Hymns of the Apocalypse

By JOE DONNELLY APRIL 17, 2020 This piece originally appeared in the Los Angeles Times. It’s like they knew. Of course Pearl Jam didn’t intend for its new album, “Gigaton,” to be a coronavirus hymnal. After all, it has been gestating for seven years, taking shape via a sort of long-distance, idea-sharing dynamic necessitated by the band […]

LA Times Reviews Slouching Towards Los Angeles

The Los Angeles Times did a nice review of this sterling collection of LA writers writing about Joan Didion’s estimable impact. It was nice to be among those contributors mentioned in the review. “Flexing his many years as a music writer, Joe Donnelly offers a lovely and convincing piece about growing up with the Beatles, learning to […]

Why Luke Perry’s death is so personal for many forgotten Gen Xers

This story originally appeared in the LA Times. My phone buzzed at 5:07 a.m. Monday morning with a text from a friend who was in India with his wife and son. The text read: “As Luke Perry goes, so does the world.” I was too groggy from the sleeping pill I’d taken to respond, but […]

L.A. Man is here!

L.A. Man: Profiles from a Big City and a Small World (Rare Bird Books | April 17, 2018) collects the best and boldest of Donnelly’s profiles—illuminating a time and place in Los Angeles worth preserving. Donnelly emerges as a sort of West Coast George Plimpton, taking his subjects by the horns—at the pool table, in […]

Bush’s War of Art

This essay originally appeared in riotmaterial.com I was on the phone with my father and I can’t remember exactly how we got to the part of the conversation we were destined to get to—the part of the conversation everyone was destined to get to—as we watched the unfathomable unfold on that morning of September 11, […]

Werner Herzog Loves L.A.

Originally published by the Los Angeles Times. Photos by Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times.   WERNER HERZOG is at a booth in a Sunset Boulevard restaurant, just down the hill from where he once rescued Joaquin Phoenix. The rescue happened 11 years ago when the freshly Oscar-nominated Phoenix flipped his car on a winding road […]

Venice: How a forgotten corner of ‘70s LA gave birth to modern skateboarding

From the collection Weird Scenes Inside The Goldmine: Los Angeles in the 19070s,” Rarebird Lit, David Kukoff editor. Except originally appeared in Huck Magazine, November 2016 Photography © Rick McCloskey AS MAJOR EVENTS GO, this one may not rank up there with Alaskan statehood, the advent of NASA, or even that April fifteenth day when […]

O. Henry Prize Stories Collection Is Here!

Joe Donnelly’s “Bonus Baby” brings us to the ball game but from inside the very center, from the pitcher’s point of view. The story takes place during a game—not just any game but a possible perfect game. We see how the pitcher’s life has led him to this moment. The pitcher’s tics, familiar to any […]

Goldsteinland

The Iconic James Goldstein and the Lautner Legacy IN A GLASS-FRAMED  photo on a glass desk in a glass and concrete house high on a hill, is pictured a fit young man with shoulder-length, shaggy hair. The man is resplendently dressed in a white, high-collared long-sleeve shirt, crisp, white slacks and black dress boots—a dandy […]

Father Pop

How Mike Salisbury defeated communism with sex, drugs and rock and roll.