/writer/artblog
Mike Daily
O'GRADY
Novelist and Recording Artist in Portland, Oregon, Mike Daily
news & blog search for Mike Daily...
Jun 20, 2008Pampel Moose
It's that time again, time for my annual Summer Reading List, and this year's is the biggest yet. As always, I asked several of my friends and colleagues for their recommendations — including newcomers Daniel Pinchbeck, Steve Aylett, Ian MacKaye, Mike Daily, Paul Saffo, Gareth Branwyn, Rodger Bridges, and Peter Lunenfeld, as [...]
Oct 1, 20072GQ ~ 2 Gyrlz Quarterly
Review by the inimitable Pecos B. Jett Alarm By Mike Daily (Stovepiper Books Media) In Mike Daily's new novel Alarm we travel along with his fictional otherself Mick O'Grady and the voice in both of their heads known as the...
Jun 24, 20072GQ ~ 2 Gyrlz Quarterly
There's no way you don't have time to catch a launch for Mike Daily's latest novel, Alarm, since there's four of them, the next one being tomorrow at Powell's, 7:30. Reading from an experimental melange of narrative, found objects, an...
May 22, 2007Powell's
From the author of Valley, Alarm is a stripped-down novel (and accompanying audio artifact) of confusion, alienation, and rediscovery in the post-9/11 era that reads like a love letter to a friend and a promise to the future.
From: Tomas Schmidt
Sent: Mon 10/20/08 11:15 AM
To: Mike Daily
Subject: The F Word, Plus 'ed-up'
Everyone, woman and child alike under the sun uses this neat shit. Mainly it is the stuff of adults: an adult way to describe the world and its entanglements. I was having coffee with someone and a pretty famous director (I always write about this dude), came in. "Is he doin' alright," asked my friend, "or is he, fucked up?" I think that dude is doin' okay, better than me I'm sure. At any rate it's living in the world day after day that could do it: whoever has the most sanity wins. I just need a house.
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Oct 12, 2008
Oct 9, 2008
Sep 28, 2008
Sep 24, 2008
Sent: Mon 10/20/08 11:15 AM
To: Mike Daily
Subject: The F Word, Plus 'ed-up'
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The first cultural landmark in Los Angeles: the apartment where Charles Bukowski wrote his most famous novel, Post Office.



