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Craft and Criticism
High School English: Balancing the Job with the Calling
Nick Ripatrazone Profiles Teacher Tricia Ebarvia
By
Nick Ripatrazone
| September 18, 2019
Pico Iyer on the Infinite
Silences of Japan
Kawabata: “No word can say as much as silence.”
By
Pico Iyer
| September 18, 2019
My First Library Was a Library of Porn
Brian Bouldrey Wanders Through the Smutty Old Times Square of Literature
By
Brian D. Bouldrey
| September 17, 2019
On the Haunted Lives of Girls and Women
Rachel Eve Moulton Considers the Way Horror is Housed in the Body
By
Rachel Eve Moulton
| September 17, 2019
Of Sisterly Bonds and Translating the Untranslatable
From Jennifer Croft's New Memoir,
Homesick
By
Jennifer Croft
| September 17, 2019
Kevin Barry on the Need to Sustain Our Literature
5 Questions for the Author of
Night Boat to Tangier
By
Literary Hub
| September 17, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Speaking Black Life Across Generations: A Conversation with Imani Perry
By
Mitchell S. Jackson
| September 17, 2019
Can Climate Fiction Be... Hopeful?
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Literary Hub
| September 16, 2019
The US Tour That Made Gertrude Stein a Household Name
By
Roy Morris, Jr.
| September 16, 2019
On Attempting to Deal With Addiction Through Books
Chris Fleming Discovers an Unlikely Ally in Marcus Aurelius
By
Chris Fleming
| September 13, 2019
The Inspired Vengeance of Mythic Icelandic Women
Kassandra Montag on Learning to Write Blunt, Unabashed Characters
By
Kassandra Montag
| September 13, 2019
11 Forgotten Books of the 1920s Worth Reading Now
Writers from the 1920s to Prime You for the 2020s
By
Bob Batchelor
| September 13, 2019
A Brief History of Mostly Terrible Campaign Biographies
“No harm if true; but, in fact, not true.” (Buckle Up for 2020)
By
Jaime Fuller
| September 12, 2019
A Legendary Publishing House's Most Infamous Rejection Letters
When Faber & Faber’s T.S. Eliot Passed on George Orwell (and More)
By
Toby Faber
| September 12, 2019
The Hard, Familiar Truths of Rion Amilcar Scott's Invented World
The Author of
The World Doesn't Require You
in Conversation with Danielle Evans
By
Danielle Evans
| September 12, 2019
The Eerily Prescient Lessons of
Darkness at Noon
Michael Scammell on the Eternal Totalitarian Truths of Arthur Koestler's Classic
By
Michael Scammell
| September 12, 2019
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State of the Crime Novel, Part 2: Issues and Recommendations
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Morgan Leigh Davies
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The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Mackintosh has a spare and confident hand Her work is sometimes described as dreamlike certainly…"