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Literary Criticism
Lost in Berlin, and in the Wordless Writing of Mirtha Dermisache
J. Mae Barizo on the Space Between the Known and Unknown
By
J. Mae Barizo
| March 23, 2018
Stop Looking for One War Story to Make Sense of All Wars
Matt Young on the Romanticized Image of the Warrior Poet
By
Matt Young
| March 22, 2018
Why Do We Turn to Stories in the Midst of a Disaster?
On Narrative and Trauma in Mexico City
By
Madeleine Wattenbarger
| March 21, 2018
Four Theories Toward the Timeless Brilliance of
Infinite Jest
Tom Bissell on the Novel of Its Generation
By
Tom Bissell
| March 21, 2018
Imagining Iraq: On the Fifteenth Anniversary of the Iraq War
Philip Metres Offers a Brief History of Imperial Dementia
By
Philip Metres
| March 20, 2018
On Finding a Hero in Alison Bechdel
Genevieve Hudson's Search for a Community on the Page
By
Genevieve Hudson
| March 20, 2018
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Does
The Virgin Suicides
Hold Up 25 Years Later?
By
Emily Temple
| March 19, 2018
Is It Worth 1,000 Words? Mark Sarvas on Writing Art in Fiction
By
Mark Sarvas
| March 14, 2018
Why Every Progressive Should Read
The Good Soldier Švejk
By
Paul Goldberg
| March 9, 2018
Curtis White: There's No Such Thing as Postmodernism
Even Some of Its Best-Known Practitioners Were Confused About It
By
Curtis White
| March 9, 2018
The Tragedies of Aeschylus Are Truly Timeless
Ismail Kadare on the Greatest of the Greeks
By
Ismail Kadare
| February 26, 2018
Hannah Arendt on the Time She Met W.H. Auden
Happy Birthday to the poet who thought “poetry makes nothing happen”
By
Hannah Arendt
| February 21, 2018
Can We Ever Escape History? On Walter Kempowski's Life's Work
An Antidote to the Traumatic Experiences of a Wartime Childhood
By
Jenny Erpenbeck
| February 15, 2018
How Do You Write One of Humanity's Most Intimate Moments?
Toward a Unified Literary Theory of the Kiss
By
Brian Turner
| February 14, 2018
How Medieval Storytellers Shape Our Understanding of Romance
Matters of the Heart, from Arthurian Legend to Tristan and Isolde
By
Marilyn Yalom
| February 14, 2018
On the Very Contemporary Art of Flash Fiction
"To Be Brief Takes Time"
By
John Dufresne
| February 13, 2018
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April 17, 2026
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David Masciotra
The Best True Crime of the Month: April 2026
April 17, 2026
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CrimeReads
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"A social satire full of dopamine-releasing one-liners and sparkling writing But it can be frustratingly…"