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Biography
First Lady of Space: How Sally Ride Became A Household Name Overnight
Loren Grush on the Media Circus Surrounding America's First Women Astronauts
By
Loren Grush
| September 14, 2023
Did J.D. Salinger Wield Copyright as Self-Protection?
"Copyright protections can stop a work from being copied, pirated, poached. They can't stop it from being misunderstood."
By
Olivia Rutigliano
| August 30, 2023
Remembering William Stafford, Whose Poetic Region Was All the World
Steve Paul on the Enduring Memory of One of America's Greatest Contemporary Poets
By
Steve Paul
| August 28, 2023
Leonora Carrington's Days as a Debutante and Art Student
Joanna Moorhead on the Artist's Teenage Years and Relationship with Max Ernst
By
Joanna Moorhead
| August 22, 2023
"Woman, Jew, Intellectual:" How the Nazi State Saw Hannah Arendt
Wolfram Eilenberger on the Social Construction of the Self Under Totalitarianism
By
Wolfram Eilenberger
| August 10, 2023
How the Start of World War I Changed an American Heiress's Life Forever
Janet Wallach on the Making of Socialite and Spy Marguerite Harrison
By
Janet Wallach
| August 7, 2023
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
How W. E. B. Du Bois Helped Pioneer African American Humanist Thought
By
Christopher Cameron
| July 27, 2023
Excavating Dora Maar: On the Afterlives of Art History's Forgotten Women
By
Anne Boyd Rioux
| July 26, 2023
Poe vs. Himself: On the Writer’s One-Sided War with Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
By
Anne Whitehouse
| July 24, 2023
Art For Everybody: Ann Magnuson on Her Friend, Keith Haring
“Even if you didn’t think you could do something, he believed you could, and then you did.”
By
Ann Magnuson
| July 20, 2023
Mikki Kendall Remembers the Indelible Work and Full Complexity of bell hooks
“Creating for more than the white gaze or the male gaze was the goal.”
By
Mikki Kendall
| July 20, 2023
Borges Dealt With His Anxiety About Going Blind by Learning a New Language
Andrew Leland on His Own Weakening Vision, Braille, and Making a Commitment to Read with Visual Aids
By
Andrew Leland
| July 18, 2023
Craig Brown on Bringing Humor to Writing About The Beatles
The Author of
One Two Three Four
on the Baillie Gifford Prize Podcast, Read Smart
By
Read Smart
| July 18, 2023
Hiding In Plain Sight: Patrick Gale on the Life and Work of Poet Charles Causley
“Only then did I reread the poems, to see how they might be transformed by the things I had learned.”
By
Patrick Gale
| July 18, 2023
Talking to the Mafia About Michael Jackson, Donald Trump, and Jimmy Hoffa
In Conversation with Andrew Keen on
Keen On
By
Keen On
| July 18, 2023
The Complicated Afterlives of
Roberto Bolaño
Twenty Years After His Death, Aaron Shulman Unpacks the Legacy of the Chilean Poet and Novelist
By
Aaron Shulman
| July 17, 2023
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Page 16 of 66
6 Thrillers That Reveal the Dark Sides of Fame
January 21, 2026
by
Jessie Garcia
Ellie Levenson on the Beautiful Realism of Ambiguous Endings in Narratives
January 21, 2026
by
Ellie Levenson
Crime on the High Seas: 8 Historical Mysteries with Pirates and Smugglers
January 21, 2026
by
Linda Wilgus
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"