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Literary Criticism
Bill McKibben: Thoreau Suggests You Put Down Your Smartphone
On the Foresight and Ongoing Relevance of a Great American Thinker
By
Bill McKibben
| July 12, 2017
Who Cares What Straight People Think?
Brandon Taylor on the Uncertain State of Queer Narratives
By
Brandon Taylor
| July 11, 2017
Who Will Tell the Tales of American Fascism?
On the Truth-Telling of Roberto Bolaño
By
Veronica Esposito
| July 11, 2017
Why Are We So Unwilling to Take Sylvia Plath at Her Word?
New Letters Alleging Abuse are Only Shocking if You Haven't Been Listening
By
Emily Van Duyne
| July 11, 2017
Dystopia
is
Realism: The Future Is Here if You Look Closely
Christopher Brown on How the Best Science Fiction Remixes the Present
By
Christopher Brown
| July 10, 2017
Tessa Hadley on Alice Munro Reading "Differently"
"A Little More Abrasive, Buoyant... Defiant?"
By
Tessa Hadley
| July 10, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Writing in the Shadow of a Masterpiece: On Homage
By
Margot Livesy
| July 5, 2017
Systemic Cruelty, Mass Sadism, and Reading "The Lottery" in 2017
By
Emily Temple
| June 27, 2017
Was
Jane Eyre
Written as a Secret Love Letter?
By
John Pfordresher
| June 26, 2017
On a Wonderful, Beautiful, Almost Failed Sentence By Virginia Woolf
A Close Reading of the Opening Lines to an Iconic Essay, 'On Being Ill'
By
Brian Dillon
| June 21, 2017
To Catch the Conscience of the President: On the Power of Theater
How We Retell our Stories, From Shakespeare to Beckett to Anne Washburn
By
Veronica Esposito
| June 20, 2017
Tolerance and Islamophobia in 16th-Century Spain, Not So Different from Now
Matthew Carr Moves from Nonfiction to Fiction in Exploring Muslim Spain
By
Matthew Carr
| June 19, 2017
In Grief, Joan Didion's Move From Fiction to Memoir
David Ulin on Moving from Journalism to Fiction to Memoir
By
David L. Ulin
| June 15, 2017
Wallace Shawn: How Should a Person Be?
On Revenge, Punishment, Bravery, and Cowardice
By
Wallace Shawn
| June 13, 2017
Embrace Your Monstrous Flesh: On Women's Bodies in Horror
"Horror films offer a fantasy space for women whose bodies betray them"
By
Rebecca Harkins-Cross
| June 8, 2017
Is Richard Brautigan's Most Famous Novel a Minor Masterpiece or Naive Relic?
Trout Fishing in America
Turns 50: Is it a True American Classic?
By
Nick Ripatrazone
| June 7, 2017
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Page 423 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…"