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Literary Criticism
How Beth Brant Uplifted the Voices of Native American Queer Women
On Taking a More Inclusive Approach to Indigenous Writing
By
Janice Gould
| October 18, 2019
The Hungarian Author Who Foresaw the Future of Nationalism
Considering Krisztina Tóth's Pointed Case for Open Borders
By
Stephanie Newman
| October 17, 2019
A Friendship in Letters:
Flannery O'Connor and Katherine Anne Porter
Talk of Peacocks, Easter, and Porter's
Ship of Fools
By
Benjamin B. Alexander
| October 16, 2019
Demystifying the Writer's Fear of Failure
Sarah Labrie on Why Writing is Supposed to Be Difficult
By
Sarah LaBrie
| October 16, 2019
Harold Bloom on Cormac McCarthy, True Heir to Melville and Faulkner
On Violence, the Sublime, and Blood Meridian's Place in the American Canon
By
Harold Bloom
| October 16, 2019
The Impossibility of Capturing Truth in a Biography
Iris Origo on Why We Try Anyway
By
Iris Origo
| October 15, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Who Has the Right to Write About Hurricane Katrina?
By
Maggie Neil
| October 11, 2019
Nobel Prize-Winner Olga Tokarczuk in Conversation with John Freeman
By
John Freeman
| October 10, 2019
Rumi Priestly Poet of Love
and
Master of the One Liner
By
Brad Gooch
| October 10, 2019
Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Giant of Kenyan Letters
Billy Kahora on a Global Literary Icon
By
Billy Kahora
| October 9, 2019
Philip Pullman on Children's Literature and the Critics Who Disdain It
Don't Let Anyone Tell You What You Should or Should Not Be Reading
By
Philip Pullman
| October 8, 2019
On the Darkness at the Heart of Jamaica Kincaid's Children's Mystery
Gabrielle Bellot Considers
Party
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| October 7, 2019
In Nazism, Joseph Roth Saw the End of Europe’s Cosmopolitan Dream
Morten Høi Jensen on the Devastation of an Idea
By
Morten Høi Jensen
| October 7, 2019
On the Endless Parade of Literary Dead Girls
"The dead girls are speaking everywhere"
By
Zefyr Lisowski
| October 7, 2019
The Books of Susan Sontag, Ranked
A Fickle Superfan’s Guide to the Dark Lady of Letters
By
Lisa Levy
| October 4, 2019
The Anti-Colonial Vision of James Baldwin's Last Two Unfinished Works
Bill Mullen on
The Welcome Table
and
No Papers for Muhammad
By
Bill V. Mullen
| October 4, 2019
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The Backlist: Hannah Morrissey Revisits David Ellis's Twisty Psychological Thriller
March 31, 2026
by
Polly Stewart
Luke Dumas on Weight Loss Horror, Stephen King’s
Thinner
, and the 1990s
March 31, 2026
by
Luke Dumas
Rob Phillips on Combining Comedy and Danger in His Debut Crime Novel
March 31, 2026
by
Rob Phillips
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Mr Buruma s book while triggered by old photos and letters from Leo s time…"