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Patti Callahan on Graham Greene, Mary Kay Andrews, and <em>Women Who Run With Wolves</em>

Patti Callahan on Graham Greene, Mary Kay Andrews, and Women Who Run With Wolves

Rapid-fire Book Recs from the Author of Surviving Savannah

By Book Marks | April 4, 2022

The Literary Film and TV You Need to Stream in April

The Literary Film and TV You Need to Stream in April

It's a Gritty Month on the Small Screen

By Eliza Smith | April 1, 2022

Why Do We Have to Feel Good? On Michael Schur’s Cloying Moral Universe

Why Do We Have to Feel Good? On Michael Schur’s Cloying Moral Universe

Ariella Garmaise Considers the Instagram Infographic Approach to Ethics

By Ariella Garmaise | April 1, 2022

Language is the True Protagonist of <em>My Brilliant Friend</em>’s Third Season

Language is the True Protagonist of My Brilliant Friend’s Third Season

Maria Albano on the “Poetry of Plain Language” in Luchetti's Adaptation

By Maria Albano | April 1, 2022

How Langston Hughes Has Influenced Generations of South African Writers

How Langston Hughes Has Influenced Generations of South African Writers

C.A. Davids on the Elusive Poet’s Connection to African Literature, Past and Present

By C. A. Davids | April 1, 2022

How Writing a Serialized Novel Helped Carley Moore Connect With the World During a Time of Disconnection

How Writing a Serialized Novel Helped Carley Moore Connect With the World During a Time of Disconnection

“In an environment that felt unstructured and constantly in flux serialization allowed me to be flexible.”

By Carley Moore | April 1, 2022

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Mass Mothering
  • Autobiography of Cotton
  • Good People
  • Empire of Madness: Reimagining Western Mental Health Care for Everyone
  • The Wall Dancers: Searching for Freedom and Connection on the Chinese Internet
  • Second Skin: Inside the Worlds of Fetish, Kink, and Deviant Desire

On Letting Children Come Up with Their Own Bedtime Stories

By Joel Agee | April 1, 2022

Danielle Rose on the Voyeuristic Nature of Epistolary Writing

By Micro Podcast | April 1, 2022

What Was it Like to Immigrate to America, Just as the Stock Market Crashed?

By New Books Network | April 1, 2022

What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Month

What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Month

Featuring new titles by Anne Tyler, NoViolet Bulawayo, Elena Ferrante, and more

By Book Marks | April 1, 2022

5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week

5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week

Laird Hunt on Emily St. John Mandel, Megan Milks on Melissa Febos, and More

By Book Marks | March 31, 2022

On Resistance and Radical Care: Books That Reveal the True Source of Collective Power

On Resistance and Radical Care: Books That Reveal the True Source of Collective Power

Daisy Pitkin Recommends Barbara Kingsolver, Nick Estes, and More

By Daisy Pitkin | March 31, 2022

“In Moderation and Without Worry.” On Jane Austen’s Use of Food As Character

“In Moderation and Without Worry.” On Jane Austen’s Use of Food As Character

Robert Tuesday Anderson Recommends a Little “Chawton Cottage Plum Pudding” While You Read

By Robert Tuesday Anderson | March 31, 2022

“We’re There to Bear Witness.” Putsata Reang on Reporting in War Zones

“We’re There to Bear Witness.” Putsata Reang on Reporting in War Zones

In Conversation with Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan on Fiction/Non/Fiction

By Fiction Non Fiction | March 31, 2022

Are Most Books About “Leadership” a Scam?

Are Most Books About “Leadership” a Scam?

Barbara Kellerman in Conversation with Andrew Keen

By Keen On | March 31, 2022

Maud Newton on the Relief of Knowing That Genes Aren’t Fate

Maud Newton on the Relief of Knowing That Genes Aren’t Fate

In Conversation with Maris Kreizman on The Maris Review Podcast

By The Maris Review | March 31, 2022

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Page 199 of 354
    • Scammers' Delight: Christopher Farnsworth on Living in the Golden Age of GriftFebruary 12, 2026 by Christopher Farnsworth
    • There Should Be a Murder in BridgertonFebruary 11, 2026 by Olivia Rutigliano
    • James Lee Burke on Chaucer, Violence, and the State of AmericaFebruary 11, 2026 by David Masciotra
    • Mass Mothering
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Dark richly layered That is what reading em Mass Mothering em is like using storytelling…"
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