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How Anthony Comstock, Enemy to Women of the Gilded Age, Attempted to Ban Contraception

How Anthony Comstock, Enemy to Women of the Gilded Age, Attempted to Ban Contraception

Hell Hath No Fury Like a Man with a Vaginal Douche Named After Him

By Amy Sohn | July 20, 2021

Surfing as Sacrament: Returning to New York’s Waves on September 12, 2001

Surfing as Sacrament: Returning to New York’s Waves on September 12, 2001

Thad Ziolkowski on Grief and the Swell

By Thad Ziolkowski | July 20, 2021

Adrian Wooldridge on the American Revolt Against Meritocracy

Adrian Wooldridge on the American Revolt Against Meritocracy

In Conversation with Andrew Keen on the Keen On Podcast

By Keen On | July 20, 2021

David Lowery on the Strange, Arduous Journey of Adapting <em>The Green Knight</em> for Film

David Lowery on the Strange, Arduous Journey of Adapting The Green Knight for Film

“This may be a poem that resists adaptation.”

By David Lowery | July 19, 2021

The Corrupt Arrogance of William Barr

The Corrupt Arrogance of William Barr

Elie Honig on the Former Attorney General’s “Feigned Ignorance”

By Elie Honig | July 19, 2021

How Oscar Wilde Won Over the American Press

How Oscar Wilde Won Over the American Press

When the US First Encountered the “Aesthetic Apostle”

By Nicholas Frankel | July 19, 2021

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • The Rest of Our Lives
  • Call Me Ishmaelle
  • This Is Where the Serpent Lives
  • Lost Lambs
  • Winter: The Story of a Season
  • The Score: How to Stop Playing Somebody Else's Game
  • Departure(s)
  • Fly, Wild Swans: My Mother, Myself and China
  • The Flower Bearers
  • Black Dahlia: Murder, Monsters, and Madness in Midcentury Hollywood

A Brief History of Perfume: Visiting an Archive of Ancient Scents

By Sarah Everts | July 19, 2021

How Two Telephone Books Tell a Condensed Story of the Holocaust

By Miljenko Jergović, translated by Mirza Purić | July 19, 2021

How a Small French Newspaper Began the Tour de France

By Adin Dobkin | July 16, 2021

For the first time, Patricia Highsmith’s diaries will be available to the public.

For the first time, Patricia Highsmith’s diaries will be available to the public.

By Walker Caplan | July 15, 2021

A new digital humanities project celebrates Dante’s impact on art around the world.

A new digital humanities project celebrates Dante’s impact on art around the world.

By Walker Caplan | July 15, 2021

Hans Onderwater on the Hunger Winter in the German-Occupied Netherlands

Hans Onderwater on the Hunger Winter in the German-Occupied Netherlands

From the We Have Ways of Making You Talk Podcast

By We Have Ways of Making You Talk | July 15, 2021

“It was sickening”: Read Chekhov’s withering review of his own first play’s opening night.

“It was sickening”: Read Chekhov’s withering review of his own first play’s opening night.

By Walker Caplan | July 14, 2021

How Sicilians Are Mobilizing in Support of Migrants’ Rights

How Sicilians Are Mobilizing in Support of Migrants’ Rights

Jamie Mackay on the Island’s Diverse Present and Future

By Jamie Mackay | July 14, 2021

On Makeup As a Tool for Queer Resistance

On Makeup As a Tool for Queer Resistance

Rae Nudson Considers the History of the Stonewall Raids and the Protests That Followed

By Rae Nudson | July 14, 2021

The Importance of Forgetting: Where Borges and Child Psychiatrists Agree

The Importance of Forgetting: Where Borges and Child Psychiatrists Agree

Scott A. Small on the Surprising Benefits of Memory Loss

By scottasmall | July 13, 2021

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Page 122 of 222
    • The Most Unhinged Women in Fiction (That Marisa Walz Would Still Invite to Brunch)February 4, 2026 by Marisa Walz
    • Sherlock Holmes and Me—Together AgainFebruary 4, 2026 by Jeffrey Siger
    • Isabelle Schuler on the Horrors and Contrasts of the 17th CenturyFebruary 4, 2026 by Isabelle Schuler
    • The Rest of Our Lives
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Month
    • "Poignant Tender The final line of em The Rest of Our Lives em is by…"
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