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What Richard Wollheim Taught Us About the ‘Finished State’ of a Person

What Richard Wollheim Taught Us About the ‘Finished State’ of a Person

Sheila Heti on the British Philosopher's Memoir, Germs

By Sheila Heti | February 2, 2021

Literary Disco Discusses Shruti Swamy's

Literary Disco Discusses Shruti Swamy's "The Neighbors"

Julia, Rider, and Tod on the Artful Short Story

By Literary Disco | February 2, 2021

Who Are the Mean Girls<br> in Literature?

Who Are the Mean Girls
in Literature?

Ellie Eaton Names Caroline Bingely, Vittoria, and Many More

By Ellie Eaton | February 1, 2021

How Should a Person Write <br>About the Internet?

How Should a Person Write
About the Internet?

On Debut Novels by Lauren Oyler and Patricia Lockwood

By Emily Temple | February 1, 2021

Searching for Mr. Darcy in Jane Austen's Would-Be Suitor, Tom Lefroy

Searching for Mr. Darcy in Jane Austen's Would-Be Suitor, Tom Lefroy

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast

By History of Literature | February 1, 2021

How Come We Don’t Know More About the Largest Labor Battle in the History of the United States?

How Come We Don’t Know More About the Largest Labor Battle in the History of the United States?

Jeffrey Webb Revisits the Battle for Blair Mountain

By Jeffrey Webb | January 29, 2021

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Whistler
  • Land
  • The Dog's Gaze: A Visual History
  • 1873: The Rothschilds, the First Great Depression, and the Making of the Modern World
  • Drayton and MacKenzie
  • The Long Revolution: Creating a United States After 1776

10 pictures of young Chekhov, ranked by hotness.

By Jonny Diamond | January 29, 2021

The Best Reviewed Books
of the Month

By Book Marks | January 29, 2021

‘But I Will Write Anyway.’ Teaching the Anti-Racist Writing Workshop

By Helen Betya Rubinstein | January 28, 2021

In Defense of Writing Books That May Never Be Read

In Defense of Writing Books That May Never Be Read

Mark de Silva: “That language fails to capture experience is no cause for disappointment.”

By Mark de Silva | January 27, 2021

Growth, Loss, and a Mailbox Mystery: 13 Years in Gray’s River Valley

Growth, Loss, and a Mailbox Mystery: 13 Years in Gray’s River Valley

Robert Michael Pyle Reflects on the Life Cycles of a Place

By Robert Michael Pyle | January 27, 2021

<em>Reading Women</em>’s Most Anticipated Books of 2021

Reading Women’s Most Anticipated Books of 2021

(The First Half of the Year, That Is)

By Reading Women | January 27, 2021

Joan Didion: Why I Write

Joan Didion: Why I Write

"I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means."

By Joan Didion | January 26, 2021

On the Ableist Attitudes That Framed V.C. Andrews as a Character in One of Her Novels

On the Ableist Attitudes That Framed V.C. Andrews as a Character in One of Her Novels

From the Lit Century Podcast with Sandra Newman
and Catherine Nichols

By Lit Century | January 26, 2021

What’s Behind the Label ‘Domestic Fiction’?

What’s Behind the Label ‘Domestic Fiction’?

Soledad Fox Maura on Rethinking Genre

By Soledad Fox Maura | January 25, 2021

Writing a Saudi American Novel When No One Has Done It Before

Writing a Saudi American Novel When No One Has Done It Before

Eman Quotah on the Beginning of a Tradition

By Eman Quotah | January 25, 2021

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    • What to Watch Now: Mad Max Fury Road (2015)June 10, 2026 by Radha Vatsal
    • 5 Dark and Speculative Adaptations of Peter PanJune 10, 2026 by Cynthia Pelayo
    • Whistler
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "A rare phenomenon in contemporary fiction a novel both majestic and intimate original and masterful…"
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