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My First Library Was a Library of Porn

My First Library Was a Library of Porn

Brian Bouldrey Wanders Through the Smutty Old Times Square of Literature

By Brian D. Bouldrey | September 17, 2019

On the Haunted Lives of Girls and Women

On the Haunted Lives of Girls and Women

Rachel Eve Moulton Considers the Way Horror is Housed in the Body

By Rachel Eve Moulton | September 17, 2019

The US Tour That Made Gertrude Stein a Household Name

The US Tour That Made Gertrude Stein a Household Name

She Was Always Ready for the Paparazzi

By Roy Morris, Jr. | September 16, 2019

On Attempting to Deal With Addiction Through Books

On Attempting to Deal With Addiction Through Books

Chris Fleming Discovers an Unlikely Ally in Marcus Aurelius

By Chris Fleming | September 13, 2019

11 Forgotten Books of the 1920s Worth Reading Now

11 Forgotten Books of the 1920s Worth Reading Now

Writers from the 1920s to Prime You for the 2020s

By Bob Batchelor | September 13, 2019

A Brief History of Mostly Terrible Campaign Biographies

A Brief History of Mostly Terrible Campaign Biographies

“No harm if true; but, in fact, not true.” (Buckle Up for 2020)

By Jaime Fuller | September 12, 2019

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Departure(s)
  • The Flower Bearers
  • Eating Ashes
  • Every One Still Here: Stories
  • Once There Was a Town: The Memory Books of a Lost Jewish World
  • The Typewriter and the Guillotine: An American Journalist, a German Serial Killer, and Paris on the Eve of WWII

A Legendary Publishing House's Most Infamous Rejection Letters

By Toby Faber | September 12, 2019

The Hard, Familiar Truths of Rion Amilcar Scott's Invented World

By Danielle Evans | September 12, 2019

The Eerily Prescient Lessons of
Darkness at Noon

By Michael Scammell | September 12, 2019

On the Iconic Iraqi Writer Who Modernized Poetic Forms

On the Iconic Iraqi Writer Who Modernized Poetic Forms

Fadhil al-Azzawi, a Countercultural Literary Force

By Farouk Yousif | September 12, 2019

Why Does Sickness Feel So Isolating When Everyone is Sick?

Why Does Sickness Feel So Isolating When Everyone is Sick?

Natalie Adler on Anne Boyer's The Undying

By Natalie Adler | September 11, 2019

Lucy Ellmann, a Great American Novelist Hiding in Plain Sight

Lucy Ellmann, a Great American Novelist Hiding in Plain Sight

Lori Feathers in Conversation with the Author of Ducks, Newburyport

By Lori Feathers | September 9, 2019

The Best Sci-Fi and Fantasy Defies Easy Genre Categorization

The Best Sci-Fi and Fantasy Defies Easy Genre Categorization

Andrew Ervin on Gormenghast and The Big Book of Fantasy

By Andrew Ervin | September 9, 2019

Just Because Walt Whitman Self-Published, Doesn't Mean You Should, Too

Just Because Walt Whitman Self-Published, Doesn't Mean You Should, Too

On Self-Publishing, Vanity, and the Need of a Good Editor

By Nick Ripatrazone | September 9, 2019

Mourning Paule Marshall, the Foremother Who Didn't Always Love Me Back

Mourning Paule Marshall, the Foremother Who Didn't Always Love Me Back

Rosamond S. King on the Contradictions of Literary Gratitude

By Rosamond S. King | September 9, 2019

On Agatha Christie and the Dawn of a Post-Capitalist Era

On Agatha Christie and the Dawn of a Post-Capitalist Era

A Close Reading of Christie's 80th book, Passenger to Frankfurt, by Slavoj Žižek

By Slavoj Žižek | September 9, 2019

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Page 298 of 352
    • William J. Mann on Rumors, the Press, and the Black Dahlia Murder's Enigmatic PlayersJanuary 27, 2026 by William J. Mann
    • Val McDermid on Why She Starts New Novels in JanuaryJanuary 27, 2026 by Val McDermid
    • How Agatha Christie Played the "Game-within-the-Game" in 'The Murder of Roger Ackroyd'January 27, 2026 by John Curran
    • Departure(s)
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Slim and stark Barnes s prose is largely stripped bare it resembles a tall ship…"
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