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CrimeReads
Literary Criticism
How Ashley Bryan’s 40-Year Secret Inspired the Category-Defying
Infinite Hope
This Week on the
NewberyTart
Podcast
By
NewberyTart
| April 15, 2021
On the Literature of Rewilding… and the Need to Rewild Literature
Phoebe Hamilton-Jones Finds Non-Human Perspectives in Max Porter, Sarah Hall, Daisy Johnson, and More
By
Phoebe Hamilton Jones
| April 14, 2021
Bollywood or Bust: Salman Rushdie on the World of
Midnight’s Children
,
Forty Years Later
“I wanted to write a novel of vaulting ambition, a high-wire act with no safety net, an all-or-nothing effort.”
By
Salman Rushdie
| April 14, 2021
Jonathan Lethem on the Rich Lives of Jaime Clarke’s Minor Literary Characters
“He has done more, even, than Vonnegut in setting
his characters free.”
By
Jonathan Lethem
| April 14, 2021
Bolu Babalola on Love as a Guiding Force That Illuminates Our Humanity
“I love romance very much. It's like the genre picked me.”
By
Rasheeda Saka
| April 14, 2021
Finding Hemingway: Seeing the Self Behind the Self-Mythologizer
Alex Thomas on Lynn Novick and Ken Burns’s New Documentary
By
Alex Thomas
| April 14, 2021
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
On the Absolute Chaos of Modern Dating: A Reading List
By
Katherine Heiny
| April 14, 2021
On Domestic Labor and Freedom in
Excellent Women
By
Lit Century
| April 13, 2021
17 new books to find at your local library.
By
Katie Yee
| April 13, 2021
Five Ways to Read Henry James
This Week on the
History of Literature
Podcast
with Jacke Wilson
By
History of Literature
| April 12, 2021
Bio-Waste: How Important Are Author Bios Anyway?
Jason Guriel Finds Major Meaning in Minor Texts
By
Jason Guriel
| April 12, 2021
How Nellie Y. McKay Forged a Path for the Study of African American Literature
Shanna Greene Benjamin on the Broader Narrative of
Black Women’s Intellectualism
By
Shanna Greene Benjamin
| April 12, 2021
On Great Literary Loves and the Joyous, Complicated Brilliance of Walt Whitman
“The first experience of literary love tends, like the first experience of erotic love, to come in youth.”
By
Mark Edmundson
| April 9, 2021
The Donald Barthelme Story Nobody Talks About But Everyone Should Read
Emily Temple on the Masterful Use of Authorial Intrusion in “Rebecca”
By
Emily Temple
| April 9, 2021
A Secret, Symbolic History of Pomegranates
Kate Lebo: “Cracking one open feels like lifting
the lid on a jewelry box.”
By
Kate Lebo
| April 9, 2021
On the Years When Jane Austen Couldn't Write
An Illustrated Look at the Effects of Worry and Uncertainty on a Literary Icon
By
Hannah K. Chapman, Lauren Burke, & Kaley Bales
| April 8, 2021
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Ready or Not
Has a Sequel!
December 8, 2025
by
Olivia Rutigliano
Books for the Searchers: A Criminologist's Four Favorite Crime Novels
December 8, 2025
by
Christoffer Carlsson
Using Black Vampire Fiction to Explore America's Horrific Past
December 8, 2025
by
Hayley Dennings
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"