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High School English: Balancing the Job with the Calling

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 <br>Silences of Japan

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

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

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

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

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
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Speaking Black Life Across Generations: A Conversation with Imani Perry

By Mitchell S. Jackson | September 17, 2019

Can Climate Fiction Be... Hopeful?

By 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

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

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

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

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

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 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<br> <em>Darkness at Noon</em>

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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    • How a Movie Idea Became a Hollywood Screenwriter’s Debut ThrillerApril 29, 2026 by Gregory Poirier
    • Permanence
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Mackintosh has a spare and confident hand Her work is sometimes described as dreamlike certainly…"
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