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Josh Weil on the Necessity of Writing What Scares You

Josh Weil on the Necessity of Writing What Scares You

Follow the Fear. See Where It Leads.

By Josh Weil | June 5, 2026

My Sister Thinks Everything I Write is About Her... Is She the Literary Asshole?

My Sister Thinks Everything I Write is About Her... Is She the Literary Asshole?

Kristen Arnett Answers Your Awkward Questions About Bad Bookish Behavior

By Kristen Arnett | June 4, 2026

A Love Letter to My Hometown: On Revisiting Rural New Hampshire in Fiction

A Love Letter to My Hometown: On Revisiting Rural New Hampshire in Fiction

Shasta Grant: “A love letter is almost always directed toward somebody or something you can’t have, and this one is no different.”

By Shasta Grant | June 3, 2026

What Do Arthurian Legend and <em>All My Children</em> Have in Common?

What Do Arthurian Legend and All My Children Have in Common?

John Glynn Explores the Similarities Between Soap Operas and Medieval Epics

By John Glynn | June 3, 2026

Lucy Sante on <em>An Anthology of New York Poets</em>

Lucy Sante on An Anthology of New York Poets

In Conversation with Michael Kelleher for the Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast

By Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast | June 3, 2026

The Sound of Imminence: Ruth Ozeki in Praise of the Typewriter

The Sound of Imminence: Ruth Ozeki in Praise of the Typewriter

How She Discovered Her Favorite Writing Instrument

By Ruth Ozeki | June 2, 2026

Best Reviewed
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  • Villa Coco
  • Something We Said: Richard Pryor, a Notorious Word, and Me
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  • Flyboy in the Buttermilk: Essays on Contemporary America

Shakespeare and Reality Televison Really Aren’t That Different

By Samantha Allen | June 2, 2026

What Co-Writing a Book on Shakespeare Taught Us About Marriage and Parenthood

By Charles O’Malley and Scott W. Stern | June 2, 2026

Dead Matter: On Writing From and Beyond the Archives

By chaun webster | June 2, 2026

Alone on a Mountain in Wyoming Far From Home and Looking for Answers

Alone on a Mountain in Wyoming Far From Home and Looking for Answers

Alexandra Oliva Goes the Extra Mile to Research the Science in Her Novel, The Radiant Dark

By Alexandra Oliva | June 1, 2026

What It Means to Write a Novel My Mother Can Never Read

What It Means to Write a Novel My Mother Can Never Read

Sarah Wang on the Ways Growing Up in an Immigrant Household Has Impacted Her Writing

By Sarah Wang | June 1, 2026

Jump Into the Ball Pit: Emily Rapp Black on the Creative Power of Play

Jump Into the Ball Pit: Emily Rapp Black on the Creative Power of Play

Writing for the Sake of Creating and Thinking Because It Feels Good

By Emily Rapp Black | May 29, 2026

Language Play(s): Ensemble, Chorus, and the Redistributed Lyric

Language Play(s): Ensemble, Chorus, and the Redistributed Lyric

Soham Patel on the Poetics of Language, Form, and Situation

By Soham Patel | May 29, 2026

“Do Indians Still Exist?” On Intergenerational Trauma and Indigenous Resilience

“Do Indians Still Exist?” On Intergenerational Trauma and Indigenous Resilience

Blair Palmer Yoxall Remembers the Family History That Inspired His Debut Novel

By Blair Palmer Yoxall | May 28, 2026

“Your dangerous shoe.” A Poem by Lila Matsumoto

“Your dangerous shoe.” A Poem by Lila Matsumoto

From the Collection Talk a Blue Streak

By Lila Matsumoto | May 27, 2026

Who Are You When You Lose Your Job? And Other Questions You Can Answer by Making Art

Who Are You When You Lose Your Job? And Other Questions You Can Answer by Making Art

Hugo dos Santos Goes to Work at a Desk in the Basement

By Hugo dos Santos | May 27, 2026

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    • Millicent Simmonds Co-Writes and Stars in New Thriller, Grace With a Deaf ProtagonistJune 17, 2026 by Olivia Rutigliano
    • The Best True Crime Books of the Month: June 2026June 17, 2026 by CrimeReads
    • 6 Suspense Novels About Art, Museums, and ForgersJune 17, 2026 by Carol Snow
    • Villa Coco
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "None of this is particularly suspenseful the novel s chief revelation is telegraphed about halfway…"
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