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Aria Song Reads William Pei Shih’s “Happy Family,” a Story of a Chinatown Childhood

Aria Song Reads William Pei Shih’s “Happy Family,” a Story of a Chinatown Childhood

From the Ursa Short Fiction Podcast with Deesha Philyaw and Dawnie Walton

By Ursa | June 22, 2022

<em>Manhattan Phoenix</em> by Daniel S. Levy, Read by Mike Lenz

Manhattan Phoenix by Daniel S. Levy, Read by Mike Lenz

On the History of 19th-Century Manhattan

By Behind the Mic | June 22, 2022

Why the World Owes America a Great Debt For Its Participation in the Second World War

Why the World Owes America a Great Debt For Its Participation in the Second World War

Dan Hampton in Conversation with Andrew Keen

By Keen On | June 22, 2022

Why, In an Age of Exponential Technological Change, Does So Little Seem to Change in Politics?

Why, In an Age of Exponential Technological Change, Does So Little Seem to Change in Politics?

Azeem Azhar in Conversation with Andrew Keen

By Keen On | June 22, 2022

How to Fix the Environment? A Four-Thousand-Year-Old Reading List for Confronting Our Climate Emergency

How to Fix the Environment? A Four-Thousand-Year-Old Reading List for Confronting Our Climate Emergency

Martin Puchner in Conversation with Andrew Keen

By Keen On | June 22, 2022

How to Spot a Fraud: Never Trust Anything That Sounds Too Good to Be True

How to Spot a Fraud: Never Trust Anything That Sounds Too Good to Be True

Dan McCrum in Conversation with Andrew Keen

By Keen On | June 22, 2022

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Mass Mothering
  • Autobiography of Cotton
  • Good People
  • Empire of Madness: Reimagining Western Mental Health Care for Everyone
  • The Wall Dancers: Searching for Freedom and Connection on the Chinese Internet
  • Second Skin: Inside the Worlds of Fetish, Kink, and Deviant Desire

Why the Crisis of Teenage Anxiety Might Begin and End With Sleep Deprivation

By Keen On | June 21, 2022

A Close Reading of Emily Dickinson’s Poem “Because I could not stop for Death”

By History of Literature | June 21, 2022

On the Etymologies and Linguistic Evolutions of “Family”

By Marina Manoukian | June 21, 2022

To the Stranger Who Returned My Lost Notebook

To the Stranger Who Returned My Lost Notebook

Leigh N. Gallagher on Losing—and Recovering—an Archive of Feelings

By Leigh N. Gallagher | June 21, 2022

The Coordination of 100 Muscles: On Reclaiming Speech as a Stutterer

The Coordination of 100 Muscles: On Reclaiming Speech as a Stutterer

Why John Whittier Treat Wrote a Character Who Shares His Struggle

By John Whittier Treat | June 21, 2022

Sera Gamble on Rejection, Writing, and the Surreality of Having 50 Million People Hear Her College Poetry

Sera Gamble on Rejection, Writing, and the Surreality of Having 50 Million People Hear Her College Poetry

Jessie Gaynor Talks to the Showrunner of The Magicians and You

By Jessie Gaynor | June 21, 2022

What a Global Approach to Writing Teaches Us

What a Global Approach to Writing Teaches Us

Ru Freeman on Crossing Borders and Making Connections

By Ru Freeman | June 21, 2022

Why Failure is Necessary for Creative Growth

Why Failure is Necessary for Creative Growth

Brandon Stosuy on Making Space for Mistakes and Setbacks

By Brandon Stosuy | June 21, 2022

Lawrence Jackson on the Distinction Between Home and Shelter

Lawrence Jackson on the Distinction Between Home and Shelter

In Conversation with Mitzi Rapkin on the First Draft Podcast

By First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing | June 21, 2022

“Will There Be War in the Morning?” Inside the Home of Italy’s Foreign Minister, August, 1939

“Will There Be War in the Morning?” Inside the Home of Italy’s Foreign Minister, August, 1939

Tilar J. Mazzeo on Galeazzo Ciano and His Wife (and Mussolini’s Daughter) Edda

By Tilar J. Mazzeo | June 21, 2022

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    • Mass Mothering
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Dark richly layered That is what reading em Mass Mothering em is like using storytelling…"
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