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Literary Criticism
What Does It Mean When We Call Women Girls?
Robin Wasserman on the Unstoppable Wave of "Girl"-Titled Books
By
Robin Wasserman
| May 18, 2016
How Writers Will Steal Your Life and Use it For Fiction
A Brief History of Plagiarizing Identity, From Leo Tolstoy to Salman Rushdie
By
Richard Cohen
| May 18, 2016
How the Best Commencement Speech of All Time Was Bad for Literature
David Foster Wallace's New Sentimentality Got Old, Fast
By
Emily Harnett
| May 17, 2016
The Unstoppable Myth of Alejandra Pizarnik
A Poet of the Night, and Love, and Terror, and Tragedy
By
Enrique Vila-Matas
| May 17, 2016
How Katherine Dunn's
Geek Love
Saved Me
For Helena Fitzgerald, the Right Book Came Along at the Right Time
By
Helena Fitzgerald
| May 17, 2016
I Am Jessa Crispin’s Problem with Publishing
Bethanne Patrick on Careerism, Criticism, and a Life in Books
By
Bethanne Patrick
| May 13, 2016
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Luis J. Rodriguez: LA is a Great Poetry Town.
By
David L. Ulin
| May 13, 2016
Even Dostoyevsky Hated Literary Readings
By
Daniel Torday
| May 12, 2016
The Dimunition of Women Writers: An American Tradition
By
Anne Boyd Rioux
| May 12, 2016
Why Fiction Needs More Women Scientists
When A Plot is Handed to You on a Petri Dish, Write It
By
Eileen Pollack
| May 10, 2016
Anton Chekhov: A Post-Post-Modernist Way Ahead of His Time
What it Means To Be Chekhovian: Lively, Innovative, Experimental
By
Peter Constantine
| May 9, 2016
No More Dead Mothers: Reading, Writing, and Grieving
After Three Novels, Hannah Gersen Gets Through the Loss of Her Mother
By
Hannah Gersen
| May 6, 2016
On Discovering Real Mothers on the Page
Pamela Erens, Rivka Glachen, Julia Fierro, and writing about motherhood
By
Jordan Rosenfeld
| May 6, 2016
Why Does Literature Hate Babies?
On the Sometimes Reciprocal Hostility Between Writing and Children
By
Rivka Galchen
| May 6, 2016
How Judy Blume Changed My Life
Lily King on the Book That Got Her Through Her Parents' Divorce
By
Lily King
| May 4, 2016
Writers, The Loneliest Artists of All
Michele Filgate on Solitude, Melissa Broder, and Olivia Laing
By
Michele Filgate
| May 4, 2016
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The 5 Greatest Fictional Recurring Characters, According to Alison Gaylin
June 18, 2026
by
Alison Gaylin
Guru-dunit: 5 Mysteries That Skewer the Worlds of Wellness and Self-Help
June 18, 2026
by
Asia Mackay
What to Watch Now, International Edition: Infernal Affairs (2002)
June 18, 2026
by
Radha Vatsal
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Strikingly em Ghost-Eye em has none of the eerie mood of a Gothic novel or…"