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Literary Criticism
Why Has Poet Lola Ridge Disappeared?
On the Historical Erasure of Political Women Artists
By
Terese Svoboda
| April 6, 2018
Your Pocket Guide to 10 Literary Movements
Never Again Will You Have Nothing to Say at a Literary Dinner Party
By
Emily Temple
| April 5, 2018
Meg Wolitzer: “What Does it Mean to Be a Woman in Power?"
The
Female Persuasion
Author on Mentorship, Work, and Getting Older
By
Kaylen Ralph
| April 5, 2018
When Marguerite Duras Got Kicked Out of the Communist Party
Perhaps They Accuse Me of Being a Whore Because They Can Find No Other Insult
By
Emily Temple
| April 4, 2018
The Year in Trump Novel Pitches: An Agent's Lament
The Truly Resonant Novels of the Trump Era Won't Be About Trump
By
Erik Hane
| March 30, 2018
On Moderata Fonte's Feminist Reimagining of 16th-Century Venice
Female Friendships and Single Women in
The Merits of Women
By
Virginia Cox
| March 27, 2018
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Mukoma Wa Ngugi: What
Decolonizing the Mind
Means Today
By
Mukoma Wa Ngugi
| March 23, 2018
Lost in Berlin, and in the Wordless Writing of Mirtha Dermisache
By
J. Mae Barizo
| March 23, 2018
Stop Looking for One War Story to Make Sense of All Wars
By
Matt Young
| March 22, 2018
Why Do We Turn to Stories in the Midst of a Disaster?
On Narrative and Trauma in Mexico City
By
Madeleine Wattenbarger
| March 21, 2018
Four Theories Toward the Timeless Brilliance of
Infinite Jest
Tom Bissell on the Novel of Its Generation
By
Tom Bissell
| March 21, 2018
Imagining Iraq: On the Fifteenth Anniversary of the Iraq War
Philip Metres Offers a Brief History of Imperial Dementia
By
Philip Metres
| March 20, 2018
On Finding a Hero in Alison Bechdel
Genevieve Hudson's Search for a Community on the Page
By
Genevieve Hudson
| March 20, 2018
Does
The Virgin Suicides
Hold Up 25 Years Later?
Rereading Jeffrey Eugenides's Debut Novel in 2018
By
Emily Temple
| March 19, 2018
Is It Worth 1,000 Words? Mark Sarvas on Writing Art in Fiction
A Brief Survey of Paintings in Literature
By
Mark Sarvas
| March 14, 2018
Why Every Progressive Should Read
The Good Soldier Švejk
Paul Goldberg on How to Stay Sane in a World Besieged by Idiocy
By
Paul Goldberg
| March 9, 2018
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“Clitter” is a Real World: And Other Discoveries Reading the First Draft of Stephen King’s
Pet Sematary
April 22, 2026
by
Caroline Bicks
What to Watch Now: Polite Society (2023)
April 22, 2026
by
Radha Vatsal
Why We Love Reluctant Heroes
April 22, 2026
by
Buddy Beaudoin
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"A social satire full of dopamine-releasing one-liners and sparkling writing But it can be frustratingly…"