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Craft and Criticism
Beth Kephart on the Observational Lens
“It’s the stance we take toward the things we choose to see.”
By
Beth Kephart
| December 1, 2023
Helen Laser and AudioFile's 2023 Best Fiction Audiobooks
In Conversation with Michele Cobb on Behind the Mic
By
Behind the Mic
| December 1, 2023
Katherine Howe on the Joy of Writing Pirates
From The History of Literature Podcast with Jacke Wilson
By
History of Literature
| December 1, 2023
November’s Best Reviewed Fiction
Featuring New Titles by Sigrid Nunez, Claire Keegan, Michael Cunningham, and More
By
Book Marks
| November 30, 2023
November’s Best Reviewed Nonfiction
Featuring New Titles by Robert Darnton, Barbra Streisand, Paul Caruana Galizia, and More
By
Book Marks
| November 30, 2023
Horror for the Holidays! Or, Scary Novels To Read While Being Nice to Your Family
“Corruption of love and kindness is the real horror...” (So Just Eat Your Aunt’s Pie, Ok?)
By
Erika Johansen
| November 30, 2023
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
What Albert Camus’s
The Stranger
Says About Our Contemporary Anxieties
By
Kate Christensen
| November 30, 2023
Timothy Schaffert on the Literary Parallels for the House GOP Clusterf*ck
By
Fiction Non Fiction
| November 30, 2023
Casey Plett On Community and Being Open To Strangers
By
The Maris Review
| November 30, 2023
Literary Fight Club: On the Great Poets’ Brawl of ‘68
Nick Ripatrazone Recounts Jim Harrison’s Brief Tenure in the Halls of Academia
By
Nick Ripatrazone
| November 29, 2023
Year of the Rabbit: Why We’re Seeing So Many Bunnies on Books
Celia Mattison on the Renaissance of an Age-Old Symbol of Feminine Power
By
Celia Mattison
| November 29, 2023
Meals and Memories: Sheila Squillante on Writing to Remember Her Father
"I write because I want to continue my father, not contain him."
By
Sheila Squillante
| November 29, 2023
A Vicious Cycle: Jessica Strawser on Telling and Re-Telling Traumatic Stories
“It’s funny, how sometimes the things you know for sure can still surprise you.”
By
Jessica Strawser
| November 29, 2023
Beyond
Poor Things
: An Ode to Alasdair Gray’s Lesser-Known, Equally Deserving Books
Including a Gargantuan Retelling of the History of English Literature and a Bowdlerization of The Divine Comedy
By
Mazin Saleem
| November 29, 2023
John Vaillant on Winning the 2023 Baillie Gifford Prize
In conversation with Razie Iqbal on the Baillie Gifford Prize Podcast, Read Smart
By
Read Smart
| November 29, 2023
Booker judge admits it’s nearly impossible to read ALL the books.
By
Jonny Diamond
| November 28, 2023
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What to Watch This Weekend: February 20, 2026
February 20, 2026
by
Dwyer Murphy
Crafting Ordinary Heroes:
A Writing Toolbox
February 20, 2026
by
Jennifer K. Breedlove
Searching for a Unified Theory of Chandler versus Macdonald
February 20, 2026
by
Frank Ladd
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"This is informed accessible literary analysis that demonstrates that Morrison s true genius was as…"