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Memoir
The Governor's Race That Made George Wallace a Hardline Segregationist
Peggy Wallace Kennedy on Her Father's 1958 Defeat
By
Peggy Wallace Kennedy
| December 19, 2019
When You Find Out Someone Won a Prize Plagiarizing Your Work
Laleh Khadivi on Who Owns a Story
By
Laleh Khadivi
| December 18, 2019
Finding Nuance and Much-Needed Relief in the Writing of Bharati Mukherjee
Mira Jacob on Reading
Jasmine
By
Mira Jacob
| December 17, 2019
Confessions of an Undercover Novelist
Abigail Hing Wen on Difficult Family Conversations
By
Abigail Hing Wen
| December 16, 2019
Rereading the Master of
'Dying Teen' Lit
Katy Hershberger Considers Lurlene McDaniel and the
Allure of a Problematic Genre
By
Katy Hershberger
| December 12, 2019
On the Trail With the Vlogging
Teens of America
Mark Kenyon Finds Some Surprising Moments of Connection
By
Mark Kenyon
| December 12, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Body Language: On Kylie Minogue, Cancer, and Coming Back to Life
By
Oliver Reeson
| December 11, 2019
From the Diaries of Helen Garner: The Trials of
Daily Life, c. 1979
By
Freeman's
| December 9, 2019
Bohumil Hrabal, the Writing Machine Who Couldn't Stop
By
Bohumil Hrabal
| December 6, 2019
How Journalism Made a
Poet Out of Me
Gillian Conoley on Objectivity, Reportage, and Truth
By
Gillian Conoley
| December 6, 2019
Reading the Unpublished Novel My Mother Took
30 Years to Write
Caroline Scott on Realizing an Unlikely Family Dream
By
Caroline Scott
| December 5, 2019
Lore Segal: A (Complicated) Love Letter to Editors
On Syntax, Rewrites, Second-Guesses, and Grace
By
Lore Segal
| December 2, 2019
Maaza Mengiste on Women Pushing to the Front Lines of Conflict
The Shadow King
Author
on
Reading Women
By
Reading Women
| November 27, 2019
Of Bohumil Hrabal's Six Loves, Guess How Many Were Cats?
The Answer is Almost All of Them
By
Bohumil Hrabal
| November 26, 2019
Self-Storage:
Reading John Cage in Reykjavik
J. Mae Barizo on Memory, Forgetting, and the Flat Circle of Time
By
J. Mae Barizo
| November 25, 2019
Meditations on a Sunday Morning While Driving on Sunset Boulevard
Sam Farahmand on the Endless Expanses of Language and Los Angeles
By
Sam Farahmand
| November 25, 2019
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Page 127 of 161
Why Fictional Detectives Should Have Friends (and Katie Siegel Is Sad If They Don't)
February 18, 2026
by
Katie Siegel
The Best Debut Novels of the Month: February 2026
February 18, 2026
by
CrimeReads
The Only Mob Boss Fried in Old Sparky
February 18, 2026
by
Jeffrey Sussman
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"a succession of nine quietly horrifying stories from a dystopian pastorally radiant England The novella…"