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Literary Criticism
Latin America’s Answer to Karl Ove Knausgaard
On Ricardo Piglia and His Alter Ego, Emilio Renzi
By
Ilan Stavans
| November 14, 2017
What We Can Learn From Multiple Translations of the Same Poem
And How It Brings Us Closer to the Experience of Reading the Original
By
Martha Collins
| November 13, 2017
Literature Without Writing: A Survey of Texts That Aren't Texts
Ross Simonini on Speech, Language, and the Foundations of Storytelling
By
Ross Simonini
| November 13, 2017
When an Umbrella is More Than Just an Umbrella
The Potent Symbolism of Brollies, from Mary Poppins to Harry Potter
By
Marion Rankine
| November 10, 2017
From Midcentury Confessional Poetry to Reality TV
How Did "Confession" Become a Dirty Word?
By
Christopher Grobe
| November 9, 2017
Read Anne Sexton's Response to Her Worst-Ever Review
Esquire is my enemy as you know."">"Dickey at
Esquire
is my enemy as you know."
By
Emily Temple
| November 9, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
All the Letters I'll Never Send
By
Clare Sestanovich
| November 9, 2017
Seeing the Hopeful Side of Post-Apocalyptic Fiction
By
Megan Hunter
| November 8, 2017
How the KKK Shaped Modern Comic Book Superheroes
By
Chris Gavaler
| November 3, 2017
Writing Poetry Under Stalin: Samizdat and Memorization
"Worse Than a State Indifferent to Poetry was One Obsessed With It"
By
Martin Puchner
| November 2, 2017
Finding Refuge in a Queer Vampire Novella
Gabrielle Bellot on the Unsung Classic That Made Her Feel Less Alone
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| November 1, 2017
Why Are We Obsessed with Onscreen Bloodletting?
A Brief History of Gore, Splatter, and the Art of Fake Blood
By
Tyler Malone
| October 31, 2017
How to Skewer a Novel: Éric Chevillard on Florian Zeller
A Legendary French Critic Weighs in on "a book to laugh at and then forget."
By
Eric Chevillard
| October 30, 2017
The Many Faces of Sylvia Plath
In Focusing Too Much on Her Death, We Miss Her Capacity for Life
By
Kelly Marie Coyne
| October 27, 2017
Jean Rhys Had to Leave Her Home to Truly See It
Gabrielle Bellot on Exile, Otherness, and the Isolation of
a Great 20th-Century Writer
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| October 26, 2017
First-Person Stories of the Body Are Much More Than Clickbait
In Praise of Narrative Medicine
By
M. Sophia Newman
| October 26, 2017
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10 New Books Coming Out This Week
May 18, 2026
by
CrimeReads
Crime and the City: Cologne, Germany
May 18, 2026
by
Paul French
Joanne Rock on Suspense and the Allure of Masked Characters
May 18, 2026
by
Joanne Rock
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Isaac Fitzgerald writes with a folksy wit that might come off as an affectation were…"