The Writing of Jack Remick
Jack Remick
As a writer approaches the visionary techniques of Late Style, art changes from exercises in the craft of massaging the Ego to the transformative language of the unconscious, the archetypes, the structural reality of myth.
Art is salvation ever more so in the Late Style which is that time when the artist, in silence, frees the mind from oppressive and expected cultural-historical restraints of form and content to unleash a newness that both confounds and instructs. Without art, we are members of a tribe of efficient killers. I am not a member of that tribe.
The Latest from Jack Remick
Updated Virtual Tour Schedule for Gabriela and The Widow
Gabriela and The Widow just blew into blogcritics.org for a fun-filled Q and A loaded with writing insights and personal revelations about the author. Thanks to Virginia Grenier. Check Gabriela out here: Article first published as Spotlight Interview with Author Jack...
Silvio Reviews Blood on Goodreads
Silvio's review on Goodreads, posted Dec 11, 2012. Reposting. Dec 11, 12 Like other reviews said, this book is not a romance, not by a long shot. It's brutal, violent, gory, disturbing with detailed descriptions of many monstrous murders, real or imaginary, and the...
Sarah Martinez Reviews “Blood”
Book Review: Blood by Jack Remick Sarah's Blog I’ve been trying to get this review up since I finished Blood several months ago. The book covered so much and has so many layered parts to it, I will never do justice to the experience. I would love to hear from other...
Press Release–Gabriela and The Widow
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Coffeetown Announces the January Release of Gabriela and The Widow, a Story of Memory, Immortality and Redemption Contact: Catherine Treadgold Publisher Coffeetown Press PO Box 70515 Seattle, WA 98127 206-414-7673 Catherine@coffeetownpress.Com...
The Jack Straw 50th–A place, an instrument, and time
The Jack Straw 50th Seattle, June 15th, 2012 7:00 AM A man turns a clarinet into a horn, a flute, a piccolo. He plays a Suite for Parts of the Clarinet. It is unlike anything I’ve heard before. I ask him if he invented this. “No,” he says. He takes no credit for...










