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Jonathan Lethem

Jonathan Lethem
Jonathan Lethem

at the National Book Critics Circle Awards (March 2012) Born Jonathan Allen Lethem February 19, 1964 Brooklyn, New York, US Harry Conklin Novelist, essayist, short story writer American 1989present Motherless Brooklyn (1999) The Fortress of Solitude (2003)

Pen name Occupation Nationality Period Notable work(s)

Notable award(s) National Book Critics Circle Award, World Fantasy Award Spouse(s) Shelley Jackson (1987-1997) Julia Rosenberg (2000-2002) [1]

www.jonathanlethem.com

Jonathan Allen Lethem (born February 19, 1964) is an American novelist, essayist and short story writer. His first novel, Gun, with Occasional Music, a genre work that mixed elements of science fiction and detective fiction, was published in 1994. It was followed by three more science fiction novels. In 1999, Lethem published Motherless Brooklyn, a National Book Critics Circle Award-winning novel that achieved mainstream success. In 2003, he published The Fortress of Solitude, which became a New York Times Best Seller. In 2005, he received a MacArthur Fellowship.

Early life
Lethem was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Judith Frank Lethem, a political activist, and Richard Brown Lethem, an avant-garde painter.[2] He was the eldest of three children. His father was Protestant (with Scottish and English ancestry) and his mother was Jewish, from a family that originated in Germany, Poland, and Russia.[3][4] His brother Blake became an artist, and his sister Mara became a photographer and writer. The family lived in a commune in the pre-gentrified Brooklyn neighborhood of North Gowanus (now called Boerum Hill). Despite the racial tensions and conflicts, he later described his bohemian childhood as "thrilling" and culturally wide-reaching.[] He gained an encyclopedic knowledge of the music of Bob Dylan, saw Star Wars twenty-one times during its original theatrical release,[5] and read the complete works of the science fiction writer Philip K. Dick. Lethem later said Dicks work

Jonathan Lethem was "as formative an influence as marijuana or punk rockas equally responsible for beautifully fucking up my life, for bending it irreversibly along a course I still travel."[6] His parents divorced when Lethem was young. When he was thirteen, his mother Judith died from a malignant brain tumor,[7] an event which he has said haunted him and has strongly affected his writing. (Lethem discusses the direct relation between his mother and the Bob Dylan song Like a Rolling Stone in the 2003 Canadian documentary Complete Unknown.) In 2007, Lethem explained, "My books all have this giant, howling missing [center]language has disappeared, or someone has vanished, or memory has gone." Intending to become a visual artist like his father, Lethem attended the High School of Music & Art in New York, where he painted in a style he describes as "glib, show-offy, usually cartoonish."[8] At Music & Art he produced his own zine, The Literary Exchange, which featured artwork and writing. He also created animated films and wrote a 125-page novel, Heroes, still unpublished. After graduating from high school, Lethem entered Bennington College in Vermont in 1982 as a prospective art student. At Bennington, Lethem experienced an "overwhelming....collision with the realities of classmy parents bohemian milieu had kept me from understanding, even a little, that we were poor....at Bennington that was all demolished by an encounter with the fact of real privilege." This, coupled with the realization that he was more interested in writing than art, led Lethem to drop out halfway through his sophomore year. He hitchhiked from Denver, Colorado to Berkeley, California in 1984, across "a thousand miles of desert and mountains through Wyoming, Utah, and Nevada, with about 40 dollars in my pocket," describing it as "one of the stupidest and most memorable things I've ever done."[9] He lived in California for twelve years, working as a clerk in used bookstores, including Moe's and Pegasus & Pendragon Books, and writing on his own time.[10] Lethem published his first short story in 1989 and published several more in the early 1990s.[11]

