logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Cooper Renner
Cooper Renner's most recent publications are The Tommy Plans (2014), a graphic novel concerning a Soviet invasion of the USA during the Cold War, and The Goddess Moon (2014), volume 3 in The Wolves of Malta cycle and its only love story. His story Coyotes is included in New Border Voices (2014),... show more

Cooper Renner's most recent publications are The Tommy Plans (2014), a graphic novel concerning a Soviet invasion of the USA during the Cold War, and The Goddess Moon (2014), volume 3 in The Wolves of Malta cycle and its only love story. His story Coyotes is included in New Border Voices (2014), an anthology from Texas A&M University Press. He is the author of Dr Jesus and Mr Dead (2011), a suspense/supernatural novel about the bubonic plague; A Death by the Sea (2011), in which an American writer traveling in Malta stumbles into a hidden world of lycanthropy; A Spurious Death in a Foreign Country (2011), the sequel to A Death by the Sea; and the chapbook Dr Polidori's Sketchbook (2010). His novella Disbelief (2012) mingles prose, poetry and artwork to tell the story of Samuel Taylor Coleridge in Malta, and Triple No. 1 (2012) includes The Amores, a series of wordless drawings, and the illustrated story The Sorrows of Young Hemdlos. He is also the translator of Mario Bellatin's Chinese Checkers: Three Fictions (2006), and his artwork and photography have appeared on the covers or in the pages of books by Eric Beeny, Parker Tettleton and Meg Pokrass, as well as in such magazines as Upstairs at Duroc, Smokelong, Sleet and Grey Sparrow Journal. His fiction has been published in such magazines as New York Tyrant, Keyhole and Sleeping Fish, and the anthology Shadows and Silence (Ash-Tree Press, 2000). His poetry appears under the name Cooper Esteban and is collected in Mosefolket (2007).
show less
Cooper Renner's Books
Recently added on shelves
Cooper Renner's readers
Share this Author
Community Reviews
M Sarki
M Sarki rated it 12 years ago
This is a compact book and because of its size could be easily dismissed, but I warn you, don't. There are three artists involved. I ran through the initial entry by the Greek (French?) poet Alek Lindus and in subsequent readings of her words I began to see things I hadn't seen the first time throug...
see community reviews
Need help?