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  • Craft and Criticism
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Lyz Lenz: Finding a Creation Myth of One’s Own

Lyz Lenz: Finding a Creation Myth of One’s Own

The Author of Godland Hits the Road in Search of a Little Darkness

By Lyz Lenz | August 14, 2019

Roy Jacobsen on the Backbone of Nordic Literature: the Sagas of Iceland

Roy Jacobsen on the Backbone of Nordic Literature: the Sagas of Iceland

Some of Europe's Most Enduring, Complex Literary Works

By Roy Jacobsen | August 14, 2019

On the Pitfalls and Power of <br>the Religious Essay

On the Pitfalls and Power of
the Religious Essay

Sonja Livingston: "Go to where the silence is."

By Sonja Livingston | August 5, 2019

What Happens When Satanists Try to Build a Public Monument?

What Happens When Satanists Try to Build a Public Monument?

For Some Residents in Belle Plaine, MN,
Religious Freedom Has Its Limits

By Jay Wexler | July 30, 2019

How Extreme Anti-Muslim Rhetoric Entered American Life

How Extreme Anti-Muslim Rhetoric Entered American Life

Zahra Noorbakhsh and Asma Uddin: What "Religious Freedom" Means for U.S. Muslims

By Zahra Noorbakhsh | July 15, 2019

Olivet Nazarene University fires new teacher for including curse words and a lesbian in his novel

Olivet Nazarene University fires new teacher for including curse words and a lesbian in his novel

By Corinne Segal | July 11, 2019

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Big Kiss, Bye-Bye
  • Bad Bad Girl
  • The Ten Year Affair
  • Nobody's Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice
  • Motherland: A Feminist History of Modern Russia, from Revolution to Autocracy
  • Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution

How Fiction Fuses the Incompatible Realities of Religion and Comedy

By Randy Boyagoda | July 9, 2019

Massoud Hayoun on What It Means to Identify as Both Jewish and Arab

By Massoud Hayoun | June 25, 2019

Discovering America's Heavenly Kingdom of Oil

By Darren Dochuk | June 17, 2019

Rebecca Solnit: How Internet Insinuation Becomes Campaign Fact

Rebecca Solnit: How Internet Insinuation Becomes Campaign Fact

On the Curious Case of Elizabeth Warren and the "Charter School Lobbyist" Who Wasn't

By Rebecca Solnit | June 6, 2019

The Quiet Revolution in Evangelical<br> Christian Publishing

The Quiet Revolution in Evangelical
Christian Publishing

And the Women Who Have Had Enough

By Kathryn Watson | May 2, 2019

Why Was Shakespeare Wary of <br>Writing About Religion?

Why Was Shakespeare Wary of
Writing About Religion?

He Would've Made a Terrible Puritan...

By Jonathan Bate | April 30, 2019

The Wild Visionary at the Heart<br> of Early Christianity

The Wild Visionary at the Heart
of Early Christianity

Jay Parini on Paul, the Unlikely Founder of the Christian Church

By Jay Parini | April 19, 2019

A Cult Can Be You and Your Weird Charismatic Friend

A Cult Can Be You and Your Weird Charismatic Friend

How Cult Logic Appears in Businesses, Families, Political Movements, Friendships

By Molly Dektar | April 17, 2019

Why Are So Many Fictional Teens <br>Entering Cults?

Why Are So Many Fictional Teens
Entering Cults?

Katherine Cusumano on Their (Our?) Search for Answers

By Katherine Cusumano | April 15, 2019

My Jewish Grandfather, Handpicked by Hitler to Curate the Museum of Extinct Races?

My Jewish Grandfather, Handpicked by Hitler to Curate the Museum of Extinct Races?

Bram Presser on Unraveling the Unlikeliest of Family Histories

By Bram Presser | April 11, 2019

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Page 17 of 19
    • I’m 13 Years Late to The Amazing Spider-Man and I Have ThoughtsNovember 7, 2025 by Olivia Rutigliano
    • The Best Psychological Thrillers of November 2025November 7, 2025 by Molly Odintz
    • From Spies and Matrons to Miami Vice: A Short History of Women in Law EnforcementNovember 7, 2025 by Alie Dumas Heidt
    • Big Kiss, Bye-Bye
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Not much happens In fact there is much in the text that is not made…"
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