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The Man Who Lived the Tragic Tale of My Book

The Man Who Lived the Tragic Tale of My Book

Surviving the Armenian Genocide, 100 Years Later, in Vermont

By Dawn MacKeen | October 12, 2016

The Man Who Invented Bookselling As We Know It

The Man Who Invented Bookselling As We Know It

On James Lackington's Temple of the Muses, "The Cheapest Bookstore in the World"

By John Pipkin | October 11, 2016

Picturing Frederick Douglass

Picturing Frederick Douglass

On the Portraits of the Most Photographed Man in the 19th Century

By James Sullivan | October 4, 2016

So Who <em>Was</em> Jack the Ripper?

So Who Was Jack the Ripper?

Otto Penzler on the Most Famous Serial Killer of Them All

By Otto Penzler | October 4, 2016

Finding a Forgotten Book On Surviving the Holocaust

Finding a Forgotten Book On Surviving the Holocaust

P.N. Singer on rescuing his grandfather's book from oblivion

By P.N. Singer | September 30, 2016

When Young Rilke Moved to the Big City and Met Rodin

When Young Rilke Moved to the Big City and Met Rodin

A 26-Year-Old Poet Alive to the Sights of Paris

By Rachel Corbett | September 23, 2016

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • The Things We Never Say
  • John of John
  • Ghost Stories: A Memoir
  • Look What You Made Me Do
  • Backtalker: An American Memoir
  • Glorious Country: How the Artist Frederic Church Brought the World to America and America to the World

The Case for White Curiosity

By Patrick Phillips | September 22, 2016

The History (and Present) of Banning Books in America

By Amy Brady | September 22, 2016

Fascist, Communist, Writer, Duchess... The Legend of the Mitford Sisters

By Laura Thompson | September 21, 2016

Jeanette Winterson on Paris's Great Bookstore, Shakespeare and Company

Jeanette Winterson on Paris's Great Bookstore, Shakespeare and Company

A New History on One of the World's Great Bookshops

By Lit Hub Photography | September 20, 2016

Hitler's Dog, and Other Problems of Historical Fiction

Hitler's Dog, and Other Problems of Historical Fiction

Peter Ho Davies on the challenges (and opportunities) of mining the past

By Peter Ho Davies | September 7, 2016

How Borges Taught Me to Embrace My Jewish Heritage

How Borges Taught Me to Embrace My Jewish Heritage

"Borges was my rabbinical master in a Yeshiva the Size of the Globe"

By Ilan Stavans | September 2, 2016

The Forgotten History of Florence's Mixed-Race Medici

The Forgotten History of Florence's Mixed-Race Medici

On the Double Assassination of a 16th-Century Duke

By Catherine Fletcher | September 2, 2016

The Art Scene Rebels of San Francisco

The Art Scene Rebels of San Francisco

On 2322 Filmore Street, home of Painterland

By Anastasia Aukeman | September 2, 2016

The Lost Art of Custom-Illustrating Your Favorite Books

The Lost Art of Custom-Illustrating Your Favorite Books

On Grangerizing, the 19th-Century DIY Craze

By Amy Stewart | August 30, 2016

Men of Power and Their Obsession with Winston Churchill

Men of Power and Their Obsession with Winston Churchill

Visiting the World's Foremost (and Only) Bookstore Devoted to Churchill

By Anthony Audi | August 25, 2016

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Page 275 of 286
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    • Tiffany Hanssen on Tony Soprano, Writing Antiheroes, and Fictionalizing Family MembersMay 12, 2026 by Gabrielle Bellot
    • David Bergen on Patricia Highsmith, Backstories, and Why Tom Ripley's Character WorksMay 12, 2026 by David Bergen
    • The Things We Never Say
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "She s not a minimalist but Elizabeth Strout does more with less than any writer…"
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