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Literary Criticism
On the Generosity of Gwendolyn Brooks, 100 Years Later
Remembering the poet and literary philanthropist
By
Matt St. John
| June 7, 2017
From Penelope to Pussyhats, The Ancient Origins of Feminist Craftivism
On Subversive Uses of Women's Handicrafts Throughout History
By
Stephanie McCarter
| June 7, 2017
Why is
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Eternally Beloved?
At 50 Years Old, García Márquez's Masterpiece is as Important As Ever
By
Veronica Esposito
| June 6, 2017
Huckleberry Kat: How Mark Twain Influenced George Herriman
The Secret Resonances Between
Krazy Kat
and
Huckleberry Finn
By
Michael Tisserand
| June 6, 2017
Revisiting Jenny Diski's Debut, Sadomasochistic Novel
On
Nothing Natural
and the Literature of Sexual Submission
By
Daphne Merkin
| June 5, 2017
My Fictional Nemesis: Why Thomas Hardy's Angel Clare is the
Worst
Against Fraudulent Nice Guys and Fake Woke Baes
By
Rachel Vorona Cote
| June 2, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Separating Truth from Lies in the Face of Atrocity
By
Johanna Skibsrud
| June 2, 2017
Franz Kafka, the Ultimate Self-Doubting Writer
By
John Sherman
| June 2, 2017
The Queer Literary Origins of Wonder Woman
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| June 1, 2017
At a Sword Fight with a Modern-Day Swashbuckler (in a Harlem Basement)
Dwyer Murphy Goes Underground to Get the Story of Lawrence Ellsworth
By
Dwyer Murphy
| June 1, 2017
Why Are We So Afraid of Female Desire?
On Sex and Moral Panic, from the Victorians to the Hays Code
By
Carol Dyhouse
| June 1, 2017
Chris Kraus on Why You Should Read Eileen Myles's First Novel
Cool for You
Reissued Just In Time
By
Chris Kraus
| May 31, 2017
I Found My Family in
Jesus' Son
James Boice on One of the Most Influential Books of the Latest 50 Years
By
James Boice
| May 31, 2017
On the Autofiction of Conrad Aiken, Unsung American Modernist
On Freud, Language, and the Topography of Consciousness
By
Conor Higgins
| May 25, 2017
Virginia Woolf: There Are Way Too Many Personal Essays Out There
Just Because You Can Write it, Doesn’t Mean You Have to Publish It
By
Lorraine Berry
| May 24, 2017
In a 12th-Century Iranian Poem, a Vision of Solidarity We Need Today
What We Can Learn from
The Conference of the Birds
By
Theodore McCombs
| May 24, 2017
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New Series to Watch this Weekend
January 16, 2026
by
Olivia Rutigliano
Novelist Van Jensen Talks with His Mother, Acclaimed Painter Jean Jensen, About Art, Literature, and Family
January 16, 2026
by
Van Jensen
The Historical Implications and Fictional Possibilities of the Hindenberg Disaster
January 16, 2026
by
L. A. Chandlar
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"