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News and Culture
On Narrative Medicine and Finding a New Language For Illness
Marcus Creaghan Considers the Ways We Describe Pain
By
Marcus Creaghan
| September 3, 2019
Where Was My Hero’s Journey?, My
Portrait of the Artist as a Young Girl
?
Janet Fitch on Finding a Real Coming-of-Age Tale
By
Janet Fitch
| September 3, 2019
Antiracism for babies, spiritual noirs, and magical realism: the week in book deals.
By
Emily Temple
| August 30, 2019
On the Brain: We're Not As Hardwired As We Think
Everything You Do Changes Who You Are
By
Gina Rippon
| August 30, 2019
Designing Your Grandfather's Book (When He's James Thurber)
Sara T. Sauers on Honoring the Family Aesthetic
By
Sara T. Sauers
| August 30, 2019
My Child Lives On in My Imperfect Memories
Naja Marie Aidt on Time, Grief, and Her Late Son, Carl Emil
By
Naja Marie Aidt
| August 30, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The Day My Mother Vanished
as a Child
By
Laura Cumming
| August 30, 2019
How to Spend a Literary Long Weekend in New Orleans
By
Colleen Rothman
| August 30, 2019
Where the Amateur Reader Ends, and the Professional Critic Begins
By
Tom Lutz
| August 30, 2019
The 12 Best Book Covers
of August
Or, Fun with Text and Cutouts
By
Emily Temple
| August 29, 2019
Jenny Odell: Our Vision of 'Productivity' is Way Too Narrow
The Author of
How To Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy
on
Just the Right Book with Roxanne Coady
By
Just the Right Book
| August 29, 2019
What Data-Driven Corporate Medicine Has Wrought
Terrence Holt Revisits Paul Starr's Classic,
The Social Transformation of American Medicine
By
Terrence Holt
| August 29, 2019
Bob Eckstein Draws His Way Through the Writer's Digest Annual Conference
Classes! Advice! A Pitch Slam!
By
Bob Eckstein
| August 29, 2019
The Life and Times of a Filipino
Overseas Worker
Rosalie Villanueva's 8,500-Mile Journey From a Manila Slum to a Texas Hospital
By
Jason DeParle
| August 29, 2019
Dignity vs. Money: Europe, Please Choose
Ilija Trojanow on the Chasm Between Europe's Actions and Its Ideals
By
Ilija Trojanow
| August 29, 2019
What It's Like to Be Told You Have Dementia
“Little bits of me feel like they’ve dropped off and gone missing.”
By
Nicci Gerrard
| August 29, 2019
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Page 1059 of 1328
How Some Crime Writers Are Finding a New Path to Publishing
May 1, 2026
by
Keith Roysdon
Lynn Cahoon on Choosing Whether to Set Cozies in Real or Fictional Places
May 1, 2026
by
Lynn Cahoon
MWA Announces the 2026 Edgar Award Winners
April 30, 2026
by
CrimeReads
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Mackintosh has a spare and confident hand Her work is sometimes described as dreamlike certainly…"