Career
First novels
Lethems first novel, Gun, with Occasional Music, is a merging of science fiction and the Chandleresque detective story, which includes talking kangaroos, radical futuristic versions of the drug scene, and cryogenic prisons. The novel was published in 1994 by Harcourt Brace, in what Lethem later described as a "delirious" experience. "I'd pictured my first novels being published as paperback originals," he recalled, "and instead a prestigious house was doing the book in cloth....I was in heaven." The novel was released to little initial fanfare, but an enthusiastic review in Newsweek, which declared Gun an "audaciously assured first novel," catapulted the book to wider commercial success.[12] Gun, with Occasional Music was a finalist for the 1994 Nebula Award, and placed first in the "Best First Novel" Lethem in Brooklyn category of the 1995 Locus Magazine reader's poll. In the mid-1990s, film producer-director Alan J. Pakula optioned the novel's movie rights, which allowed Lethem to quit working in bookstores and devote his time to writing. He followed Gun, with Occasional Music in 1995 with Amnesia Moon. Partially inspired by Lethem's experiences hitchhiking cross-country, this second novel uses a road narrative to explore a multi-post-apocalyptic future landscape rife with perception tricks. After publishing many of his early stories in a 1996 collection (The Wall of the Sky, the Wall of the Eye), Lethem's third novel, As She Climbed Across the Table, was published in 1997. The novel takes as its starting point a physics researcher who falls in love with an artificially generated spatial anomaly called

Jonathan Lethem "Lack", for whom she spurns her previous partner. Her ex-partner's comic struggle with this rejection, and with the anomaly constitute the majority of the narrative. In 1996, Lethem moved from the San Francisco Bay Area back to Brooklyn. His next book, published after his return to Brooklyn, was Girl in Landscape. In the novel, a young girl must endure puberty while also having to face a strange and new world populated by aliens known as Archbuilders. Girl in Landscape's plot and characters, including the figures of a young girl and a violently protective father figure, were "very strongly influenced" by the 1956 John Wayne Western The Searchers, a movie with which Lethem is "obsessed."[13]

Mainstream success and "genre bending"


The first novel Lethem began after returning to New York City was Motherless Brooklyn, a return to the detective theme, this time maintaining objective realism while exploring subjective alterity through Lionel Essrog. His protagonist has Tourette syndrome and is obsessed with language. Lethem later said that Essrog "obviously [is] the character I've written with whom I most identify," and explained that the novel "stands outside myself...It's the only one which doesn't need me, never did. It would have found someone to write it, by necessity." Upon its publication in 1999, Motherless Brooklyn won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction, The Macallan Gold Dagger for crime fiction, and the Salon Book Award, and was named book of the year by Esquire. In 1999, Edward Norton announced that he was planning to write, direct and star in a film adaptation of the novel.[14] In March 2007, Norton said he was still working on the screenplay.[15]

According to The New York Times, the mainstream success of Motherless Brooklyn made Lethem "something of a hipster celebrity," and he was referred to several times as a "genre bender."[16] Critics cited the variety of Lethem's novels, which were alternately hard-boiled detective fiction, science fiction, and autobiographical. (Lethem credited his comfort in genre-mixing to his father's art, which "always combined observed and imagined reality on the same canvas, very naturally, very un-self-consciously.") In Time magazine, Lev Grossman classed Lethem with a movement of authors similarly eager to blend literary and popular writing, including Michael Chabon (with whom Lethem is friends),[17] Margaret Atwood, and Susanna Clarke. In 2003, Lethem responded to the issue of "genre bending": The fact is, I used to get very involved, six or seven years ago, and before that, in questions of taxonomy of genre, and in the ideawhich is ultimately a political ideathat a given writer, perhaps me, could in some objective way alter or reorganize the boundaries between genres....Nowadays, I've come to feel that talking about categories, about 'high' and 'low', about genre and their boundaries and the blurring of those boundaries, all consists only of an elaborate way to avoid actually discussing what moves and interests me about booksmy own, and others'. What I like are books in their homely actualitythe insides of the books, the mysterious movements of characters and situations and the emotions that accompany those movements. The play of sentences, their infinite variety.[18] In the early 2000s, Lethem published a story collection, edited two anthologies, wrote magazine pieces, and published the 55-page novella This Shape We're In (2000). This Shape We're In was one of the first offerings from McSweeney's Books, the publishing imprint that developed from Dave Eggers' McSweeney's Quarterly Concern.

