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Gossip, Deceit, and Heartbreak in 19th-Century New England

Gossip, Deceit, and Heartbreak in 19th-Century New England

Christine Leigh Heyrman Unpacks an Unlikely Calvinist Love Triangle

By Christine Leigh Heyrman | February 10, 2021

Rare and lurid document of 18th-century English queerness discovered.

Rare and lurid document of 18th-century English queerness discovered.

By Jonny Diamond | February 9, 2021

A Brief History of Metaphor in <br>Persian Poetry

A Brief History of Metaphor in
Persian Poetry

Dick Davis on Literary Forms That Have Lasted a Thousand Years

By Dick Davis | February 9, 2021

Boundaries and Care: On Touring French Pharmacies Before the Pandemic

Boundaries and Care: On Touring French Pharmacies Before the Pandemic

Lucie Elven Charts the Research Process of Her Latest Book

By Lucie Elven | February 9, 2021

When Talking About Poetry Online <br>Goes Very Wrong

When Talking About Poetry Online
Goes Very Wrong

On Ciaran Carson and the Importance of Low-Stakes Conversations in the “Small Back Room”

By Wayne Miller | February 8, 2021

On the Complexity of Using the Mango as a Symbol in Diasporic Literature

On the Complexity of Using the Mango as a Symbol in Diasporic Literature

Urvi Kumbhat Maps a Personal Genealogy of the Fruit

By Urvi Kumbhat | February 8, 2021

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • They
  • This Is Not About Us
  • Eradication: A Fable
  • The Boundless Deep: Young Tennyson, Science and the Crisis of Belief
  • The Last Kings of Hollywood: Coppola, Lucas, Spielberg—And the Battle for the Soul of American Cinema
  • End of Days: Ruby Ridge, the Apocalypse, and the Unmaking of America

Fleeing the Cambodian Genocide for the False Promise of the American Dream

By Emergence Magazine | February 8, 2021

On the Unconventional 19th-Century Women Who Ventured to Write Novels

By Rosalind Miles | February 5, 2021

New and Noteworthy Nonfiction This February

By Literary Hub | February 5, 2021

Of Mobs and Namesakes: Writing the Story of My Infamous Grandfather

Of Mobs and Namesakes: Writing the Story of My Infamous Grandfather

Russell Shorto on the Path To His Latest Book

By Russell Shorto | February 5, 2021

Molly Crabapple on New York City Before—and One Day, After—COVID-19

Molly Crabapple on New York City Before—and One Day, After—COVID-19

“Stay because this is a city of ghosts, and we need someone to remember them.”

By Molly Crabapple | February 5, 2021

On the Rise of Neo Fascism in Contemporary Germany

On the Rise of Neo Fascism in Contemporary Germany

Nadav Eyal Encounters Neo-Nazis in 2014

By Nadav Eyal | February 5, 2021

What Does It Mean to Write a Political Novel?

What Does It Mean to Write a Political Novel?

Tobias Carroll: When Fury Meets Fiction

By Tobias Carroll | February 4, 2021

On the Courage of the Earliest Civil Rights Bus Protesters

On the Courage of the Earliest Civil Rights Bus Protesters

Thomas C. Holt Recounts the Rebellion of Carrie Lee Fitzgerald

By Thomas C. Holt | February 4, 2021

Obstinate Love: In Memory of the Great Ved Mehta

Obstinate Love: In Memory of the Great Ved Mehta

Chaya Bhuvaneswar Remembers the Renowned Writer
and Influential Mentor

By Chaya Bhuvaneswar | February 4, 2021

Christopher Bonanos: New York City Was Never Dead

Christopher Bonanos: New York City Was Never Dead

In Conversation with Maris Kreizman on The Maris Review Podcast

By The Maris Review | February 4, 2021

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    • Valerie Wilson Wesley on the Harlem Renaissance and Writing Historical MysteriesFebruary 19, 2026 by Alex Dueben
    • The Best International Crime Fiction of February 2026February 19, 2026 by Molly Odintz
    • Baltimore, 1979: N Luv Wit a StripperFebruary 19, 2026 by Michael Gonzales
    • They
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "a succession of nine quietly horrifying stories from a dystopian pastorally radiant England The novella…"
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