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Literary Criticism
Virginia Woolf: There Are Way Too Many Personal Essays Out There
Just Because You Can Write it, Doesn’t Mean You Have to Publish It
By
Lorraine Berry
| May 24, 2017
In a 12th-Century Iranian Poem, a Vision of Solidarity We Need Today
What We Can Learn from
The Conference of the Birds
By
Theodore McCombs
| May 24, 2017
We Need the Lives of Others Now More Than Ever
On the Expansive Reading and Insights of Tony Judt
By
Veronica Esposito
| May 23, 2017
The Wisdom of Sendak: Children Are Wild, Honest, Immoral Beings
On the Weird Kingdoms and Kinship of Maurice Sendak and Ralph Eugene Meatyard
By
Buzz Poole
| May 22, 2017
Americans in Search of Utopia
19th-Century Experiments in Perfection
By
Betsy Hartmann
| May 22, 2017
Why We
Do
Need Another Adaptation of
Little Women
At Heart, Retelling is an Act of Love
By
Anne Boyd Rioux
| May 19, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Queering the "I": On First-Person LGBTQ Narratives
By
Ilana Masad
| May 19, 2017
Reading Joan Didion in the Midst of Depression
By
Philippa Snow
| May 18, 2017
In Praise of Juan Rulfo: Carmen Boullosa, Yuri Herrera, and More...
By
Literary Hub
| May 17, 2017
The Price Tag of Being a Woman
How Rachel Cusk, Joanna Walsh & Others Depict the Demands of Femininity
By
Melynda Fuller
| May 17, 2017
In
Kintu
, a Look at What it Means to be Ugandan Now
How Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi's novel Offers an Important Corrective
By
Aaron Bady
| May 15, 2017
The Political Murakami on Life in a Dark Timeline
Gabrielle Bellot on the Unreality of the Real World, Post-9/11
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| May 10, 2017
On the Books We Read (and Write) to Get By
Death Shall Have No Dominion Over the Literature of Grief
By
Veronica Esposito
| May 9, 2017
On the Dark(er) Side of the Perpetually Dark Edward Gorey
From Wittgenstein to The Golden Girls, a Man of Varied Interests
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| May 3, 2017
What
I'd Die for You
Tells Us About Fitzgerald's Troubled Final Years
And How he Turned Personal Tragedy into His Best Work
By
Cody Delistraty
| May 3, 2017
The Many Ways in Which We Are Wrong About Jane Austen
Lies, Damn Lies, and Literary Scholarship
By
Helena Kelly
| May 3, 2017
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Art of Deception: 5 True Crime Books Featuring Forgers, Fraudsters, and Con Artists
March 17, 2026
by
J. R. Thornton
Beyond
Wuthering Heights
: Joanna Margaret on 2026's Gothic Romance Boom
March 17, 2026
by
Joanna Margaret
Modern-Day Thelmas and Louises: 10 Crime Novels Featuring Female Duos
March 17, 2026
by
Elle Cosimano
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Moves back and forth through time as Junod tries to untangle his father s convoluted…"