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Literary Criticism
You Can Never Go Back: On Loving Children's Books as an Adult
Why Visiting Old Fictional Friends is So Bittersweet
By
Anya Jaremko-Greenwold
| November 14, 2017
Latin America’s Answer to Karl Ove Knausgaard
On Ricardo Piglia and His Alter Ego, Emilio Renzi
By
Ilan Stavans
| November 14, 2017
What We Can Learn From Multiple Translations of the Same Poem
And How It Brings Us Closer to the Experience of Reading the Original
By
Martha Collins
| November 13, 2017
Literature Without Writing: A Survey of Texts That Aren't Texts
Ross Simonini on Speech, Language, and the Foundations of Storytelling
By
Ross Simonini
| November 13, 2017
When an Umbrella is More Than Just an Umbrella
The Potent Symbolism of Brollies, from Mary Poppins to Harry Potter
By
Marion Rankine
| November 10, 2017
From Midcentury Confessional Poetry to Reality TV
How Did "Confession" Become a Dirty Word?
By
Christopher Grobe
| November 9, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Read Anne Sexton's Response to Her Worst-Ever Review
By
Emily Temple
| November 9, 2017
All the Letters I'll Never Send
By
Clare Sestanovich
| November 9, 2017
Seeing the Hopeful Side of Post-Apocalyptic Fiction
By
Megan Hunter
| November 8, 2017
How the KKK Shaped Modern Comic Book Superheroes
Masked Men Who Take the Law into Their Own Hands
By
Chris Gavaler
| November 3, 2017
Writing Poetry Under Stalin: Samizdat and Memorization
"Worse Than a State Indifferent to Poetry was One Obsessed With It"
By
Martin Puchner
| November 2, 2017
Finding Refuge in a Queer Vampire Novella
Gabrielle Bellot on the Unsung Classic That Made Her Feel Less Alone
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| November 1, 2017
Why Are We Obsessed with Onscreen Bloodletting?
A Brief History of Gore, Splatter, and the Art of Fake Blood
By
Tyler Malone
| October 31, 2017
How to Skewer a Novel: Éric Chevillard on Florian Zeller
A Legendary French Critic Weighs in on "a book to laugh at and then forget."
By
Eric Chevillard
| October 30, 2017
The Many Faces of Sylvia Plath
In Focusing Too Much on Her Death, We Miss Her Capacity for Life
By
Kelly Marie Coyne
| October 27, 2017
Jean Rhys Had to Leave Her Home to Truly See It
Gabrielle Bellot on Exile, Otherness, and the Isolation of
a Great 20th-Century Writer
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| October 26, 2017
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“Profit is the Only Principle”: How 'Point Blank' Presaged Our Current Moment
April 23, 2026
by
Greg Wands
What to Watch Now, International Edition: The Two Prosecutors (2025)
April 23, 2026
by
Radha Vatsal
6 Thrillers That Sit with Discomfort and Ethical Ambiguities
April 23, 2026
by
Michael Cowan
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"A social satire full of dopamine-releasing one-liners and sparkling writing But it can be frustratingly…"