Ahead of The Removals' premiere on Wednesday, May 4, at the Wexner Center for the Arts (where tickets are on sale now!), we've released a third and final trailer.

⭐ We have a different website for our Ohio bookstore + cafe! Visit it here. ⭐
Ahead of The Removals' premiere on Wednesday, May 4, at the Wexner Center for the Arts (where tickets are on sale now!), we've released a third and final trailer.

Molly Delaney reports on attending Iowa City's Mission Creek Festival for the first time, a fun-filled and action-packed 2.5 days and nights where culture of all stripes is at the forefront.

Tickets are now on sale for the premiere of The Removals, a movie written and directed by Nicholas Rombes, at the Wexner Center for the Arts on May 4! As the premiere draws nigh, we'll be releasing a couple behind the scenes features, as well as a third and final trailer.

We spent the last two weeks consumed by the twin spring tornadoes that are AWP and Mission Creek. It was fun. It was exhausting. And the following books helped us attain new heights in our stack of books to read. While we can't vouch for all of them cause we haven't read them yet, we did find them enticing enough to pay green money for them.

Check this video interview with writer and director of The Removals, Nicholas Rombes.

Earlier this year we signed a contract extension for The Drop Edge of Yonder, so stay tuned for a hot new edition of that novel. Combined with all the interest abroad, and a killer profile at VICE last year, it goes to show the vitality and endurance that Wurlitzer's work has. Which is really incredible to be a part of.

Our first graphic novel, The Incantations of Daniel Johnston, is out this July and we're growing increasingly excited! We're polishing up the book now, but we wanted to share the contributor pictures with you, as they're two of our favorites.

We're thrilled to announce that we'll be publishing our fourth work by Joshua Mohr, and the very first book-length work of non-fiction by this acclaimed novelist. We have a storied (get it?) history with Mr. Mohr, going back to his debut—Some Things That Meant the World to Me—which was our first best-seller, appearing on the San Francisco Chronicle bestseller list.

Really, Mark de Silva's essay on putdownable prose and the difference between cookie-cutter and visionary work published at 3:AM Magazine had a profound effect on me. Previously, I held a speech by Jason Flores-Williams, delivered at the closing of CBGB's, and later published in The Brooklyn Rail as my raison d'être at Two Dollar Radio.

(614) Magazine gives us some local love in this article titled, 'Too Loud to Ignore.' In it, they track our aesthetic and literary intentions, the film production of The Removals in Columbus, and our plans to open a bookstore in town later this year.
