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<em>New Yorker</em> Cartoonist Barry Blitt: How Far is Too Far in the World of Political Satire

New Yorker Cartoonist Barry Blitt: How Far is Too Far in the World of Political Satire

The Author of Blitt, in Conversation with Kerri Arsenault

By Kerri Arsenault | October 24, 2017

Currybooks: On Authenticity and Our Expectations of South Asian Writers

Currybooks: On Authenticity and Our Expectations of South Asian Writers

Diasporic Writers Have to Play Both Tourist and Tour Guide

By Naben Ruthnum | October 23, 2017

How the Oldest Stories Can Give Us the Best Perspective

How the Oldest Stories Can Give Us the Best Perspective

On War, Troy, and the Slow Time of Classic Literature

By Veronica Esposito | October 23, 2017

At Oslo's House of Literature, a Free Space for Ideas (and Writers)

At Oslo's House of Literature, a Free Space for Ideas (and Writers)

How Can We Make This Kind of Thing Happen in America?

By Kerri Arsenault | October 20, 2017

On Borders, White Space, and Saying the Unsayable

On Borders, White Space, and Saying the Unsayable

"A Poem’s Virtue is in its Lament Against Powerlessness"

By Sasha Pimentel | October 20, 2017

Peter Coyote: Voice of the Vietnam Generation

Peter Coyote: Voice of the Vietnam Generation

Clara Bingham Asks a Counterculture Legend About Narrating a Hard History

By Clara Bingham | October 20, 2017

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • The Keeper
  • The Life You Want
  • The News from Dublin: Stories
  • Kutchinsky's Egg: A Family's Story of Obsession, Love, and Loss
  • Metropolitans: New York Baseball, Class Struggle, and the People's Team
  • A Good Person

Jennifer Egan Makes Friends Across Seven Decades (and Countless Letters)

By Jennifer Egan | October 19, 2017

Philip Pullman: I'm Quite Against a Sentimental Vision of Childhood

By Nicholas Tucker | October 19, 2017

Black Francis: Ray Bradbury Validated My Desire to Write

By Black Francis | October 19, 2017

A Stroke Made My Mother a Poet, I Merely Transcribed

A Stroke Made My Mother a Poet, I Merely Transcribed

For Freeman's Marius Chivu on the Origins of His First Poem

By Marius Chivu | October 19, 2017

When Climate Change Comes for the Fairy Tale Forest

When Climate Change Comes for the Fairy Tale Forest

What Else is Lost When an Iconic Landscape is Destroyed?

By Olivia Campbell | October 19, 2017

Breaking Good: Why Artists Remake, Experiment, and Smash Tradition

Breaking Good: Why Artists Remake, Experiment, and Smash Tradition

On Remodeling Not Only the Imperfect, but the Beloved

By Anthony Brandt and David Eagleman | October 19, 2017

The Bluebeard Myth is Forever Relevant

The Bluebeard Myth is Forever Relevant

Catherine Burns on Women Trapped in Abusive Relationships

By Catherine Burns | October 19, 2017

In Writing, We Get to Be Bolder, Riskier, and More Foolish

In Writing, We Get to Be Bolder, Riskier, and More Foolish

Like Following a Mysterious Whistle into a Canyon in the Dead of Night

By Panio Gianopoulos | October 18, 2017

A Day in the Life of a Freelancer

A Day in the Life of a Freelancer

Lorraine Berry on the Way She Tries to Make a Living

By Lorraine Berry | October 18, 2017

Octavia Butler: The Brutalities of the Past Are All Around This

Octavia Butler: The Brutalities of the Past Are All Around This

Gabrielle Bellot on a Writer Who Changed Her Life

By Gabrielle Bellot | October 17, 2017

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    • How The Horrors Of Dating Can Lay The Groundwork for A Good Thriller April 7, 2026 by Kirsten King
    • The Night Kate Crane Watched the Story of Her Father's Murder Unfold as an Episode of 'Homicide'April 7, 2026 by Kate Crane
    • The Keeper
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "rench bring us directly into her characters heads The mystery is as much about their…"
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