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Literary Criticism
Torn Dresses, Frank Sinatra, Ghosts in the Loo: Judi Dench on a Lifetime of Playing Shakespeare
Judi Dench and the Actor and Director Brendan O'Hea in Conversation from Their New Book "Shakespeare: The Man Who Pays the Rent"
By
Literary Hub
| April 23, 2024
Jane Smiley! Judi Dench! Amy Tan on birding! 24 new books out today.
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| April 23, 2024
Sasha Vasilyuk on the Price of Secrecy in Russia and Ukraine
Jane Ciabattari Talks to the Author of “Your Presence Is Mandatory”
By
Jane Ciabattari
| April 23, 2024
What Medieval Poets Can Teach Us About Climate Change, and What Evangelicals Today Get Wrong
Eleanor Johnson on How Medieval Christian Writers Accepted Ecological Collapse
By
Eleanor Johnson
| April 22, 2024
Announcing the Winners of the 2024 O. Henry Prize for Short Fiction
Series Editor Jenny Minton Quigley on the Importance of Finding the Unusual in the Ordinary
By
Jenny Minton Quigley
| April 22, 2024
“Pale Fire” (Tavi’s Version): Notes on Taylor Swift and the Literature of Obsessive Fandom
Leigh Stein Considers Tavi Gevinson’s New Zine, “Fan Fiction”
By
Leigh Stein
| April 19, 2024
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Paul Yamazaki on the Important, Joyous Work of Running an Independent Bookstore
By
Paul Yamazaki
| April 19, 2024
What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
By
Book Marks
| April 19, 2024
Julia Alvarez on Falling in Love with Writing Again
By
Julia Alvarez
| April 19, 2024
5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
“Levine is a gifted performance artist of literary fiction—part French existentialist and part comic bomb-thrower.”
By
Book Marks
| April 18, 2024
My “Friend” Keeps Sending Me Their Writing and I Need It To Stop: Am I the Literary Asshole?
Kristen Arnett Answers Your Awkward Questions About Bad Bookish Behavior
By
Kristen Arnett
| April 18, 2024
Jen Silverman on Generational Divides in American Politics
In Conversation with V.V. Ganeshananthan on Fiction/Non/Fiction
By
Fiction Non Fiction
| April 18, 2024
Facing That Which Haunts You: Ethel Rohan on Writing About Grief
“For most of my life, I’ve suffered in shame and silence while the men who hurt me got away scot-free.”
By
Ethel Rohan
| April 18, 2024
Margot Livesey on Thomas Hardy's Mistakes
From The History of Literature Podcast with Jacke Wilson
By
History of Literature
| April 17, 2024
The Time I Stole Tama Janowitz’s
Slaves of New York
and Couldn’t Stop Reading It
Elwin Cotman on His Frustration and Enchantment with a True 1980s Classic
By
Elwin Cotman
| April 16, 2024
How Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon Forged a Literary and Romantic Bond
Michael Korda on the Creative and Sentimental Camaraderie Between Two Soldier Poets
By
Michael Korda
| April 16, 2024
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Page 117 of 459
"This Town Is the Monster": 6 Horror Novels Where the Setting Itself Is Evil
May 19, 2026
by
Mary Berman
8 Transporting Thrillers to Help You Escape the Office This Summer
May 19, 2026
by
Rachel Moore
Appalachian Jump Scare
May 19, 2026
by
Michael Amos Cody
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Isaac Fitzgerald writes with a folksy wit that might come off as an affectation were…"