Jonathan Russell Clark (@jrc2666) 's Twitter Profile
Jonathan Russell Clark

@jrc2666

Writer: Esquire, LA Times, LitHub, Washington Post Author: AN OASIS OF HORROR IN A DESERT OF BOREDOM and SKATEBOARD.

ID: 2464124618

linkhttp://jonathanrussellclark.com calendar_today26-04-2014 05:20:25

3,3K Tweet

3,3K Followers

4,4K Following

Esquire (@esquire) 's Twitter Profile Photo

How did a demure jazz-club owner become a global literary sensation and a perennial Nobel Prize contender? We’re taking you inside the unlikely rise of Japan’s greatest contemporary writer. esquire.com/entertainment/…

Jonathan Russell Clark (@jrc2666) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For Esquire I had the immense privilege of profiling Haruki Murakami and exploring his international acclaim, his recurring themes, and a midnight release party in Columbus, Ohio. esquire.com/entertainment/…

Esquire (@esquire) 's Twitter Profile Photo

How did a demure jazz-club owner become a global literary sensation and a perennial Nobel Prize contender? We’re taking you inside the unlikely rise of Japan’s greatest contemporary writer. Jonathan Russell Clark writes: esquire.com/entertainment/…

Adrienne Westenfeld (@adriennemwest) 's Twitter Profile Photo

After nearly nine years at Esquire, I’ve been laid off from my role as Books and Fiction Editor. I’m looking for a new full-time role where I can use my storytelling skills, in the book world or beyond it. If you know of anything, I’m at [email protected]. (🧵1/10)

Brandy Jensen (@brandyljensen) 's Twitter Profile Photo

always satisfying when an article about some stupid assholes includes a photo that’s like “yep that’s them, the stupid assholes”

always satisfying when an article about some stupid assholes includes a photo that’s like “yep that’s them, the stupid assholes”
Kyle Chayka (@chaykak) 's Twitter Profile Photo

this is really a shame, Adrienne built an incredible section at Esquire and published great, rare reporting on the book industry

Kelly Stout (@scoutstout) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Imagine being dumb enough to lay off Adrienne, the smartest, hardest working person at esquire! Wild choice on their part, but fantastic news for whoever gets her next.

Sophie Vershbow (@svershbow) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Working with Adrienne Westenfeld on 10 Esquire features has been the highlight of my journalism career. She is brilliant, discerning, and collaborative in all the ways an editor who brings out the best in her writers should be. We need her back in Book World immediately.

Jonathan Russell Clark (@jrc2666) 's Twitter Profile Photo

What the fuck is happening in publishing? Adrienne is such an incredible editor and person. And this happens on the same day those chucklefucks announce they’re going to publish AI bullshit books. Everything is going in the wrong direction.

Adam Morgan (@adamm0rgan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Adrienne is one of the best editors in the world. This is such a massive loss for Esquire and its readers, but a huge win for whoever hires her next. Writing for her has been one of the highlights of my career.

Adrienne Westenfeld (@adriennemwest) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My final act at Esquire is a fitting one: I hand-modeled my way into the role of "woman with knife" in a Chuck Palahniuk story. So proud to launch my fifth Napkin Project, featuring Chuck, Jacqueline Woodson, Daniel M. Lavery, Meg Wolitzer, and Weike Wang. esquire.com/entertainment/…

Asymptote Journal (@asymptotejrnl) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Could a moment at a baseball game kickstart a literary transformation? For Haruki Murakami, it did. From jazz cafés to talking cats, underground realms to magical realism, his fiction explores the mysteries of consciousness and connection: tinyurl.com/3mtnk9sd

Patrycja (@jej_sen) 's Twitter Profile Photo

obsessed with this painting by Hélène Delmaire, which inspired this ekphrastic poem from We Contain Landscapes (Tin House, 2025). it’s a sonnet that breaks off, with fewer syllables at the last line, bc the speaker is crying . WCL is out in March 🌀

obsessed with this painting by Hélène Delmaire, which inspired this ekphrastic poem from We Contain Landscapes (<a href="/Tin_House/">Tin House</a>, 2025). it’s a sonnet that breaks off, with fewer syllables at the last line, bc the speaker is crying . WCL is out in March 🌀
gabrielle korn (@gabrielle_korn) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In honor of my new book, The Shutouts, which comes out today, I wrote about why queer sex belongs in climate fiction for Literary Hub lithub.com/why-we-need-mo…