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Literary Criticism
“Maybe More People Should Have Writer's Block.” In Which Joy Williams Responds to Our Questions Via Typewriter
The Author of Harrow Really Wanted to Try Out Her New Hermes 3000
By
Joy Williams
| September 14, 2021
Is the Original
Pinocchio
Actually About Lying and Very Long Noses?
John Hooper and Anna Kraczyna on the Italian Author Behind the Beloved (Pre-Disney) Children’s Tale
By
John Hooper and Anna Kraczyna
| September 14, 2021
How Richard Wright Grappled with Behaviorism, Racism, and Trauma in
Native Son
George Makari on the Phobic World of Wright’s First Novel
By
George Makari
| September 14, 2021
Dana Gioia on Why Ray Bradbury is So Essential
This Week from the
Big Table
Podcast with JC Gabel
By
Big Table
| September 14, 2021
Water, Water Everywhere: Readings on Life’s Essential Ingredient
From Gilgamesh to Climate Science, Giulio Boccaletti Recommends Stories of Water
By
Giulio Boccaletti
| September 14, 2021
Julie Shapiro and Claire Boyle on Reversing Roles for the 64th Issue of McSweeney’s
This Week on the
So Many Damn Books
Podcast
By
So Many Damn Books
| September 14, 2021
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The Books That Give Us Chills: On Reading Emotionally
By
Veronica Esposito
| September 13, 2021
If I Had Loved Her Less: On a Queer Reading of Henry David Thoreau and the Daily Performance of Manhood
By
Jennifer Finney Boylan
| September 13, 2021
In Celebration of Laurie Colwin’s Lost Manhattan
By
Bethanne Patrick
| September 13, 2021
Seeking a More Tranquil Mind? Take Horace’s Advice
Alan Jacobs on Getting an Education in Possibility From the Ancients
By
Alan Jacobs
| September 13, 2021
Mike Palindrome Chooses the Top 10 Literary Centuries
From the
History of Literature
Podcast with Jacke Wilson
By
History of Literature
| September 13, 2021
“I Would Not Take Prisoners.” Tolstoy’s Case Against Making War Humane
Samuel Moyn Considers Prince Andrei, Carl von Clausewitz, and the Rules of War
By
Samuel Moyn
| September 10, 2021
Maggie Nelson on Criticism, Intentionality, and Pain
In Conversation with Maris Kreizman on
The Maris Review
Podcast
By
The Maris Review
| September 9, 2021
7 Novels For Living Out Your Cottagecore Fantasies
Lillie Vale’s Coziest Houses in Fiction
By
Lillie Vale
| September 9, 2021
Following the Paths of the Wild-Walking Women of the Past, from Nan Shepherd to Georgia O’Keeffe
Annabel Abbs on the Literature and Legacy of Women Hikers
By
Annabel Abbs
| September 9, 2021
Writing Black Essays in White People’s Houses
Jill Louise Busby on the Writing Residency Industrial Complex
By
Jill Louise Busby
| September 9, 2021
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The Best International Crime Novels, Mysteries, and Thrillers of 2025
December 17, 2025
by
Molly Odintz
The Best Books of 2025: Traditional Mysteries
December 17, 2025
by
CrimeReads
The Strange History of Erle Stanley Gardner and the Las Vegas Private Eye
December 17, 2025
by
James T. Bartlett
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"