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Politics
Poets Respond to the Anniversary of Nakba
Zaina Alsous, Hala Alyan, Tariq Luthun, and More
By
Literary Hub
| May 16, 2018
Against Erasure
After Solmaz Sharif
By
Noor Hindi
| May 16, 2018
Palestinian Resistance: An Icon for Those Who Long to Live Free
"We Have Only Ourselves and People of Conscience to Effectuate Our Own Liberation"
By
Susan Abulhawa
| May 16, 2018
Rebecca Solnit: The Coup Has Already Happened
So What Are We Going to Do About It?
By
Rebecca Solnit
| May 15, 2018
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
"Like My Grandfather and Father, I Don’t Demand or Expect Perfection in Those I Love"
By
Richard Russo
| May 11, 2018
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
How My Father's Strike Nearly Broke Our Town in Two
By
Kerri Arsenault
| May 10, 2018
A Letter to My Daughter About the Black Magic of Banking
By
Yanis Varoufakis
| May 8, 2018
On Marjane Satrapi’s Early #MeToo Novel
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Gabrielle Bellot
| April 30, 2018
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
Two Novels That Interrogate the Principle of the Few Over the Many
By
Colette Shade
| April 24, 2018
It's Never Too Soon for Art (or Politics) About Trauma
Tom McAllister on Writing a Novel About a School Shooting
By
Tom McAllister
| April 20, 2018
On the Many Braveries of Marjory Stoneman Douglas
Dava Sobel in Praise of a Great Environmentalist, Writer, and American
By
Dava Sobel
| April 20, 2018
When War Destroyed My Grandmother's Grave
In Iraq, War Comes with Various Names
By
Dunya Mikhail
| April 19, 2018
Rebecca Solnit: Whose Story (and Country) Is This?
On the Myth of a "Real" America
By
Rebecca Solnit
| April 18, 2018
In Sarajevo, a Monument to Childhood Disrupted by War
On the Museum Honoring Child Survivors and Victims of the Bosnian War
By
Dan Sheehan
| April 18, 2018
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6 Thrillers That Reveal the Dark Sides of Fame
January 21, 2026
by
Jessie Garcia
Ellie Levenson on the Beautiful Realism of Ambiguous Endings in Narratives
January 21, 2026
by
Ellie Levenson
Crime on the High Seas: 8 Historical Mysteries with Pirates and Smugglers
January 21, 2026
by
Linda Wilgus
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"