Portland Mercury
The Stranger
EverOut
Savage Love
Hump
Bold Type Tickets
The Latest
News
Culture
Music
Performance
Food & Drink
I, Anonymous
Savage Love
Pop Quiz PDX
Top Events Today and This Week
Live Music
•
Arts
•
Food
•
& More!
Support Portland Mercury
Masthead
Ad Info & Rates
Jobs at Portland Mercury
Contact
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Takedown Policy
Log In
Sign Up
All contents © Index Newspapers LLC
PO Box 86208, Portland, OR 97286
Where to Pick Up Your "SAY NICE THINGS ABOUT PORTLAND" Print Issue! 🌹
See How YOU Score on Our Local Trivia Quiz! 🤔
TONIGHT: the Hilarious TWO EVILS Game Show! 😈
Books
Nov 2, 2009 at 4:54 pm
National Novel Writing Month...
Alison Hallett
started yesterday!
You're already behind.
Monkey wrestles with own perfectionist tendencies
Comments 1
Tags:
Books
Blogs
More In Books
Author Q&A: Intersex Activist Alicia Roth Weigel on Her New Memoir
Inverse Cowgirl
Ian Karmel's Memoir
T-Shirt Swim Club
Covers the Comedian's Weight Loss and the Immaculate Snacks of His Youth
Editors' Picks
THE TRASH REPORT: Hollywood DC's Biggest Night, It's the State of the Academy Awards!
Your Sassy-Ass Local Trivia Quiz About Famous Flops, Creepy Bird Lovers, and the (Hurrah) Death of Capitalism!
THE TRASH REPORT: Trump is Losing Ivanka, Celebrity Memoirs, and Trash Pandas Cause Havoc (Raccoons, Not You)
Let's Eat! The
Mercury
's BURGER WEEK Is Happening RIGHT NOW! 🎉🍔😍
THE TRASH REPORT: Sexy Current Events, Jenna Ortega's Mom Makes Smoking Cool Again, and What NOT To Do If You're Taking a Picture with Pedro Pascal
DOJ Wants Independent Monitor to Watch Over Portland Police
Popular Articles
Portland Book Festival 2023 Authors, Ranked by Lit Crowd Gasps
Ian Karmel's Memoir
T-Shirt Swim Club
Covers the Comedian's Weight Loss and the Immaculate Snacks of His Youth
An LA Comics Fest Comes to Create Permanent Damage in Portland
Multnomah County Library Opens Temporary Northeast Portland Location
Author Q&A: Intersex Activist Alicia Roth Weigel on Her New Memoir
Inverse Cowgirl
Oregon Cartoonist Breena Bard Draws a Climate Change Story From a Middle-School View