Lethem reading at the 2008 Brooklyn Book Festival

Jonathan Lethem In November 2000, Lethem said that he was working on an uncharacteristically "big sprawling" novel, about a child who grows up to be a rock journalist. The novel was published in 2003, as The Fortress of Solitude. The semi-autobiographical bildungsroman features dozens of characters in a variety of milieus, but features a tale of racial tensions and boyhood in Brooklyn during the late 1970s. The main characters are two friends of different backgrounds who grew up on the same block in Boerum Hill. It was named one of nine "Editor's Choice" books of the year by The New York Times and has been published in fifteen languages. Lethem's second collection of short fiction, Men and Cartoons, was published in late 2004. In March 2005, The Disappointment Artist, his first collection of essays, was released. On September 20, 2005, Lethem received a MacArthur Fellowship. In an interview with Armchair/Shotgun in 2009, Lethem said of short fiction: I'm writing short stories right now, that's what I do between novels, and I love them. I'm very devoted to it. You know, it's funny. There seems to be some sort of law that you only get to be celebrated for one or the other. And then a couple of people will break it. Updike did. They didn't review his story collections by saying, "Well, these are nice, but he's a novelist." Or review his novels by saying, "Well, too bad he can't do the longer stuff." Other people tend to get patronized on one end or the otherand I'll take it. I have a very happy life as a novelist. But the story collections I've published are tremendously important to me. And many of the uncollected storiesor yet-to-be-collected storiesare among my proudest writings. They're very closely allied, obviously, to novel writing. But also very distinct, and, you know, there's no need to choose.[19]

2005 - present
In September 2006, Lethem wrote the article "The Genius of Bob Dylan", a lengthy interview with Bob Dylan, which was published in Rolling Stone.[20] The interview contained Lethem's reflections on Dylan's artistic achievements, and revealed Dylan's dissatisfaction with contemporary recording techniques and his thoughts on his own status. After Motherless Brooklyn and The Fortress of Solitude, Lethem decided that "[i]t was time to leave Brooklyn in a literary sense anyway... I really needed to defy all that stuff about place and memory." In 2007, he returned as a novelist to California, where Lethem reading at Occupy Wall Street; his shirt refers to the New York Mets' some of his earlier fiction had been set, with home field changing from Shea Stadium, named after William Shea, to CitiField, You Don't Love Me Yet, a novel about an the naming rights for which were bought by Citibank upstart rock band. The novel revolves around a woman in the band, Lucinda, who answers phones for her friend's complaint line and uses some of a caller's words as lyrics. According to Lethem, the book was inspired by the years he spent as the lead singer in an upstart California band in the late 1980s and early 1990s, during what he called "the unformed posturing phase of life."[21] The novel received mixed reviews. In 2005, Lethem had announced that he was planning to revive the Marvel Comics character Omega the Unknown in a ten-issue series to be published in 2006.[22] After hearing of the project, Omega co-creator Steve Gerber expressed

