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Literary Criticism
Trying to Figure Out Bruce Chatwin's Unpublished
Magnum Opus
Jeremy Klemin on a Legendary Travel Writer's Attempt
to Figure It All Out
By
Jeremy Klemin
| May 20, 2019
The Ongoing Exile of the Undocumented
Oscar Villalon on
The Death and Life of Aida Hernandez
By
Oscar Villalon
| May 17, 2019
Discovering an Iconic Literary Character Was Based on Your Grandfather
Did Joseph Heller Base
Catch-22
's John Yossarian on Julius Fish?
By
Brian Birnbaum
| May 16, 2019
On a New Generation of Villainous Women, From Witches to Wicked Stepmothers
How Contemporary Writers Are Reframing Narratives Around Female Characters
By
Alexis Gunderson
| May 16, 2019
On Robert Caro, Great Men, and the Problem of Powerful Women in Biography
Caroline Fraser: “Power and ambition in women are often hidden, buried, shrouded, disguised, crushed, thwarted, mocked, warped, punished, or excoriated.”
By
Caroline Fraser
| May 16, 2019
Is Masculinity a Terrorist Ideology?
Lacy Johnson on Rachel Louise Snyder and the Ways We Name Violence
By
Lacy M. Johnson
| May 15, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The 36 Best One-Star Amazon Reviews of
Mrs. Dalloway
By
Emily Temple
| May 14, 2019
Joanna Scutts on How We Find—and Lose—Women Writers
By
Joanna Scutts
| May 13, 2019
16 Poet Biopics, Ranked
By
Emily Temple
| May 8, 2019
What Would It Mean to Live in
a World Without Stories?
Alexis Wright on the Systemic Weaponization of Silence
By
Alexis Wright
| May 8, 2019
Rebecca Solnit on Setting
Cinderella
Free for Contemporary Readers
A Classic Fairytale Rebuilt as a Working Class Liberation Story
By
Rebecca Solnit
| May 7, 2019
On Elizabeth Bishop, Loss, and Coming Out After 20 Years in a Convent
Patricia Dwyer Revisits the Spaces She Has Lost
By
Patricia M. Dwyer
| May 7, 2019
Reading the Selfie-Filled Memoir of Halldór Laxness
What's Not to Love About Descriptions of Food and Strong Opinions About Poets?
By
Gerður Kristný
| May 7, 2019
What Is an Australian National Literature and Who Creates It?
Nam Le on David Malouf and the Violence of World-Building
By
Nam Le
| May 6, 2019
On the Modern American Obsession with French Revolution Narratives
Because Guillotines and Eating the Rich Never Really Go Out of Style
By
Tobias Carroll
| May 3, 2019
Anjelica Huston on Finding Her Father in the Writing of Lillian Ross
the integrity of her subject."">"She maintains her own integrity and she respects
the integrity of her subject."
By
Anjelica Huston
| May 3, 2019
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Page 399 of 455
“Profit is the Only Principle”: How 'Point Blank' Presaged Our Current Moment
April 23, 2026
by
Greg Wands
What to Watch Now, International Edition: The Two Prosecutors (2025)
April 23, 2026
by
Radha Vatsal
6 Thrillers That Sit with Discomfort and Ethical Ambiguities
April 23, 2026
by
Michael Cowan
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"A social satire full of dopamine-releasing one-liners and sparkling writing But it can be frustratingly…"