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Literary Criticism
“I Would Not Take Prisoners.” Tolstoy’s Case Against Making War Humane
Samuel Moyn Considers Prince Andrei, Carl von Clausewitz, and the Rules of War
By
Samuel Moyn
| September 10, 2021
Maggie Nelson on Criticism, Intentionality, and Pain
In Conversation with Maris Kreizman on
The Maris Review
Podcast
By
The Maris Review
| September 9, 2021
7 Novels For Living Out Your Cottagecore Fantasies
Lillie Vale’s Coziest Houses in Fiction
By
Lillie Vale
| September 9, 2021
Following the Paths of the Wild-Walking Women of the Past, from Nan Shepherd to Georgia O’Keeffe
Annabel Abbs on the Literature and Legacy of Women Hikers
By
Annabel Abbs
| September 9, 2021
Writing Black Essays in White People’s Houses
Jill Louise Busby on the Writing Residency Industrial Complex
By
Jill Louise Busby
| September 9, 2021
Read It and Weep: Margaret Atwood on the Intimidating, Haunting Intellect of Simone de Beauvoir
On the French Existentialist's Never-Before-Published Novel
By
Margaret Atwood
| September 8, 2021
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Lauren Groff and Rebecca Makkai Talk Literary Ethics, the Loneliness of Bodies, and Writerly Friendship
By
Rebecca Makkai
| September 8, 2021
Alexandra Kleeman on the Artificial Boundary Between the Natural and Man-Made
By
Thresholds
| September 8, 2021
Commuting with Shylock: (Reluctantly) Revisiting
The Merchant of Venice
with My 10-Year-Old Son
By
Dara Horn
| September 8, 2021
The In-Between World: On the Mythology of
The Famished Road
and the Literary Scaffolding of Ben Okri
Vanessa Guignery Considers the Author's Blurring of Boundaries
By
Vanessa Guignery
| September 8, 2021
Crystal Wilkinson on Finding Community Among Affrilachian Poets
This Week from the
Reading Women
Podcast
By
Reading Women
| September 8, 2021
Brigette Benkeman on Dora Maar, Surrealist Photographer and Picasso’s “Weeping Woman”
This Week from the
Big Table
Podcast with JC Gabel
By
Big Table
| September 7, 2021
Hilma Wolitzer on the Catharsis of Writing Through Grief
Jane Ciabattari Talks to the Author of
Today a Women Went Mad in the Supermarket
By
Jane Ciabattari
| September 7, 2021
Making a Way Out of No Way: Celebrating the Power of Black Female Relationships in Literature
Dawn Turner on Sisterhood and Empowerment Against Formidable Odds
By
Dawn Turner
| September 7, 2021
Interview with an Indie Press: Biblioasis
On Creating a “Charmingly Irregular” List
By
Corinne Segal
| September 3, 2021
On the Life and Under-Recognized Work of Margery Latimer, Visionary Modernist Writer
Joy Castro Revisits an Intellectual Ahead of Her Time
By
Joy Castro
| September 2, 2021
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Page 232 of 350
Thinking Outside the Cop: Using Game Wardens in Crime Fiction
January 13, 2026
by
Sarah Crouch
Make Our Villains Gayer, Please: Reclaiming the Trope of Queer-Coded Antagonists
January 13, 2026
by
Isha Raya
Ross Montgomery on Researching Profanity, Halley's Comet, and Writing Historical Fiction
January 13, 2026
by
Alex Dueben
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Poignant Tender The final line of em The Rest of Our Lives em is by…"