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The Restless Comedy of Jane Austen's Unfinished Last<br> Novel, <em>Sanditon</em>

The Restless Comedy of Jane Austen's Unfinished Last
Novel, Sanditon

Fragment of a Seaside Romp

By Janet Todd | January 10, 2020

On the Short Stories That Inspired a Russian Czar to Free the Serfs

On the Short Stories That Inspired a Russian Czar to Free the Serfs

How the Fiction of Ivan Turgenev Changed Lives

By Daniyal Mueenuddin | January 7, 2020

On the Darker Standalone Novels from the <em>Baby-Sitters Club</em> Author

On the Darker Standalone Novels from the Baby-Sitters Club Author

This Week on The NewberyTart Podcast

By NewberyTart | January 7, 2020

Has African Migration to the US Led to a Literary Renaissance?

Has African Migration to the US Led to a Literary Renaissance?

Yogita Goyal Considers “Afropolitan” Literature

By Yogita Goyal | January 6, 2020

At the Literary Intersection of Climate Disaster, Apocalypse, and Folk Horror

At the Literary Intersection of Climate Disaster, Apocalypse, and Folk Horror

Tobias Carroll on Books by Lucie McKnight Hardy, Claire Colman,
Stephen Graham Jones, and Jennifer Givhan

By Tobias Carroll | January 6, 2020

Tayari Jones on the Necessary American History of Ann Petry's <em>The Street</em>

Tayari Jones on the Necessary American History of Ann Petry's The Street

“Crossing the line between belles lettres and pulp, Petry is
a pioneer of the literary thriller.”

By Tayari Jones | January 6, 2020

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Stay Alive: Berlin, 1939-1945
  • Under Water
  • Paradiso 17
  • The Plans I Have for You
  • In Search of Now: The Science of the Present Moment
  • Stephen Sondheim: Art Isn't Easy

Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Feminist Press

By Literary Hub | January 6, 2020

The Booksellers’ Year in Reading: Part Three

By Literary Hub | December 30, 2019

Our Favorite Literary Hub Stories of 2019

By Literary Hub | December 20, 2019

How to Break in to Publishing If You're a Smalltown Brazilian Mayor in the 1930s

How to Break in to Publishing If You're a Smalltown Brazilian Mayor in the 1930s

Novelist Graciliano Ramos's Reports to the Governor of Alagoas Are Literature Unto Themselves

By Padma Viswanathan and Graciliano Ramos | December 20, 2019

Visiting Jeff VanderMeer's Weird, Wondrous Worlds

Visiting Jeff VanderMeer's Weird, Wondrous Worlds

Erin Berger Catches Up With the Author of Dead Astronauts

By Erin Berger | December 18, 2019

When You Find Out Someone Won a Prize Plagiarizing Your Work

When You Find Out Someone Won a Prize Plagiarizing Your Work

Laleh Khadivi on Who Owns a Story

By Laleh Khadivi | December 18, 2019

One Man's Literary Crusade to Uncensor Sex in America

One Man's Literary Crusade to Uncensor Sex in America

On Gershon Legman, Original Sex-Positive Hipster Intellectual

By Susan G. Davis | December 18, 2019

The Pain, Hidden in Plain Sight, of John Cheever's Darkest Work

The Pain, Hidden in Plain Sight, of John Cheever's Darkest Work

Rick Moody on Bullet Park

By Rick Moody | December 18, 2019

Unearthing the Stories of Australia's Working Class

Unearthing the Stories of Australia's Working Class

Enza Gandolfo on Finding Herself in the Novels of Dorothy Hewitt

By Enza Gandolfo | December 18, 2019

High Comedy and Misdemeanors: <br>The Shakespearean Drama at the Heart of Impeachment

High Comedy and Misdemeanors:
The Shakespearean Drama at the Heart of Impeachment

Liesl Schillinger on the Contemporary Resonance of Love’s Labour’s Lost

By Liesl Schillinger | December 17, 2019

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    • The Art of Interview and InterrogationApril 2, 2026 by David Swinson
    • From Hero to Villain: These Actors Proved They Had the Ultimate RangeApril 2, 2026 by Keith Roysdon
    • Stay Alive: Berlin, 1939-1945
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Mr Buruma s book while triggered by old photos and letters from Leo s time…"
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