Gesture as read by the novel’s author, Gary Indiana.
Losing close friends amidst AIDS anxiety, “Burmese Days,” from a novel in progress, by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.
An excerpt from the novel Burma, “Love Isn’t Living, Life Doesn’t Live” by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print
Filmmaker Valie Export speaks to Gary Indiana about the trials and tribulations of making cinema in Austria, describing past moments of backlash and her fascination with the “dead” city of Vienna.
In celebration of Small Press Month, BOMB Magazine presents a serialized audiobook of The Shanghai Gesture as read by the novel’s author, Gary Indiana.
Gary Indiana talks to venerated filmmaker and writer Gus Van Sant, director of films such as My Own Private Idaho and Drugstore Cowboy, before the release of Even Cowgirls Get the Blues.
Excerpted from the novel The Family Dog, the seedy realities of a sexual relationship, “Pillow Talk” by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.
Gary Indiana writes that Daniel Schmid’s films, including Hecate, Paloma, and Shadow of Angels, “elaborate the sensual fantasies people call forth to veil reality, a response of desire to exigencies of the social order.”
An excerpt from the novel Burma, “You Tell Me and We’ll Both Know,” by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.
A fascinating discussion between long-time BOMB contributor Gary Indiana and the late Robert Mapplethorpe on the New York art scene of the late 1980s and the difficulties of intimacy, comfort and eroticism in photography and portraiture.
From his perch and cat-bird seat at the bar of Rounds, a rent boy gives his take on a life of johns and tricks. This article is only available in print.
This First Proof contains an excerpt from the novel Resentment: A Comedy. For copyright reasons this content is available in print only.
In celebration of Small Press Month, BOMB Magazine presents a serialized audiobook of The Shanghai Gesture as read by the novel’s author, Gary Indiana.
This First Proof contains an excerpt from The Shanghai Gesture. For copyright reasons this content is available in print only.
In celebration of Small Press Month, BOMB Magazine presents a serialized audiobook of The Shanghai Gesture as read by the novel’s author, Gary Indiana.
In celebration of Small Press Month, BOMB Magazine presents a serialized audiobook of The Shanghai Gesture as read by the novel’s author, Gary Indiana.
An excerpt from the novel Burma, “Borrowed Times,” by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.
An excerpt from the novel, Burma by Gary Indiana, “Shadow of Angels.” This article is only available in print.
From childhood memories of the Cold War to Pope sighting with Viva, Gary Indiana writes a connection “between religion and nuclear war” in his short story “Black Moon.”
In celebration of Small Press Month, BOMB Magazine presents a serialized audiobook of The Shanghai Gesture as read by the novel’s author, Gary Indiana.
In celebration of Small Press Month, BOMB Magazine presents a serialized audiobook of The Shanghai Gesture as read by the novel’s author, Gary Indiana.
In celebration of Small Press Month, BOMB Magazine presents a serialized audiobook of The Shanghai Gesture as read by the novel’s author, Gary Indiana.
Filmmaker Alexander Kluge delves into the cultural significance of film and television with Gary Indiana in this 1989 conversation. A series of Kluge’s films is currently screening at Spectacle Theater in Brooklyn.
Emma Tennant is a self-described femenist author from Britain. Tennant is well known for using existing texts for inspiration and then adapting these stories, such as Stevenson’s Jekyll and Hyde, in a contemporary and relatable manner.
A fantasy of affection trailed in the short story “Idée Fixe,” from the novel Burma, by Gary Indiana. This article is only available in print.