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Literary Criticism
On Discovering My Aunt Eleni’s Place in Queer Greek Literature
Natalie Bakopoulos Shares Lessons From Translating Her Aunt’s Novel
By
Natalie Bakopoulos
| August 21, 2025
The Annotated Nightstand: What Khadijah Queen Is Reading Now, and Next
Featuring Linda Hogan, Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Sinclair Lewis, and Others
By
Diana Arterian
| August 21, 2025
Nicholas Boggs on James Baldwin’s Love Stories
In Conversation with Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan on Fiction/Non/Fiction
By
Fiction Non Fiction
| August 21, 2025
Ilya Kaminsky on Discovering Poetry as a Deaf Child in Ukraine
“The language of poetry speaks to all our senses... It can speak, privately, to all of us. It is visceral.”
By
Ilya Kaminsky
| August 20, 2025
A Talent for Trouble: A Brief History of Paddington Bear
Michael Horowitz on the Gentle Refugee (and Best Bear of Them All?)
By
Daniel Horowitz
| August 20, 2025
Charlie Jane Anders on How A.S. Byatt’s
Possession
Paved the Way for Dark Academia
The Author of “Lessons in Magic and Disaster” Rereads an Iconic Text in a Time of Academic Suppression
By
Charlie Jane Anders
| August 19, 2025
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Exploring Octavia Butler’s Beginnings as a Sci-Fi Trailblazer
By
Susana M. Morris
| August 19, 2025
James Baldwin! Octavia Butler! Deadwood! 20 new books out today.
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| August 19, 2025
Hiroshima at Eighty: Contemporary Literature as a Product of the Post-Nuclear World
By
Ed Simon
| August 18, 2025
A Million Sour Cherry Orchards: Olia Hercules on Remembering the Ghosts of Ukraine
The Author of "Strong Roots" Paints a Portrait of Her Ancestral Land in the Wake of Russia's Invasion
By
Olia Hercules
| August 15, 2025
Nancy Reddy on Finding the Plot in Your Own Life
“The most moving memoirs are the ones in which you see someone transformed.”
By
Nancy Reddy
| August 15, 2025
“Old Song,” a Poem by Nima Hasan
Huda Fakhreddine: “A real poem is never only of the moment. A real poem defeats time, every time.”
By
Nima Hasan
| August 15, 2025
5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
“The author is a professional contrarian, which pretty much means she can bounce off others to naysay whenever so moved.”
By
Book Marks
| August 14, 2025
Exile, Imprisonment, Aloneness: Emma Sloley on the Dark Allure of Writing About Islands
The Author of “The Island of Last Things” Visits Alcatraz and Offers an Antidote to Doomerism
By
Emma Sloley
| August 14, 2025
The Night the Warring Poet Clans of NYC Came Together in Peace
Nathan Kernan on James Schuyler’s First Public Poetry Reading
By
Nathan Kernan
| August 14, 2025
Will Bardenwerper on Baseball’s Betrayal of Its Minor League Roots
In Conversation with Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan on Fiction/Non/Fiction
By
Fiction Non Fiction
| August 14, 2025
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Page 36 of 454
James Wolff on Why the World of Espionage Is Impossibly Messy
April 14, 2026
by
James Wolff
What to Watch Now: Syriana (2005)
April 14, 2026
by
Radha Vatsal
R.M. Caldwell on Writing a Regency-Era 'Fast and the Furious', Neurodivergence, and More
April 14, 2026
by
Alex Dueben
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"As talky and thinky as a memory play sweeping up Kafka Covid glass flowers and…"