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Literary Criticism
The Avid Reader: Sandra Cisneros on Elena Poniatowska
Having a Coffee with One of Mexico's Great Novelists
By
Sandra Cisneros
| November 1, 2018
The Zombies of Karl Marx: Horror in Capitalism's Wake
Brains, one might say, “to each according to his need.”
By
Tyler Malone
| October 31, 2018
How Much Did James Joyce Base "The Dead" on His Own Family?
Colm Tóibín on the Greatest Short Story Ever Written
By
Colm Tóibín
| October 30, 2018
Literary Hoax is the Most Underappreciated Genre
From James Macpherson to Lee Israel to JT LeRoy, It's All Good
By
J.W. McCormack
| October 30, 2018
The Radical Moralist: On Lionel Trilling's Literary Criticism
Writing in the Cusp of the Victorian and Modern
By
Adam Kirsch
| October 30, 2018
Why Contemporary Art (and Literature) Needs More Sarcastic Critics
César Aira Thinks We Could Use a Bit More "Whatever" in Art
By
César Aira
| October 29, 2018
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
In Gratitude for the Fierce Women of the World
By
Laird Hunt
| October 29, 2018
The Year I Stopped Reading White People
By
Jerome Blanco
| October 24, 2018
The Psychiatrist Who Tried To Save Sylvia Plath
By
Paul Alexander
| October 23, 2018
The Vulnerable Private Writings of Ernest Hemingway
Sandra Spanier Considers the Archive of an Icon
By
Sandra Spanier
| October 23, 2018
Amy Bloom on the Legacy of Thom Jones
In Praise of Razor-Edged, Moving Fiction
By
Amy Bloom
| October 18, 2018
Why America’s Best Political Novelist Is Required Reading in 2018
On the Prescience of Ward Just
By
Susan Zakin
| October 17, 2018
Life Got You Down? Time to Read
The Master and Margarita
Or, How to Be Happy With Russian Literature
By
Viv Groskop
| October 16, 2018
Passing for White: A Literary History
Darryl Pinckney on the Life and Writing of Nella Larsen
By
Darryl Pinckney
| October 15, 2018
On the Adventuresome Dane Who Drove Across North Africa in the 1930s
Why Knud Holmboe's Memoir is About So Much More Than Travel
By
André Naffis-Sahely
| October 12, 2018
The Beats' Holy Grail: The Letter That Inspired
On the Road
On Neal Cassady's Rediscovered "Joan Anderson Letter"
By
David L. Ulin
| October 5, 2018
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Page 318 of 355
Why Fictional Detectives Should Have Friends (and Katie Siegel Is Sad If They Don't)
February 18, 2026
by
Katie Siegel
The Best Debut Novels of the Month: February 2026
February 18, 2026
by
CrimeReads
The Only Mob Boss Fried in Old Sparky
February 18, 2026
by
Jeffrey Sussman
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"a succession of nine quietly horrifying stories from a dystopian pastorally radiant England The novella…"