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Literary Criticism
We Owe More to Our Young Writers: On the Relevance of the Workshop
Ru Freeman Considers the Responsibility of the Writing Life
By
Ru Freeman
| April 16, 2020
Life As It Really Is: Translator Richard Pevear on the Stories of Chekhov
"In art, as in life, there is nothing accidental.”
By
Richard Pevear
| April 14, 2020
The Question of Homoeroticism in Whitman's Poetry
Mark Doty on Sexuality and 'Unspeakability' in
Leaves of Grass
By
Mark Doty
| April 14, 2020
Fairy Tales and Facts: Siri Hustvedt on How We Read in a Pandemic
"Separate and Secluded" We Pass Our Days
By
Siri Hustvedt
| April 13, 2020
Like Talking With a Friend: Intimacy in Lucia Berlin’s Peripatetic Narratives
Alexandra Chang on Learning from a Master
By
Alexandra Chang
| April 13, 2020
Kay Ryan on the Preposterous Beauty of Gerard Manley Hopkins
One Legendary Poet Analyzes Another
By
Kay Ryan
| April 13, 2020
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The West in Pieces: On the Reimagined Grammar(s) of C. Pam Zhang
By
Christian Kiefer
| April 9, 2020
Writing From Within the Rosenberg Family Legacy
By
Ellen Meeropol
| April 9, 2020
The Listening World: Neurodivergent Voices for a More-Than-Human World
By
Chris Martin
| April 8, 2020
In a Quiet London Enclave, Five Iconic Women Writers Forged a Home
Mecklenburgh Square Drew Virginia Woolf, Hilda Doolittle, and Others
By
Francesca Wade
| April 8, 2020
What Will Happen to the Novel
After This?
On the Inevitable Post-Pandemic Genre
By
Emily Temple
| April 7, 2020
The Case for Teaching Depressing Books
Sahar Mustafah on the Literature of Empathy and Action
By
Sahar Mustafah
| April 7, 2020
How Having a Writing Community Stimulates Creativity
Mary Gannon and Kevin Larimer on Finding Your People
By
Kevin Larimer and Mary Gannon
| April 7, 2020
Finding Permission to Fail in
A Confederacy of Dunces
Mary Pauline Lowry on Its Grotesque Charms
By
Mary Pauline Lowry
| April 7, 2020
What Two Imaginary Cats Tell Us About Who We Are (and How We're Different)
Marie Mutsuki Mockett on the Chaos of Feline Energy
By
Marie Mutsuki Mockett
| April 7, 2020
A Pandemic is Not a War (and Other Consequences of Male Inferiority)
Nathaniel Popkin on the Sad and Stupid Men Who're Making Things Worse
By
Nathaniel Popkin
| April 6, 2020
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Page 368 of 451
James Sallis: What a Crime Fiction Master Leaves Behind
April 2, 2026
by
Nick Kolakowski
The Art of Interview and Interrogation
April 2, 2026
by
David Swinson
From Hero to Villain: These Actors Proved They Had the Ultimate Range
April 2, 2026
by
Keith Roysdon
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Mr Buruma s book while triggered by old photos and letters from Leo s time…"