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Gun Violence: America's Great Common Denominator

Gun Violence: America's Great Common Denominator

Amy Butcher on Waking Up to Gunshots

By Amy Butcher | May 23, 2018

How Does Someone Become Untouchable?

How Does Someone Become Untouchable?

Sujatha Gidla Attempts to Answer a Lifelong Question

By Samira Sadeque | May 22, 2018

How Ammon Bundy Rallied Ranchers Against the Government

How Ammon Bundy Rallied Ranchers Against the Government

The American Constitution: More or Less Dictated by God

By James Pogue | May 22, 2018

I Forgot, Like You, To Die: 12 Palestinian Writers Respond to the Ongoing Nakba

I Forgot, Like You, To Die: 12 Palestinian Writers Respond to the Ongoing Nakba

"Gaza makes an audacious claim on life; its people continue to resist."

By Literary Hub | May 16, 2018

Artists Respond to the Anniversary of the Nakba

Artists Respond to the Anniversary of the Nakba

Comics by Leila Abdelrazaq and Marguerite Dabaie

By Literary Hub | May 16, 2018

Poets Respond to the Anniversary of Nakba

Poets Respond to the Anniversary of Nakba

Zaina Alsous, Hala Alyan, Tariq Luthun, and More

By Literary Hub | May 16, 2018

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • House of Day, House of Night
  • The Award
  • Daring to Be Free: Rebellion and Resistance of the Enslaved in the Atlantic World
  • Casanova 20: Or, Hot World
  • Frostlines: A Journey Through Entangled Lives and Landscapes in a Warming Arctic
  • The Six Loves of James I

Against Erasure

By Noor Hindi | May 16, 2018

Palestinian Resistance: An Icon for Those Who Long to Live Free

By Susan Abulhawa | May 16, 2018

Rebecca Solnit: The Coup Has Already Happened

By Rebecca Solnit | May 15, 2018

Colin Kaepernick: A True Dissident

Colin Kaepernick: A True Dissident

How He Exposed the Sports World’s Limited Scope, Curiosity, and Critical Thinking

By Howard Bryant | May 11, 2018

Richard Russo on Loving Flawed Family Members

Richard Russo on Loving Flawed Family Members

"Like My Grandfather and Father, I Don’t Demand or Expect Perfection in Those I Love"

By Richard Russo | May 11, 2018

How My Father's Strike Nearly Broke Our Town in Two

How My Father's Strike Nearly Broke Our Town in Two

Kerri Arsenault on an Early Lesson in Labor and Loyalty

By Kerri Arsenault | May 10, 2018

A Letter to My Daughter About the Black Magic of Banking

A Letter to My Daughter About the Black Magic of Banking

Yanis Varoufakis Has Some Thoughts on Capitalism

By Yanis Varoufakis | May 8, 2018

On Marjane Satrapi’s Early #MeToo Novel

On Marjane Satrapi’s Early #MeToo Novel

How Embroideries Reveals the Power of Women's Stories

By Gabrielle Bellot | April 30, 2018

What If Readers Are Learning the Wrong Lessons From My Writing?

What If Readers Are Learning the Wrong Lessons From My Writing?

Nafissa Thompson-Spires on Race, Empathy, and the Ethics of Satire

By Nafissa Thompson-Spires | April 25, 2018

When Fiction Pulls Back the Curtain on American Conservatism

When Fiction Pulls Back the Curtain on American Conservatism

Two Novels That Interrogate the Principle of the Few Over the Many

By Colette Shade | April 24, 2018

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