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How Do We Write About Political Crisis and Personal Conflict?

How Do We Write About Political Crisis and Personal Conflict?

Carys Davies Outlines the Process of Writing Her Latest Novel

By Carys Davies | January 26, 2021

Of Progressive Bookselling, <br>Past and Future

Of Progressive Bookselling,
Past and Future

Lucy Kogler on the American Bookstore as a Radical Resource

By Lucy Kogler | January 26, 2021

On Class Warfare and the Perfect Storm of Crises That Got Us Here

On Class Warfare and the Perfect Storm of Crises That Got Us Here

Michael Lind Talks to Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | January 26, 2021

From the Golden Age to... Roombas: 8 Essential Books About Artificial Intelligence

From the Golden Age to... Roombas: 8 Essential Books About Artificial Intelligence

Michael Wooldridge Helps Us Prepare for Our Robert Overlords

By Michael Wooldridge | January 25, 2021

What James Baldwin Taught Nikky Finney About the Poet’s Responsibility to the Living

What James Baldwin Taught Nikky Finney About the Poet’s Responsibility to the Living

In Conversation with Walter Mosley on The Quarantine Tapes

By The Quarantine Tapes | January 25, 2021

How the Long Winter of 1933 Birthed a New Kind of Nationalism

How the Long Winter of 1933 Birthed a New Kind of Nationalism

Paul Jankowski Talks to Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | January 25, 2021

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

The Unmade Edges of Language: On the Poetry of Alvin Feinman

By James Geary | January 25, 2021

Writing a Saudi American Novel When No One Has Done It Before

By Eman Quotah | January 25, 2021

On Cancel Culture, Accountability, and Transformative Justice

By adrienne maree brown | January 25, 2021

‘There Are No Slaveholders Here.’ A Letter from Frederick Douglass

‘There Are No Slaveholders Here.’ A Letter from Frederick Douglass

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast

By History of Literature | January 25, 2021

On the Long, Baseless History of Anti-Vaccination Movements

On the Long, Baseless History of Anti-Vaccination Movements

And How Doctors Have Enabled Anti-Vaxxers

By Charles Kenny | January 22, 2021

Against the Myth of the <br>Macho Craftsman

Against the Myth of the
Macho Craftsman

On the Idea of Crafting as Community Support

By Glenn Adamson | January 22, 2021

Why is 18th-Century Bath Considered the Model for Modern Day Spas?

Why is 18th-Century Bath Considered the Model for Modern Day Spas?

Ian Bradley on Health Tourism, Illness, and Therapy

By Ian Bradley | January 22, 2021

What Is It About Conservatism and the Idea of Openness?

What Is It About Conservatism and the Idea of Openness?

Johan Norberg Talks to Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | January 22, 2021

The Oldest, The Longest, The Weirdest: A Brief History of Land Borders

The Oldest, The Longest, The Weirdest: A Brief History of Land Borders

Simon Winchester on How We Divide Our World

By Simon Winchester | January 21, 2021

On the Power of Afrofuturism in the 21st Century

On the Power of Afrofuturism in the 21st Century

Tim Fielder Details the Legacies of Radical Black Imaginaries

By Tim Fielder | January 21, 2021

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    • The Best Books of 2025: Espionage FictionDecember 12, 2025 by CrimeReads
    • House of Day, House of Night
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"
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