
Tim Mohr
Writer at Freelance
Articles
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Jul 26, 2024 |
centmagazine.co.uk | Jodi Kantor |Megan Twohey |Daniel J. Levitin |Tim Mohr
So much we don’t know…So much hidden from us… Exposés written words, opening our eyes and delving into the hidden truths of life and society. Uncovering stories that often remain untold until someone is brave enough to tell them. These books not only offer insights into important stories but also ignite movements and inspire change.
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Sep 16, 2023 |
bookreporter.com | Alina Bronsky |Tim Mohr
BARBARA ISN’T DYING by Alina Bronsky is actually about Barbara dying. We don't realize that at first, and while the main character, Herr Schmidt (as he is referred to in the narrative) or "Schmidt, Walter" (as he refers to himself), refuses to admit that there is anything wrong with Barbara, it becomes crystal clear to us that she is not getting any better. It also becomes crystal clear to us as we read the narrative from Walter’s point of view that he is not a nice man.
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May 16, 2023 |
chron.com | Tim Mohr |Elena Lappin
- - - Novelist Alina Bronsky is a master of honest yet intricate storytelling, delivered with dark humor and a sharp edge. Her debut, "Broken Glass Park" (2010), tells the story of a teenage girl whose mother has been murdered and who moves from Russia to Germany. Her second novel, "The Hottest Dishes of the Tartar Cuisine" (2011), revolves around a steely mother who goes to extreme lengths to protect a daughter she seems not to love.
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May 15, 2023 |
washingtonpost.com | Tim Mohr
Novelist Alina Bronsky is a master of honest yet intricate storytelling, delivered with dark humor and a sharp edge. Her debut, " Broken Glass Park" (2010), tells the story of a teenage girl whose mother has been murdered and who moves from Russia to Germany. Her second novel, " The Hottest Dishes of the Tartar Cuisine " (2011), revolves around a steely mother who goes to extreme lengths to protect a daughter she seems not to love.
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May 15, 2023 |
lithub.com | Tim Mohr |Alina Bronsky
In December, 2004, I flew to Aspen, Colorado, to stay with Hunter S. Thompson at Owl Farm, his legendary “fortified compound” in nearby Woody Creek. We were supposed to start working on a Gonzo guide to life he planned to write—to be serialized in Playboy magazine, where I was a low-level editor at the time, and then published as a book. Some visitors to Owl Farm fired guns at books or gas canisters, some partied, and some ran away, too weirded out by the goings-on in Hunter’s orbit.
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