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Literary Criticism
Caliban Never Belonged to Shakespeare
What Shakespeare's "Thing of Darkness" Tells Us About Gatekeeping and Language
By
Marcos Gonsalez
| July 26, 2019
Got Writer's Block?
Read This Poem
Nick Ripatrazone Close Reads Gerard Manley Hopkins' "To R.B."
By
Nick Ripatrazone
| July 25, 2019
On One of the Great Dutch Novels of Social Reform
How Eduard Douwes Dekker's
Max Havelaar
Led to a Revolution
By
Pramoedya Ananta Toer
| July 25, 2019
Love, Death, and the Birds of Terry Tempest Williams
Randon Billings Noble: What of the Raven, What of the Dove?
By
Randon Billings Noble
| July 24, 2019
On My 42-Year Correspondence with W.S. Merwin
Howard Norman Reflects on the Collective Meaning of 416 Letters
By
Howard Norman
| July 24, 2019
Please Take This Summer to Become Obsessed
With
The Group
Mary McMarthy's 1960s Novel About the 1930s Feels Like 2019
By
Mikaella Clements
| July 23, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
My Life as Poet Laureate (of a Law Firm)
By
Elizabeth Bales Frank
| July 23, 2019
Was
The Odyssey
the First Greek Novel?
By
Michael Wood
| July 22, 2019
George Orwell and More in the Borderlands of Life and Death
By
Andrew Ervin
| July 22, 2019
A Poet and a Novelist Discuss the Literary Allure of Outer Space
Gale Marie Thompson and Zach Powers Get Spacey
By
Zach Powers and Gale Marie Thompson
| July 19, 2019
My Niece Is Probably the Reincarnation of Shirley Jackson
CJ Hauser on Motherhood and
The Haunting of Hill House
By
CJ Hauser
| July 18, 2019
The Fictional Singer-Songwriter Who Got Her Own Real Album
Laura Barnett on Creating the Musician She'd Always Dreamed About
By
Laura Barnett
| July 18, 2019
How Contemporary Poetry Treats the Old Myths of the American Railroad
Thomas Dai on the Poems of Kai Carlson-Wee and Jenny Xie
By
Thomas Dai
| July 17, 2019
Mukoma Wa Ngugi: On the Poem That Made Me Fall in Love with Words
A Close Reading of Sonia Sanchez's "Poem at Thirty"
By
Mukoma Wa Ngugi
| July 17, 2019
What Hemingway Cut From
For Whom the Bell Tolls
An Epilogue, For Starters
By
Seán Hemingway
| July 16, 2019
Brazil's History Is Ahead of It, Not Behind
Geovani Martins on Finding Joy in a Beautiful, Struggling Nation
By
Geovani Martins
| July 16, 2019
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April 17, 2026
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April 17, 2026
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David Masciotra
The Best True Crime of the Month: April 2026
April 17, 2026
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CrimeReads
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"A social satire full of dopamine-releasing one-liners and sparkling writing But it can be frustratingly…"