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Memoir
The Food Writer Who Lost Her Sense of Smell
Sofia Perez on Losing One of the Things That Mattered Most to Her
By
Sofia Perez
| November 2, 2017
Chasing the Brontë Sisters from South India to the Yorkshire Moors
Deepa Bhasthi on a Pilgrimage 20 Years in the Making
By
Deepa Bhasthi
| November 2, 2017
To the Lady Who Mistook Me for the Help at the National Book Awards
"Doesn’t something break just then, when you and I approach?"
By
Patrick Rosal
| November 1, 2017
Discovering My Family's Murderous Nazi Past
Sacha Batthayany on Learning the Dark Secret of His Aunt Margit
By
Sacha Batthyany
| November 1, 2017
The Day My VW Beetle Morphed Into a Hot Rod
For
Freeman's
, David Searcy Recalls Younger Days
By
David Searcy
| October 31, 2017
Learning the Hard Way That Writing a Book is Not Like Writing for TV
Evany Rosen on Assembling Her Own Personal Writers Room
By
Evany Rosen
| October 25, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Megan Mayhew Bergman Experiences the Tao of Sunbathing
By
Megan Mayhew Bergman
| October 23, 2017
The Dirty Secret of War: It Can Be As Compelling As It Is Ugly
By
Philip Caputo
| October 20, 2017
When the French Invaded Hanoi, My Brothers Stayed Behind
By
Mai Elliott
| October 20, 2017
A Stroke Made My Mother a Poet, I Merely Transcribed
For
Freeman's
Marius Chivu on the Origins of His First Poem
By
Marius Chivu
| October 19, 2017
Falling in Love Over Email: Anatomy of a Digital Courtship
Peter Bognanni on Migrating from the Laptop to Real Life
By
Peter Bognanni
| October 18, 2017
The Painting That Changed My Life
On Art, Grief, and Amy Pleasant's
After the Death
By
Kerry Folan
| October 18, 2017
Lidia Yuknavitch: The Time I Snuck Into Ken Kesey's Fiction Class
On Fitting in with Misfits, from Ken Kesey to Melissa Febos
By
Lidia Yuknavitch
| October 17, 2017
On the Literary Wheelings and Dealings of Ulysses S. Grant and Mark Twain
The World of Publishing, Unchanged for 150 Years
By
Ron Chernow
| October 17, 2017
What Does Your Life Teach You About Becoming a Writer?
David Biespiel on Love Affairs, Family Memories, and the Body
By
David Biespiel
| October 16, 2017
On the Hard Lessons of Being a Hockey Dad
Nick Paumgarten Looks for a Sheet of Fresh Ice
By
Nick Paumgarten
| October 10, 2017
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Page 191 of 209
(A.C.A.G.) All Cops Are Grotesque: Writing the Southern Gothic Police Officer
June 16, 2026
by
T.J. Martinson
Hilary Davidson on Learning to Love Unreliable Narrators
June 16, 2026
by
Hilary Davidson
Kimberly McCreight on Memoirs, Cheryl Strayed's 'Wild', and Climbing Mountains
June 16, 2026
by
Kimberly McCreight
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"None of this is particularly suspenseful the novel s chief revelation is telegraphed about halfway…"