Jonathan Lethem personal outrage over the use of the character without his participation, though he later discussed the project with Lethem and admitted that he had "misjudged" him.[23] In May 2006, Marvel Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada explained that the series had been delayed to 2007, saying that "winning the MacArthur Grant put additional and unexpected demands on [Lethem's] time."[24] The revamped Omega the Unknown series was published in ten monthly issues from October 2007 to July 2008; the issues were published in a single volume in October 2008. In early 2007, Lethem began work on Chronic City,[25] which was published on October 13, 2009.[26] In July 2008, Lethem said that Chronic City is "set on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, its strongly influenced by Saul Bellow, Philip K. Dick, Charles G. Finney and Hitchcocks Vertigo and it concerns a circle of friends including a faded child-star actor, a cultural critic, a hack ghost-writer of autobiographies, and a city official. And its long and strange."[27] His essay "The Ecstasy of Influence: A Plagiarism" (2007) is a passionate defense of plagiarism and a call for a return to a gift economy in the arts. He writes, "The kernel, the soullet us go further and say the substance, the bulk, the actual and valuable material of all human utterancesis plagiarism," and "Don't pirate my editions; do plunder my visions. The name of the game is Give All. You, reader, are welcome to my stories. They were never mine in the first place, but I gave them to you." The essay was included in his 2011 collection, The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions, Etc.[28] In 2011, The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick, edited by Pamela Jackson and Lethem, was published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Among other projects, Lethem published short books about John Carpenter's film They Live (published in October, 2010 as They Live) and the Talking Heads album Fear of Music.[29] Starting in 2011, he served as the Roy E. Disney Professor in Creative Writing at Pomona College, the position formerly held by David Foster Wallace.[30] Lethem's next novel, entitled Dissident Gardens, was released on September 10, 2013. According to Lethem in an interview with the Los Angeles Times, the novel concerns "American leftists," very specifically "a red-diaper baby generation trying to figure out what it all means, this legacy of American Communism."[31] Regarding the novel's setting, Lethem revealed in the same interview that it is "set in Queens and Greenwich Village, another New York neighborhood book, very much about the life of the city... writing about Greenwich Village in 1958 was really a jump for me, it was as much of an imaginative leap as any of the more fantastical things I've done. But really exciting, too."[32]

Personal life
In 1987, Lethem married the writer and artist Shelley Jackson; they were divorced by 1997. In 2000, he married Julia Rosenberg, a Canadian film executive; they divorced two years later. As of 2007, Lethem lived in Brooklyn and Berwick, Maine, with his third wife, the filmmaker Amy Barrett, and their son, Everett Barrett Lethem (b. May 23, 2007).[33] In 2010, he was named Disney Professor of Writing at Pomona College in Claremont, California, beginning in Spring 2011.[34]

Works
Novels Gun, with Occasional Music (1994) Amnesia Moon (1995) As She Climbed Across the Table (1997) Girl in Landscape (1998) Motherless Brooklyn (1999) The Fortress of Solitude (2003)

You Don't Love Me Yet (2007) Chronic City (2009)

Jonathan Lethem Dissident Gardens (2013) Novellas This Shape We're In (2000) Short story collections The Wall of the Sky, the Wall of the Eye (1996) Kafka Americana (1999) (with Carter Scholz) Men and Cartoons (2004) How We Got Insipid (2006)

Non-fiction The Disappointment Artist (2005) Believeniks!: 2005: The Year We Wrote a Book About the Mets with Christopher Sorrentino, as "Ivan Felt and Harris Conklin" (2006) They Live (2010) The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions, Etc. (2011) The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick (2011, co-editor with Pamela Jackson) Talking Heads' Fear Of Music (2012) Comics Omega the Unknown (2007) Films Light and the Sufferer (2009) screenplay by Christopher Peditto based on a short story by Lethem The Epiphany (2011) short film by SJ Chiro based on a short story by Lethem Miscellaneous "Monstrous Acts and Little Murders" [35] (Salon.com essay, January 1997) The Vintage Book of Amnesia (editor, 2001) Da Capo Best Music Writing: The Year's Finest Writing on Rock, Pop, Jazz, Country and More (editor, 2002) "You Don't Know Dick" [36] (Bookforum essay, Summer 2002) The Subway Chronicles (contributor, 2006) Brooklyn Was Mine (contributor, 2008) "Being James Brown" [37] (Rolling Stone essay, June 2006) "The Genius of Bob Dylan" [38] (Rolling Stone interview, September 2006) "The Ecstasy of Influence" [39] (Harper's Magazine essay, February 2007) "Ava's Apartment" [40] (The New Yorker short story, May 2009) "Procedure in Plain Air" [41] (The New Yorker short story, October 2009)

References
Notes
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] http:/ / www. jonathanlethem. com Richard Brown Lethem Website (http:/ / www. richardlethem. com) http:/ / www. forward. com/ articles/ 111940/ http:/ / www. lrb. co. uk/ v24/ n24/ jonathan-lethem/ my-egyptian-cousin Edemariam, Aida. "The Borrower" (http:/ / books. guardian. co. uk/ review/ story/ 0,,2093135,00. html), The Guardian, 2007-06-02. Retrieved on 2007-08-01.

