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Literary Criticism
5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
"The book is a naked attempt by a twilight superstar to shore up his legacy"
By
Book Marks
| October 12, 2023
The Pleasures of a Pessimistic Literary Escape: Jessie Gaynor on Edith Wharton’s
The Glimpses of the Moon
"Even when writing an escapist romance, Wharton is inescapably herself"
By
Jessie Gaynor
| October 11, 2023
Adam Thirlwell on Witold Gombrowicz's
The Possessed
Revisiting a Polish Modernist Classic
By
Adam Thirlwell
| October 11, 2023
How Horror Helps Us Confront and Understand Grief and Loss
Alexandra Dos Santos on Shirley Jackson's
The Haunting of Hill House
By
Alexandra Dos Santos
| October 11, 2023
Domestic Yet Universal: Rumaan Alam on Helen Garner's
The Children's Bach
"This is a story about how life happens to all of us."
By
Rumaan Alam
| October 10, 2023
Writing as Transformation: Who Paul Yoon Needed to Become to Finish His Book
Laura van den Berg Speaks with the Author of
The Hive and the Honey
By
Laura van den Berg
| October 10, 2023
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
No One Ever Said It: On the Long History of "Ye Olde" in English
By
Hana Videen
| October 10, 2023
Why the Russian Protest Poems of Sergey Gandlevsky Still Matter Today
By
Philip Metres
| October 10, 2023
Benjamín Labatut Will Not Be Profiled
By
Adam Dalva
| October 9, 2023
Ann Patchett on Oscar Hijuelos' Lush, Elegiac Novel Full of Music and Sex
"Bless the novels that provide accounts of the world that came before."
By
Ann Patchett
| October 9, 2023
Derangement and Estrangement: On Poetic Turbulence in Translation
Joyelle McSweeney Considers Hussein Barghouthi's
The Blue Light
and Kim Hyesoon's
Phantom Pain Wings
By
Joyelle McSweeney
| October 9, 2023
Robots Are People, Too: On the Ways Writers Use Non-Human Characters to Tell Human Stories
Allegories, Companions, Advisor, Otherworldly, and Outsiders
By
Dan Hope
| October 6, 2023
What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
Featuring New Titles by Benjamín Labatut, Safiya Sinclair, Lydia Davis, Melissa Broder, and More
By
Book Marks
| October 6, 2023
Understanding Zora Neale Hurston's Loneliness
Richard Deming on Hurston's 1942 autobiography,
Dust Tracks on a Road
By
Richard Deming
| October 5, 2023
Alex Reisner on Covering Books3 and Fighting Piracy
In Conversation with Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan on
Fiction/Non/Fiction
By
Fiction Non Fiction
| October 5, 2023
C Pam Zhang on Food, Wealth, and Pressure
In Conversation with Maris Kreizman on
The Maris Review
Podcast
By
The Maris Review
| October 5, 2023
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New Series to Watch this Weekend
January 16, 2026
by
Olivia Rutigliano
Novelist Van Jensen Talks with His Mother, Acclaimed Painter Jean Jensen, About Art, Literature, and Family
January 16, 2026
by
Van Jensen
The Historical Implications and Fictional Possibilities of the Hindenberg Disaster
January 16, 2026
by
L. A. Chandlar
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"