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History
American Xenophobia: Each Generation Must Write the Wrongs of History
Veronica Esposito on the Legacy and Lessons of Japanese Internment
By
Veronica Esposito
| September 18, 2017
To Abolish the Chinese Language: On a Century of Reformist Rhetoric
Thomas S. Mullaney on Theories of Chinese Modernization
By
Thomas S. Mullaney
| September 15, 2017
Hiroshima, the Holocaust, and the Meaning of "Survivor"
“There is No Payment That Could Begin to Make Up for Any of It”
By
Elizabeth Rosner
| September 15, 2017
The Deadliest Weapon of War That Was Never Actually Used
Part Two of the Life and Times of James B. Conant: The Chemical Weapons Arms Race
By
Jennet Conant
| September 13, 2017
Drinking With Stalin on Christmas: An American in Moscow at the Dawn of the Cold War
Part One of the Life and Times of James B. Conant
By
Jennet Conant
| September 12, 2017
Balzac Tried to Buy a Waistcoat for Every Day of the Year (and Other Revelations of Parisian Fashion)
On the Absurd and Wonderful Sartorial Habits of a Great Writer
By
Valerie Steele
| September 11, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
“He Comes for the Girls.” Philip Roth on Getting Kicked Out of Prague
By
Philip Roth
| September 8, 2017
Two Never Before Published Letters from Marcel Proust to His Neighbor
By
Marcel Proust
| August 25, 2017
Another Way New York City is Dying: The Rise of Fauxstalgia
By
Jeremiah Moss
| August 16, 2017
The First English Woman to Make a Living as a Writer Was Also a Spy
On Aphra Behn, Playwright and Punk-Poetess of the 17th Century
By
Janet Todd
| August 7, 2017
Sam Shepard on Writing, Reading, and the Promise of Eternal Love
From his Letters to Johnny Dark
By
Sam Shepard
| August 2, 2017
Duke Ellington Really Just Wanted to Be a Writer
On the Literary Sensibilities of a Great American Musician
By
Brent Hayes Edwards
| August 1, 2017
Svetlana Alexievich on Why She Does What She Does
A Nobel Laureate at the Beginning of Her Career
By
Svetlana Alexievich
| July 27, 2017
The Invention of the Rural Hipster
On the Gaskins, Going Back to the Land, and Old Time American Wisdom
By
John T. Edge
| July 24, 2017
Judging Evil: At the Birthplace of International Justice
Philippe Sands on the History of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity
By
Philippe Sands
| July 11, 2017
The American Artist Who's Been Drawing Interwar Berlin for 23 Years
Comics Creator Jason Lutes on a Project That's Spanned Half his Life
By
Daniel A. Gross
| July 7, 2017
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Page 264 of 278
What to Watch This Weekend: February 20, 2026
February 20, 2026
by
Dwyer Murphy
Crafting Ordinary Heroes:
A Writing Toolbox
February 20, 2026
by
Jennifer K. Breedlove
Searching for a Unified Theory of Chandler versus Macdonald
February 20, 2026
by
Frank Ladd
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"This is informed accessible literary analysis that demonstrates that Morrison s true genius was as…"