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The Latest
Doughnuts or Donuts? Krispy Kreme or Dunkin'? All of the Above?
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Erin Brockovich Wants to Talk About the Water Crisis
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Keen On
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Pamela Painter on Reading's Pleasures—and Badly Behaved Characters
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Margot Livesey
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Wayne Macauley on
Gerald Murnane's Most Memorable Book
Considering "Cultural Cringe" and the Issue of Literary Influence
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On Arnold Lobel's Preoccupation With Solitude in
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Arctic Fever and the Creation of the Hyper-Masculine Explorer
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When Adrienne Rich Refused The National Book Award
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A Young V.S. Naipaul Writes to His Dad About Wanting to Fit in at School
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The Uncertainty of the Future Has Made Storytellers of Us All
Nancy Star on Getting Lost In the Woods During a Pandemic
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Danger and Depth in Literary Thrillers: This Month's Audiobook Recommendations
James Tate Hill: "Who needs more danger in 2020?"
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James Tate Hill
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Like Jazz, Bowling, and Old Hollywood Hairdos?
Thank Insects.
Edward D. Melillo on the Miraculous Properties of Shellac
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Edward D. Melillo
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What Happened to the Classic Western? It Got Better
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History of Literature
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This Isn't an Election Crisis—It's a Crisis of Trump
Alan Hirsch in Conversation with Andrew Keen on
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Ntozake Shange on Sun Ra and How She Came to Have Her Name
"I wasn’t ready yet for the implications of Black people as interpreters of outer space."
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Page 717 of 1231
Cannibal, the Listicle
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The Pull of Gritty, Authentic Crime Fiction in the Era of AI Slop
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Will Dean
Fergus Craig on Cozies, Humor, and Placing Serial Killers in Unexpected Settings
February 17, 2026
by
Fergus Craig
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"a succession of nine quietly horrifying stories from a dystopian pastorally radiant England The novella…"