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Literary Criticism
Dear Eavan Boland, I Wanted to Send You a Letter
Amy Robinson on the Poet Who Changed Her Life
By
Amy Robinson
| May 1, 2020
The Internet Novel Is As Chaotic As Your Twitter Feed
Can Fiction Make Sense of Distraction?
By
Maddie Crum
| May 1, 2020
How Virginia Woolf and Susan Sontag Looked at Photos
of Violence
On Photography and Complicity
By
Pepper Stetler
| May 1, 2020
Eavan Boland: Beautiful and Complicated and Fierce and Brilliant and Loyal
Gabrielle Calvocoressi Remembers Their Friend
By
Gabrielle Calvocoressi
| May 1, 2020
Greil Marcus on
Gatsby
: A Blues Fable of the Great Depression
Reconsidering the American Myth of a Distant Paradise
By
Greil Marcus
| April 30, 2020
Newly-Translated Latin American Stories Defy Colonial Myths
Lucas Iberico Lozada on Expanding the Canon
By
Lucas Iberico Lozada
| April 30, 2020
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
More Reasons to Move to New Zealand: A Literary Guide
By
Elen Turner
| April 29, 2020
Rufi Thorpe on the Narrative Role of the Bystander
By
Rufi Thorpe
| April 29, 2020
Robert Stone's Journalism Set New Moral and Artistic High-Water Marks
By
Matt Gallagher
| April 28, 2020
Why T.S. Eliot Has Remained an Enigma
Vijay Seshadri on the Historical Forces that Shaped Him
By
Vijay Seshadri
| April 28, 2020
The Saint and I: On Augustine and Writing About Mothers
Natalie Carnes on What the
Confessions
Got Wrong
By
Natalie Carnes
| April 28, 2020
All Poetry is Collaboration
Matthew Rohrer on the Importance of Listening
By
Matthew Rohrer
| April 28, 2020
On Frances Burney and the Birth of 'Chick Lit'
A Groundbreaking Storytelling Formula Since the 18th Century
By
Gina Fattore
| April 27, 2020
Guiding Me Back to My Caribbean Roots: Remembering Novelist Andrea Levy
Keishel A. Williams on
Fruit of the Lemon
, a Classic of Immigration Lit
By
Keishel A. Williams
| April 24, 2020
Rebecca Solnit: On Letting Go of Certainty in a Story That Never Ends
Finding Communion in the Fairy Tales We Tell
By
Rebecca Solnit
| April 23, 2020
Finding a Way Forward from the Pandemic in the Words of the Poets
Lawrence Joseph on Robert Hayden, Etel Adnan, Adrienne Rich, and Cathy Park Hong
By
Lawrence Joseph
| April 22, 2020
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Page 284 of 352
From Romance to Thrillers to Horror—and Back Again
January 28, 2026
by
L. S. Stratton
Women in Espionage:
A Reading List
January 28, 2026
by
Rhys Bowen
Nalini Singh on the Many Character Archetypes of Cozies, Noir, and Thrillers
January 28, 2026
by
Nalini Singh
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Slim and stark Barnes s prose is largely stripped bare it resembles a tall ship…"