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Literary Criticism
How Far Can Fascist Satire Go?
On the Troubling, Compelling Work of Curzio Malaparte
By
Tobias Carroll
| August 21, 2017
The Reluctant Spiritual Autobiographer
Adrian Shirk Didn't Know What Kind of Book She Was Writing Until She Was Half-Way Through
By
Adrian Shirk
| August 21, 2017
Pursuing the Artfully Naked "I": The Myth-Making of Kathy Acker
Seeking the Iconic Status of Great Writer as Countercultural Hero
By
Chris Kraus
| August 18, 2017
Air Travel: From Majesty to Drudgery in 100 Years
From Saint-Exupéry to DeLillo, the Way We Write About Flight
By
Ellie Robins
| August 18, 2017
What Poetry Can Teach Us About Power
Political Poems Use Language in a Way Distinct from Rhetoric
By
Matthew Zapruder
| August 16, 2017
What Does it Mean When We Call a Key a "Slave"?
On the Power and Responsibility of Metaphor
By
Peggy Shinner
| August 14, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The Useful Dangers of Fairy Tales
By
Amber Sparks
| August 11, 2017
On Nanni Balestrini, the Most Radically Formalist Poet of the Italian Scene
By
Franco “Bifo” Berardi
| August 11, 2017
How Much of Einstein's Theory of Relativity is in the Writing of Virginia Woolf?
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| August 10, 2017
Toward a New Climate Change Genre: First Impact Fiction
Ashley Shelby: The Apocalypse is Now
By
Ashley Shelby
| August 9, 2017
Rereading
Mrs. Dalloway
at the Same Age as Mrs. Dalloway
"I Will Gather the Folds of My Life Together, in the Way Clarissa Does"
By
Carole Burns
| August 3, 2017
There's No Such Thing As Historical Fiction
Paul Lynch on What the Fictional Past Reveals of the Real-Life Present
By
Paul Lynch
| July 26, 2017
The Radical Potential of Queer Road Novels
Looking Beyond the Bro-Canon
By
Allison Gallagher
| July 25, 2017
How a Book About Grover Revealed to Me the Wide World of Literature
From Joyce to Kafka to
The Monster at the End of the Book
By
David Burr Gerrard
| July 18, 2017
Jane Austen's Most Widely Mocked Character is Also Her Most Subversive
In Defense of
Pride and Prejudice
's Mrs. Bennet
By
Rachel Dunphy
| July 18, 2017
A Woman Alone in London: On the Literature of Solitude
"A Solitary Life is No Less Liberated Than One That is Lived More Publicly"
By
Lucy Scholes
| July 17, 2017
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Page 422 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
The Best Mysteries, Thrillers, and Crime Novels of April 2026
April 1, 2026
by
Molly Odintz
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Mr Buruma s book while triggered by old photos and letters from Leo s time…"