[6] Middlehurst, Charlotte. "Jonathan Lethem to Appear in Shanghai (http:/ / www. timeoutshanghai. com/ features/ Blog/ 4046/ Jonathan-Lethem-to-appear-in-Shanghai-(UPDATED). html), Time Out Shanghai (September 26, 2011) [7] Lethem (2005). pp. 36-37.

Jonathan Lethem
[8] "Interview: Jonathan Lethem" (http:/ / www. postroadmag. com/ Issue_5/ Etcetera5/ Lethem. htm), Post Road Magazine, Fall/Winter 2002. Retrieved on 2007-08-29. [9] Kelleghan, Fiona. "Private Hells and Radical Doubts: An Interview with Jonathan Lethem" (http:/ / www. depauw. edu/ sfs/ interviews/ letheminterview. htm), Science Fiction Studies 25.2, July 1998. Retrieved on 2007-09-17 [10] "License at the Margins" (http:/ / alumni. berkeley. edu/ news/ california-magazine/ summer-2010-shelf-life/ license-margins), California Magazine, June 2010. Retrieved on 2010-07-04. [11] Houle, Zachary. "A Conversation With Jonathan Lethem" (http:/ / www. sfsite. com/ 11b/ jl93. htm), The SF Site, November 2000. Retrieved on 2007-08-29. [12] Gaffney, Elizabeth. "Jonathan Lethem: Breaking the Barriers Between Genres" (http:/ / www. publishersweekly. com/ article/ CA165462. html), Publishers Weekly, 1998-03-30. Retrieved on 2007-09-19. [13] Lethem, Jonathan. "Breeding Hybrids in the Genre Garden" (http:/ / www. locusmag. com/ 1997/ Issues/ 10/ Lethem. html), Locus Magazine, October 1997. Retrieved on 2007-09-19. [14] Fleming, Michael. "Norton Birthing 'Motherless': New Line Nurturing Lethem Novel" (http:/ / www. variety. com/ article/ VR1117756590. html?categoryid=13& cs=1), Variety, 1999-10-13. Retrieved on 2007-08-29. [15] Clarke, Donald. "Mr. Ed" (http:/ / www. irishtimes. com/ theticket/ articles/ 2007/ 0302/ 1172185328322. html), The Irish Times The Ticket, 2007-03-02. Retrieved on 2008-02-07. [16] Cardwell, Diane. "Untangling the Knots of a Brooklyn Boyhood" (http:/ / query. nytimes. com/ gst/ fullpage. html?res=9D02E6DD163AF935A2575AC0A9659C8B63) , The New York Times, 2003-09-16. Retrieved on 2008-03-28. [17] Henderson, Eleanor. "From Pittsburgh to Sitka: On Michael Chabons The Yiddish Policemens Union" (http:/ / www. vqronline. org/ articles/ 2007/ summer/ henderson-chabon-yiddish-policemen/ ) (book review), The Virginia Quarterly Review, Summer 2007. Retrieved on 2007-07-28. [18] "Jonathan Lethem Interview" (http:/ / www. failbetter. com/ 11/ LethemInterview. htm), FailBetter.com, Summer/Fall 2003. Retrieved on 2007-08-29. [19] Armchair/Shotgun - Issue 1, City Chronicle p. 114 [20] http:/ / www. rollingstone. com/ news/ story/ 11216877/ the_modern_times_of_bob_dylan_a_legend_comes_to_grips_with_his_iconic_status/ print [21] Gilbert, Megan. "A Hit Song of the Mind: Profile of Jonathan Lethem, Author, You Don't Love Me Yet" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20070929071412/ http:/ / www. zoom-in. com/ blog/ 2007/ 05/ a_hit_song_of_the_mind_profile_of_jonathan_lethem_author_you_dont_love_me_yet), 2007-05-21. Retrieved on 2012-01-27. [22] Winters, Rebecca. "Meta-Hero