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History
How US Interventions in Indonesia and Brazil Set the Stage for the Next 50 Years
Vincent Bevins on the Dictatorships Born of the Cold War
By
Vincent Bevins
| May 28, 2020
How Mary Oppen Rewrote the Role of the Artist’s Wife
In Just One Book She Wrote a Life's Worth of Energy
By
Abby Walthausen
| May 28, 2020
A Feminist Vision of War, from a Long-Buried Correspondence
Oswyn Murray on Eileen Alexander's Letters
By
Oswyn Murray
| May 28, 2020
Why Did So Many Restaurants Stay Open During the 1918 Pandemic?
For Starters, More People Needed Places to Eat
By
Rebecca Spang
| May 27, 2020
Women Who Did What They Wanted: A Reading List
C.W. Gortner on Fearless Figures from History
By
C.W. Gortner
| May 27, 2020
The Letter That Changed Emily Dickinson's Life
At a Crossroads, She Sought Another Writer's Counsel
By
Martha Ackmann
| May 26, 2020
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
History is No Longer a Circle, Nor is Progress Guaranteed
By
Szczepan Twardoch
| May 26, 2020
When All of New York City Stopped Reading the News at Once
By
Rob Brotherton
| May 26, 2020
Here's a rare recording of Raymond Carver reading one of his best-known stories.
By
Corinne Segal
| May 22, 2020
Letters of War, and the End of Youth
Claire Messud on Her Family's WWII Correspondence
By
Claire Messud
| May 22, 2020
Lauren Francis-Sharma:
'What if the Facts Aren't the Facts at All?'
On Writers of Color Confronting Historical Fiction
By
Lauren Francis-Sharma
| May 22, 2020
How the Black Press Battled Military Discrimination and Won
Op-Eds, Dedicated Journalism, and a Successful Campaign
By
Dan C. Goldberg
| May 22, 2020
A murderess, a black mass, a scandalous literary salon: Welcome to Paris in 1920.
By
Corinne Segal
| May 21, 2020
On the Revisionist Histories at the Heart of Fascism and Populism
From Perón to Trump, the Political Art of Spinning Lies Into Myth
By
Federico Finchelstein
| May 21, 2020
Travels with Barbie, From Tehran to Paris to New York
Porochista Khakpour on Loving—and Destroying—a Beloved Doll
By
Porochista Khakpour
| May 21, 2020
The Case of Oscar Wilde's Mistaken Identity in Naples
Renato Miracco on a Scandalized Italian Public
By
Renato Miracco
| May 21, 2020
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Page 174 of 222
Halle Berry Will Play the President of the United States in
The President is Missing
February 4, 2026
by
Olivia Rutigliano
Why Horror Is the Perfect Genre for Processing Trauma
February 4, 2026
by
Christina Ferko
The Most Unhinged Women in Fiction (That Marisa Walz Would Still Invite to Brunch)
February 4, 2026
by
Marisa Walz
The Best Reviewed Books of the Month
"Poignant Tender The final line of em The Rest of Our Lives em is by…"