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The Perils of Designing a Cover for a Novel You Truly Love

The Perils of Designing a Cover for a Novel You Truly Love

Oliver Munday on Redesigning Fleur Jaeggy's 1989 Masterpiece Sweet Days of Discipline

By Oliver Munday | July 31, 2019

Never Again What? On the Hard Questions Primo Levi's Still Asking

Never Again What? On the Hard Questions Primo Levi's Still Asking

The Necessity of Revisiting His Classic If This Is a Man

By Giacomo Lichtner | July 31, 2019

Eclipsed, a Wandering Reading Series, Finds a Home

Eclipsed, a Wandering Reading Series, Finds a Home

On the Many Lives of a Literary Event

By Janelle Greco | July 31, 2019

The Late-Capitalist Privileges of<br> Being an Art Monster

The Late-Capitalist Privileges of
Being an Art Monster

Sarah Elaine Smith on Working a Tech Job While Trying to Make Art

By Sarah Elaine Smith | July 31, 2019

Of Poetry and Pilgrimage: Queer Writers Staying Hopeful in Madrid

Of Poetry and Pilgrimage: Queer Writers Staying Hopeful in Madrid

At the Unamuno Author Series Festival, Poets Reckon
with Looming Fascism

By Anna Hundert | July 31, 2019

How to Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Hartford, Connecticut

How to Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Hartford, Connecticut

Mark Twain, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Wallace Stevens, and More

By Michele Herrmann | July 31, 2019

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Departure(s)
  • The Flower Bearers
  • Eating Ashes
  • Every One Still Here: Stories
  • Once There Was a Town: The Memory Books of a Lost Jewish World
  • The Typewriter and the Guillotine: An American Journalist, a German Serial Killer, and Paris on the Eve of WWII

40 writers signed a letter in protest of 'abhorrent' conditions at the US-Mexico border.

By Corinne Segal | July 30, 2019

Murder? Poachers? What the hell is going on with Where the Crawdads Sing author Delia Owens?

By Jessie Gaynor | July 30, 2019

Finding Photos of My Grandfather in a Japanese Internment Camp

By Brandon Shimoda | July 30, 2019

The Books That Bear the Weight<br> of the Living

The Books That Bear the Weight
of the Living

Angelique Stevens on What Her Mom's Books Truly Meant

By Angelique Stevens | July 30, 2019

A Brief and Awful History <br>of the Lobotomy

A Brief and Awful History
of the Lobotomy

Groundbreaking Discoveries... But at What Cost?

By Andrew Scull | July 30, 2019

What Happens When Satanists Try to Build a Public Monument?

What Happens When Satanists Try to Build a Public Monument?

For Some Residents in Belle Plaine, MN,
Religious Freedom Has Its Limits

By Jay Wexler | July 30, 2019

On Hitler's Last Desperate Plan to Destroy Paris

On Hitler's Last Desperate Plan to Destroy Paris

"Paris must not fall into enemy hands except as a field of ruins."

By Jean Edward Smith | July 30, 2019

Is this the oldest debut author in history?

Is this the oldest debut author in history?

By Dan Sheehan | July 29, 2019

<em>Wall Street Journal</em> op-ed writer manages simultaneously terrible takes on books and college.

Wall Street Journal op-ed writer manages simultaneously terrible takes on books and college.

By Jonny Diamond | July 29, 2019

Tony Hoagland Was a Poet <br>of Heart and Humor

Tony Hoagland Was a Poet
of Heart and Humor

Mike Schneider Remembers His Friend's Idiomatic Writing

By Mike Schneider | July 29, 2019

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    • Departure(s)
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "This briny English writer author of em Flaubert s Parrot em and a winner of…"
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