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Literary Criticism
How Bad Writing Destroyed the World
On the Origin of Ayn Rand's Thinking, and a Manchurian Economist Named Greenspan
By
Adam Weiner
| October 6, 2016
Why Every American Should Read
The Reluctant Fundamentalist
Gabrielle Bellot on Radical Difference in the Age of Trump
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| October 5, 2016
Is Joyce Carol Oates Trolling Us?
On Gaffes, Cats, and My Obsession with JCO's Twitter Feed
By
Eric Thurm
| October 5, 2016
Leave Elena Ferrante Alone
David L. Ulin on the Baffling Impulse to Unmask a Beloved Writer
By
David L. Ulin
| October 3, 2016
The Haunting of Shirley Jackson
Laura Miller on Imaginative Young Women in Big, Isolated Houses...
By
Laura Miller
| September 28, 2016
On the Heterodox Jewishness of Clarice Lispector
A Writer of the Diaspora, In Search of God
By
Nathan Goldman
| September 27, 2016
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The Secret to Faking Your Own Death
By
Elizabeth Greenwood
| September 26, 2016
How
Peyton Place
Comforted Me as a Closeted Teenager
By
Nathan Smith
| September 26, 2016
Edith Wharton's Indictment of Gilded Age Inequality: Still Relevant
By
Colette Shade
| September 22, 2016
What About a Woman's Right to Idleness?
On the Work of Writing and Leopoldine Core's
When Watched
By
Emily Harnett
| September 21, 2016
Fear and Loathing in New England: Lev Grossman Looks Back at His First Novel
"I wasn’t really a slacker; I was more just a loser."
By
Lev Grossman
| September 20, 2016
Is "Show Don't Tell" a Universal Truth or a Colonial Relic?
Namrata Poddar on the Western Preference for Visual Over Oral Storytelling
By
Namrata Poddar
| September 20, 2016
Our Doppelgängers, Ourselves
Why the Uncanny Valley Continues to Fascinate Us
By
Alan Glynn
| September 19, 2016
What Do We Mean When We Say Women's Fiction?
Liz Kay on Broadening the Scope of Stories By and For Women
By
Liz Kay
| September 19, 2016
Finding the Unsayable in Translation
On Javier Marías, Roberto Bolaño, and a Double Dose of Defamiliarization
By
Michael Helm
| September 16, 2016
Alan Moore Goes (Very Very) Big with
Jerusalem
On the Ongoing Ascendancy of the Very Long Novel
By
Joshua Zajdman
| September 14, 2016
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Kamilah Cole on Race, Tropes, and the Whitewashing of Dark Academia
December 30, 2025
by
Kamilah Cole
The Best Books of 2025: Gothic Fiction
December 29, 2025
by
Molly Odintz
Liven Up Your "Dead Week" with These Criminally Underseen Crime Movies from Warner Bros
December 29, 2025
by
Alex Rollins Berg
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"