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History
The Story of the Philosopher-Artist of L.A.
On the Life of Noah Purifoy, Keeper of the Watts Towers
By
Kellie Jones
| May 25, 2017
The Boxer and The Professor: Friendships of the Lost Generation
On Café Life with Hemingway and Dos Passos
By
James McGrath Morris
| May 11, 2017
American Stories Are Refugee Stories
Bich Nguyen Contemplates the Fall of Saigon, and Everything After
By
Beth Nguyen
| May 1, 2017
Performing
Hamlet
in a Sandstorm at a Syrian Refugee Camp
"This was fear of God, of the end of days, not of a weather event"
By
Dominic Dromgoole
| April 21, 2017
The Witches of Suburbia
Good Witches Get Domesticated; Wicked Witches Are Made an Example
By
Willem De Blécourt
| April 14, 2017
The Notorious Legends and Dubious Stories of 10 Literary Deaths
Whose clothes were those, Poe?
By
Emily Temple
| April 13, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Actual Social Justice Warriors: The Women of Celtic Mythology
By
Philip Freeman
| April 10, 2017
Hysteria, Witches, and The Wandering Uterus: A Brief History
By
Terri Kapsalis
| April 5, 2017
History of a Disappearance
By
Lit Hub Excerpts
| April 5, 2017
Take Heart: Shakespeare's Drafts Were Pretty Damn Rough
On the Rewrites, Random Additions, and Many Changes to the Bard's Plays
By
J.P. Romney and Rebecca Romney
| March 20, 2017
Read a (Love) Letter From Herman Melville to Nathaniel Hawthorne
On the anniversary of the publication of
The Scarlet Letter
By
Emily Temple
| March 16, 2017
The Doctor Who Made Addicts of the Nazis
On Methamphetamine Use in the Third Reich
By
Norman Ohler
| March 7, 2017
A History of Violence: Walking the Blood-Soaked Shores of Spirit Lake
Rethinking an Early-American Captivity Narrative
By
Katie Prout
| March 1, 2017
A Real-Life Fitzgerald Hero, Too True for the Jazz Age
On Hobey Baker, and the Beginning of the American Century
By
Beatriz Williams
| January 26, 2017
Some Things You May Not Have Known About Edith Wharton's Dog Obsession
On the 155th anniversary of Wharton's birth, a tribute to her very favorite thing
By
Emily Temple
| January 24, 2017
The Reverend Martin Luther King, Sr. on His Son's Legacy
"M.L. had chosen to do was unquestionably right."
By
The Reverend Martin Luther King, Sr.
| January 16, 2017
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Page 278 of 291
She’s Just Not That Into You, Bear: Gendered Desire in
Obsession
July 16, 2026
by
Natasha Lancaster
Seicho Matsumoto's
A Quiet Place
Is a Dark Fairy-Tale of Post-War Japan
July 16, 2026
by
Pico Iyer
Jack Friday on 'The Big Sleep', Invented Cities, and Chronicling a Changing Austin, Texas
July 16, 2026
by
Jack Friday
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Wonderfully dry intellectually frisky Mason is a lively fluid writer here he glides smoothly between…"