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Literary Criticism
On Danticat, Camus, and the Art of Exile
Gabrielle Bellot Reminds Us That Immigrant Art is American Art
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| January 30, 2019
When Even the Greatest of Writers Grapples with Self-Doubt
Gabrielle Bellot on W.B. Yeats and the Fine Line Between Arrogance and Humility
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| January 28, 2019
Deconstructing Old Stories to Tell Them in New Ways
Daisy Johnson on the Limits of the Wholly New
By
Daisy Johnson
| January 25, 2019
How Virginia Woolf Taught Me to Mourn
Two Writers Grieving for a Parent, a Century Apart
By
Katharine Smyth
| January 25, 2019
Lessons From a Newly-Discovered Sylvia Plath Story
It Would Be Easy to Write It Off—But We Shouldn't.
By
Emily Van Duyne
| January 24, 2019
On the Overlooked Eroticism of Mary Oliver
Poetry as Affirmation of Queer Desire
By
Jeanna Kadlec
| January 23, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
What We Don't Know About Sylvia Plath
By
Emily Van Duyne
| January 22, 2019
David Treuer on the Myth of an Edenic, Pre-Columbian 'New' World
By
David Treuer
| January 22, 2019
John McPhee: Seven Ways of Looking at a Writer
By
Tyler Malone
| January 17, 2019
How Domesticity is at the Heart of the Novel
On What It Is to Write About Everyday Life
By
Tessa Hadley
| January 16, 2019
This Science Fiction Novelist Created a Feminist Language from Scratch
There's Even a Word For Emotional Labor!
By
Rebecca Romney
| January 15, 2019
A Brief History of Children's Books: Nasty, Brutish, and Short
Jennifer Traig on the Bizarre Violence of Early Kid Lit
By
Jennifer Traig
| January 14, 2019
The Virtue of Giddiness in Art
Rosie Haward on Desire and Dizziness, from Bernini to Adjani
By
Rosie Haward
| January 14, 2019
An Unnecessarily Close Reading of
That
Scene in
Portnoy's Complaint
Chopped Meat Through the Kosher Grinder
By
Emily Temple
| January 11, 2019
How Do You Set James Joyce’s Most Famous Story on the Stage?
Feasting with the Ghosts of “The Dead”
By
Leslie Pariseau
| January 10, 2019
An Oddly Poetic Account of Colorblindness from the Turn of the Last Century
the music of light."">"We may aptly term color
the music of light
."
By
Emily Noyes Vanderpoel
| January 10, 2019
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The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"