Worship" (http:/ / www. time. com/ time/ magazine/ article/ 0,9171,1056261,00. html), Time, 2005-05-01. Retrieved on 2006-12-23. [23] Johnson, Rich. "Into the Unknown" (http:/ / www. comicbookresources. com/ columns/ index. cgi?column=litg& article=2168), Comic Book Resources, 2005-06-14. Retrieved on 2006-12-23. [24] Quesada, Joe. Joe Fridays: Week 51 (http:/ / www. newsarama. com/ JoeFridays/ JoeFridays51. html), Newsarama.com, 2006-05-19. Retrieved on 2006-12-24. [25] Kleffel, Rick. Jonathan Lethem (http:/ / trashotron. com/ agony/ audio/ jonathan_lethem_2007. mp3) (mp3 audio), The Agony Column Audio Interview Archive, 2007-04-16. Retrieved on 2007-09-07. [26] Chronic City listing (http:/ / www. amazon. com/ s/ ref=nb_ss_gw?url=search-alias=stripbooks& field-keywords=chronic+ city+ lethem& x=0& y=0), Amazon.com. Retrieved on 2009-01-13. [27] Renaud, Jeffrey. "Lethem Exits the Unknown with Omega" (http:/ / www. comicbookresources. com/ ?page=article& id=17292), Comic Book Resources, 2008-07-18. Retrieved on 2008-08-03. [28] "The Ecstasy of Influence: A Plagiarism" (http:/ / www. harpers. org/ archive/ 2007/ 02/ 0081387) [29] Scott, Ronnie. "The Rumpus Long Interview with Jonathan Lethem" (http:/ / therumpus. net/ 2010/ 01/ the-rumpus-long-interview-with-jonathan-lethem/ ), The Rumpus, 2010-01-19. Retrieved on 2010-03-20. [30] http:/ / pomona. edu/ news/ 2010/ 04/ 22-jonathan-lethem. aspx [31] Los Angeles Times (http:/ / www. latimes. com/ features/ books/ jacketcopy/ la-et-jc-jonathan-lethem-on-his-upcoming-novel-dissident-gardens-video-20130422,0,2795959. story) [32] Los Angeles Times (http:/ / www. latimes. com/ features/ books/ jacketcopy/ la-et-jc-jonathan-lethem-on-his-upcoming-novel-dissident-gardens-video-20130422,0,2795959. story) [33] Gretzinger, Nelle. "The Brooklyn Fridge: Jonathan Lethem" (http:/ / www. ediblebrooklyn. net/ pages/ articles/ summer2007/ pdfs/ fridge. pdf), Edible Brooklyn, Summer 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-17 [34] Gretzinger, Nelle. "Jonathan Lethem Appointed Disney Professor of Creative Writing at Pomona College" (http:/ / www. pomona. edu/ news/ 2010/ 04/ 22-jonathan-lethem. aspx), Pomona College website (April 22, 2010). Retrieved on 2012-02-26 [35] http:/ / www. salon. com/ 1997/ 01/ 06/ jackson_3/ [36] http:/ / www. bookforum. com/ archive/ sum_02/ lethem. html [37] http:/ / www. rollingstone. com/ news/ story/ 10533775/ being_james_brown [38] http:/ / www. rollingstone. com/ news/ story/ 11216877/ the_modern_times_of_bob_dylan_a_legend_comes_to_grips_with_his_iconic_status/ print [39] http:/ / www. harpers. org/ TheEcstasyOfInfluence. html

Jonathan Lethem
[40] http:/ / www. newyorker. com/ fiction/ features/ 2009/ 05/ 25/ 090525fi_fiction_lethem [41] http:/ / www. newyorker. com/ fiction/ features/ 2009/ 10/ 26/ 091026fi_fiction_lethem

Bibliography Lethem, Jonathan (2005). The Disappointment Artist. New York: Doubleday. ISBN0-385-51217-1.

