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Literary Criticism
On the Birth of the Economist Class and the Untaming of Corporations
Nicholas Shaxson on New Books by Nicholas Lemann, Binyamin Appelbaum, and More
By
Nicholas Shaxson
| January 15, 2020
Considering Garth Greenwell's Revolutionary Erotics
Ben Miller on
Cleanness
and Comradeship
By
Ben Miller
| January 15, 2020
Finding the Literature I Needed Everywhere But University
Jessica Andrews on Seeing Herself in the Writing of Adrienne Rich, Jeanette Winterson, Audre Lorde and More
By
Jessica Andrews
| January 15, 2020
How Edith Wharton's Novel of New York High Society Speaks to Class Divisions Today
Jennifer Egan on
The House of Mirth
By
Jennifer Egan
| January 14, 2020
Merve Emre: When Elena Ferrante is Your Editor
"Part of me wishes I had never pursued her."
By
Merve Emre
| January 14, 2020
My Novel Centered on the Eliot-Hale Letters. Now, We Can Read Them
Martha Cooley on a Decades-Old Mystery
By
Martha Cooley
| January 14, 2020
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
J.M. Barrie's Handwritten Manuscript of
Peter Pan
By
Literary Hub
| January 13, 2020
Relearning Old Lessons: What a Forgotten Novel Can Teach Us About Immigration in 2020
By
Anne Boyd Rioux
| January 13, 2020
The Impossible Exercise of Interviewing Leonora Carrington
By
Claudia Dey
| January 13, 2020
The Restless Comedy of Jane Austen's Unfinished Last
Novel,
Sanditon
Fragment of a Seaside Romp
By
Janet Todd
| January 10, 2020
On the Short Stories That Inspired a Russian Czar to Free the Serfs
How the Fiction of Ivan Turgenev Changed Lives
By
Daniyal Mueenuddin
| January 7, 2020
On the Darker Standalone Novels from the
Baby-Sitters Club
Author
This Week on
The NewberyTart
Podcast
By
NewberyTart
| January 7, 2020
Has African Migration to the US Led to a Literary Renaissance?
Yogita Goyal Considers “Afropolitan” Literature
By
Yogita Goyal
| January 6, 2020
At the Literary Intersection of Climate Disaster, Apocalypse, and Folk Horror
Tobias Carroll on Books by Lucie McKnight Hardy, Claire Colman,
Stephen Graham Jones, and Jennifer Givhan
By
Tobias Carroll
| January 6, 2020
Tayari Jones on the Necessary American History of Ann Petry's
The Street
“Crossing the line between belles lettres and pulp, Petry is
a pioneer of the literary thriller.”
By
Tayari Jones
| January 6, 2020
Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Feminist Press
The FP Staff Shares Favorite Titles From the Last Half Century
By
Literary Hub
| January 6, 2020
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The Best Horror Fiction of 2025
December 16, 2025
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December 16, 2025
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Tanya Grant
How an Opponent of Capital Punishment Put a Serial Killer on Death Row
December 16, 2025
by
Dick Harpootlian
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"