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Robin Hemley on Kafka and Writerly Ambition

Robin Hemley on Kafka and Writerly Ambition

From The History of Literature Podcast with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | May 9, 2022

How Lady Bird Johnson Saw the President Die

How Lady Bird Johnson Saw the President Die

Julia Sweig On America’s Most Famous Second Lady-Turned-First

By Julia Sweig | May 6, 2022

The first major biography of Volodymyr Zelensky in English will be published in July.

The first major biography of Volodymyr Zelensky in English will be published in July.

By Corinne Segal | May 4, 2022

After Steve Jobs, The Flood: Apple Without Its Emblematic and Enigmatic Founder

After Steve Jobs, The Flood: Apple Without Its Emblematic and Enigmatic Founder

Tripp Mickle Explains the Line of Succession at a Silicon Valley Powerhouse

By Tripp Mickle | May 4, 2022

The Untold and Very True Story of <em>The Devil Wears Prada</em>

The Untold and Very True Story of The Devil Wears Prada

On Anna Wintour, a Former Assistant, and the Role That Made an Editor a Celebrity

By Amy Odell | May 3, 2022

Alejandro Zambra on Juan Emar, Whose Avant-Garde Writings Deserve Our Attention

Alejandro Zambra on Juan Emar, Whose Avant-Garde Writings Deserve Our Attention

“He wanted to write, to give himself over to pure leisure, to the search.”

By Alejandro Zambra | May 2, 2022

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Transcription
  • London Falling: A Mysterious Death in a Gilded City and a Family's Search for Truth
  • Attention: Writing on Life, Art, and the World
  • The Oyster Diaries
  • Yesteryear
  • Here Where We Live Is Our Country: The Story of the Jewish Bund

How Sissieretta Jones, Celebrated Black Opera Singer, Enshrined Her Own Story

By Rosalyn Story | May 2, 2022

What Julia—HBO’s New Julia Child Series—Gets Terribly Wrong About Legendary Editor Judith Jones

By Sara B. Franklin | April 27, 2022

On the Disappearing of Joan Vollmer Burroughs

By Katie Bennett | April 25, 2022

Illustrating Patricia Highsmith’s Literary Career

Illustrating Patricia Highsmith’s Literary Career

From Grace Ellis and Hannah Templer’s Graphic Novel

By Grace Ellis and Hannah Temper | April 25, 2022

How To Write History While It’s Happening: Lessons From Tacitus

How To Write History While It’s Happening: Lessons From Tacitus

Richard Cohen on the Enduring Influence of One of Ancient Rome’s Most Famous Historians

By Richard Cohen | April 22, 2022

How Obsessively Reading About The Royal Family Got Me Through a Breakdown

How Obsessively Reading About The Royal Family Got Me Through a Breakdown

For Robert Leleux Finding the One Family More Messed Up Than His Own Was a Life-Saver

By Robert Leleux | April 22, 2022

Did Thomas Edison “Disappear” His Most Significant Rival in Inventing the Kinetograph?

Did Thomas Edison “Disappear” His Most Significant Rival in Inventing the Kinetograph?

Paul Fischer’s on a Dark Corner of Motion Picture Lore

By Paul Fischer | April 22, 2022

John Keats on Film: Considering Jane Campion’s Exquisitely Rendered <em>Bright Star</em>

John Keats on Film: Considering Jane Campion’s Exquisitely Rendered Bright Star

Lucasta Miller Investigates the Limits and Possibilities of Literary Biopics

By Lucasta Miller | April 21, 2022

Imagining the Lives of the Aviators Who Inspired William Faulkner

Imagining the Lives of the Aviators Who Inspired William Faulkner

Taylor Brown on Looking to the Past (Which Isn't Even Past)

By Taylor Brown | April 21, 2022

The Chairman Had No Rhythm: What It Meant to Dance with Mao Zedong

The Chairman Had No Rhythm: What It Meant to Dance with Mao Zedong

Vanessa Hua Follows Echoes of History Around the Dance Floor

By Vanessa Hua | April 20, 2022

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    • The Best Paperback Releases of April 2026April 10, 2026 by CrimeReads
    • Transcription
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "There is so much silence in this novel so much air A novel speaks yes…"
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