External links
Official website (http://www.jonathanlethem.com) Lorin Stein (Summer 2003). "Jonathan Lethem, The Art of Fiction No. 177" (http://www.theparisreview.org/ interviews/228/the-art-of-fiction-no-177-jonathan-lethem). The Paris Review. Jonathan Lethem (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm504672/) at the Internet Movie Database Jonathan Lethem (http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?Jonathan_Lethem) at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database

Article Sources and Contributors

Article Sources and Contributors


Jonathan Lethem Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=572511903 Contributors: Accotink2, Adam2005, Ahadley, All Hallow's Wraith, Altzinn, Aristophanes68, AshcroftIleum, AussieLegend2, AxelBoldt, Axeman89, Bear300, Beetstra, Before My Ken, Beta M, Beyond My Ken, Bflesschi, Bhandzo, Bissinger, Bjones, BlackAndy, Bobo192, Bornintheguz, CalJW, CanisRufus, Centretown, Cgingold, Charles Matthews, Chino, Choor monster, ChuckWhittington, D6, DGerlach, DRE, Davewild, David Shankbone, Dbiel, Dreamyshade, Esrever, Ferdinand Pienaar, Fuhghettaboutit, GCL, Graham87, Green Cardamom, Grunge6910, HJ Mitchell, Hadalyedison, Hattak, Hob, Hobbesy3, Htanna, Hurricane Joan, Ipsenaut, Jeanenawhitney, Jfpierce, Jleon, Jmabel, Jmont1, JoedaPlumber, JohnnyLurg, Johnpacklambert, Jon Lethem, Jseipel, Keith D, Ketsuekigata, Koavf, Kozuch, Kukkurovaca, Male1979, Mandarax, Martarius, MaxSem, Mercurywoodrose, Mick gold, Moncrief, Mthwaite, MuzikJunky, Mythenmetz, Namiba, Nehushtan, Neonorange, Nickpheas, Nightscream, Nikkimaria, Ninebelow, Omicronpersei8, PKDASD, Parkwells, Pepso2, Pfrishauf, Phthoggos, Pleather, Pmather, RE, Ray Radlein, Reader34, Rich Farmbrough, RobyWayne, STL Dilettante, Sadads, Sailsbystars, SandyGeorgia, Scottandrewhutchins, Sevenstones, ShelfSkewed, Shsilver, SilverFox183, Snovember, Sophitus, Sparsefarce, Stephenb, Steven Walling, Stevenmitchell, Stoshmaster, Sybok, Tbennert, TheGrappler, TheLateDentarthurdent, Tony1, Tvoz, Tyoda, Violetriga, Wthrw, Wv235, Xezbeth, Zoidbergmd, 148 anonymous edits

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File:Jonathan Lethem 2011 NBCC 2012 Shankbone 2.JPG Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Jonathan_Lethem_2011_NBCC_2012_Shankbone_2.JPG License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Contributors: David Shankbone File:Jonathan Lethem on the banks of the Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn, NY.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Jonathan_Lethem_on_the_banks_of_the_Gowanus_Canal_in_Brooklyn,_NY.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Contributors: Fred Benenson File:Jonathan Lethem at the Brooklyn Book Festival.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Jonathan_Lethem_at_the_Brooklyn_Book_Festival.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Contributors: David Shankbone File:Jonathan Lethem Occupy Wall Street 2011 Shankbone.JPG Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Jonathan_Lethem_Occupy_Wall_Street_2011_Shankbone.JPG License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Contributors: David Shankbone

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