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  • Craft and Criticism
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Lydia Millet Wonders Why We're Not Panicking More

Lydia Millet Wonders Why We're Not Panicking More

The Author of A Children's Bible Talks to Kristin Iversen About
End Times, Smug Liberals, and Good Teens

By Kristin Iversen | May 11, 2020

How Cherokee Citizens Are Writing Themselves<br> Into the Future

How Cherokee Citizens Are Writing Themselves
Into the Future

Erika Wurth on the Literature of Native Sovereignty

By Erika T. Wurth | May 7, 2020

Digging Beyond the Myths of America's Red-Blue Divide

Digging Beyond the Myths of America's Red-Blue Divide

Sarah Neilson on Marie Mutsuki Mockett's American Harvest

By Sarah Neilson | May 6, 2020

The Sociopath in Black and White: A Reading List

The Sociopath in Black and White: A Reading List

From Mr. Ripley to Fagin, a List of Favorite Characters Who
Lack a Conscience

By Dr. Martha Stout | May 6, 2020

Remembering H.G. Carrillo, and His Marvelous Recounting of Cuban History

Remembering H.G. Carrillo, and His Marvelous Recounting of Cuban History

Manuel Muñoz Introduces the Late Author's Novel, Loosing My Espanish

By H.G. Carrillo | May 6, 2020

Annie Ernaux’s Object Lessons: <br> Braiding Identity Through Time

Annie Ernaux’s Object Lessons:
Braiding Identity Through Time

Mary Hawthorne on The Years

By Mary Hawthorne | May 6, 2020

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • The Silver Book
  • The Land in Winter
  • Evensong
  • Without Consent: A Landmark Trial and the Decades-Long Struggle to Make Spousal Rape a Crime
  • The History of Money: A Story of Humanity
  • The American Revolution: An Intimate History

Anne Carson on Marilyn Monroe and Helen of Troy

By Sarah Moore | May 4, 2020

Dear Eavan Boland, I Wanted to Send You a Letter

By Amy Robinson | May 1, 2020

The Internet Novel Is As Chaotic As Your Twitter Feed

By Maddie Crum | May 1, 2020

How Virginia Woolf and Susan Sontag Looked at Photos<br> of Violence

How Virginia Woolf and Susan Sontag Looked at Photos
of Violence

On Photography and Complicity

By Pepper Stetler | May 1, 2020

Eavan Boland: Beautiful and Complicated and Fierce and Brilliant and Loyal

Eavan Boland: Beautiful and Complicated and Fierce and Brilliant and Loyal

Gabrielle Calvocoressi Remembers Their Friend

By Gabrielle Calvocoressi | May 1, 2020

Greil Marcus on <em>Gatsby</em>: A Blues Fable of the Great Depression

Greil Marcus on Gatsby: A Blues Fable of the Great Depression

Reconsidering the American Myth of a Distant Paradise

By Greil Marcus | April 30, 2020

Newly-Translated Latin American Stories Defy Colonial Myths

Newly-Translated Latin American Stories Defy Colonial Myths

Lucas Iberico Lozada on Expanding the Canon

By Lucas Iberico Lozada | April 30, 2020

More Reasons to Move to New Zealand: A Literary Guide

More Reasons to Move to New Zealand: A Literary Guide

Literary Landmarks, Contemporary Writing, and More

By Elen Turner | April 29, 2020

Rufi Thorpe on the Narrative Role of the Bystander

Rufi Thorpe on the Narrative Role of the Bystander

Writing Ordinary People Who Witness the Extraordinary

By Rufi Thorpe | April 29, 2020

Robert Stone's Journalism Set New Moral and Artistic High-Water Marks

Robert Stone's Journalism Set New Moral and Artistic High-Water Marks

Matt Gallagher Breaks Down the Mechanics of Stone's Political Writings

By Matt Gallagher | April 28, 2020

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    • The Silver Book
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