  urlLink The Missing Links - Gallix Death of urlLink Robert Quine , the Voidoids' guitarist. urlLink Alex Garland interviewed in The Daily Telegraph . No sooner has urlLink Pete Libertine returned to England than he is urlLink arrested for possessing an offensive weapon (sic). The urlLink Stonehenge festival is 30 years old. Jim Lewis and urlLink Jeffrey Eugenides discuss urlLink modernism in Slate . urlLink Martin Jacques argues that democracy isn't working.
urlLink The Futureheads ' debut album is urlLink reviewed in The Observer . Read about Jonathan Coe 's biography of urlLink B.S. Johnson in the urlLink New Statesman . The reformed urlLink New York Dolls take Meltdown urlLink by storm . urlLink Stella Vine 's blog. A new urlLink Billy Childish exhibition at the brilliant urlLink Aquarium Gallery in London (9-28 July).
The Economist on urlLink Bloomsday . Novelist urlLink Steve Aylett has released an album entitled urlLink Lord Pin . "Meet Joe Blog": urlLink Time magazine on the blogging phenomenon. An interview with urlLink J. G. Ballard . James Wood on the urlLink Booker nouveau. The urlLink Stone Roses top The Observer 's urlLink 100 greatest British albums poll.
Novelist urlLink Aleksandar Hemon on "Espionage Lit". urlLink Franz Ferdinand hit the million mark. English urlLink football anthems . urlLink Tiny Mix Tapes is pretty cool. urlLink Julian Cope in The Guardian . urlLink Panda porn .
urlLink The Others ' blog. Two more interesting lit blogs: urlLink Bookdwarf and urlLink Rake's Progress . The return of urlLink Louis de Bernis : "I only write when I feel like it. I don't ever have writer's block -- I just sometimes don't feel like writing. And if I don't feel like writing, I won't bother. So sometimes, I can go weeks or months without doing anything.
" urlLink Dave Eggers ' short shorts. urlLink Punk , poet, model-cum-film director urlLink Richard Jobson is interviewed in The Observer : "It was his older brother, Francis, who died recently and to whom the film is dedicated, who initially hipped him to the right sounds and the right clobber. The violence, though, he took to all by himself. 'There's a mechanism in the male dynamic that's drawn towards that stuff,' he says. 'I find it really odd when people deny that. It seems almost unreal now but for a young guy living in a completely grey world, it was an incredibly liberating experience in many ways and one that translated beautifully for me into rock'n'roll.
' It was punk rock that lifted the 16-year-old Jobson out of the gang and on to the stage..." 
