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Good for publishing, bad for our souls: Michael Wolff has written a sequel to <em>Fire and Fury</em>.

Good for publishing, bad for our souls: Michael Wolff has written a sequel to Fire and Fury.

By Emily Temple | May 15, 2019

The Struggle to Learn Nonviolence in a Violent Place

The Struggle to Learn Nonviolence in a Violent Place

Rachel Louise Snyder on the Paradoxes of Prison Rehabilitation

By Rachel Louise Snyder | May 9, 2019

Balancing Power in the Lebanese Borderlands

Balancing Power in the Lebanese Borderlands

Alev Scott at the Edge of a Syrian Refugee Camp in Arsal

By Alev Scott | May 9, 2019

What Would It Mean to Live in <br>a World Without Stories?

What Would It Mean to Live in
a World Without Stories?

Alexis Wright on the Systemic Weaponization of Silence

By Alexis Wright | May 8, 2019

When white nationalists protest your bookstore

When white nationalists protest your bookstore

By Corinne Segal | May 2, 2019

A Writing School for <br>Working People

A Writing School for
Working People

"Workers don’t need to learn about their oppression; they need a space to imagine beyond it."

By Matt Grant | May 1, 2019

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Permanence
  • No Way Home
  • Muskism: A Guide for the Perplexed
  • Small Town Girls: A Writer's Memoir
  • Last Night in Brooklyn
  • If This Be Magic: The Unlikely Art of Shakespeare in Translation

Growing Up At Ground Zero of American Apartheid

By Greg Bottoms | May 1, 2019

Edward Said on the Death of American Activist Rachel Corrie

By Edward Said | April 29, 2019

As Sri Lanka Goes So Goes the World

By Ru, Duranya, and Hasadri Freeman | April 28, 2019

An Appeal to the 'Democratic Conscience of the State'<br> Won't Get You Far

An Appeal to the 'Democratic Conscience of the State'
Won't Get You Far

Natasha Lennard on Anti-Fascism and the Criminalization
of Protest in America

By Natasha Lennard | April 26, 2019

Germaine Greer and the Cusp of<br> the Feminist Revolution

Germaine Greer and the Cusp of
the Feminist Revolution

On the Early Days of the Women's Liberation Movement

By Elizabeth Kleinhenz | April 19, 2019

The Cautionary Patriotism of<br> the Presidents Adams

The Cautionary Patriotism of
the Presidents Adams

Father and Son Alike, Suspicious of Too Much Charisma

By Nancy Isenberg and Andrew Burstein | April 18, 2019

Where Suspicion Meets Reality: How Conspiracy Enters the American Mainstream

Where Suspicion Meets Reality: How Conspiracy Enters the American Mainstream

Irradiated Milk, Mind Control, Demonic Minions and Other Oddities

By Anna Merlan | April 16, 2019

Heike Geissler's Grim Account of<br> the Amazon Workplace

Heike Geissler's Grim Account of
the Amazon Workplace

Inside the Belly of a Very Contemporary Beast

By Monika Zaleska | April 16, 2019

What Does <em>Ulysses</em> Tell Us About<br> Pete Buttigieg?

What Does Ulysses Tell Us About
Pete Buttigieg?

On Judging a Candidate By What They Read

By Tyler Malone | April 15, 2019

Why Are So Many Fictional Teens <br>Entering Cults?

Why Are So Many Fictional Teens
Entering Cults?

Katherine Cusumano on Their (Our?) Search for Answers

By Katherine Cusumano | April 15, 2019

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    • What's New To Streaming: April 30, 2026May 1, 2026 by Radha Vatsal
    • How Some Crime Writers Are Finding a New Path to PublishingMay 1, 2026 by Keith Roysdon
    • Lynn Cahoon on Choosing Whether to Set Cozies in Real or Fictional PlacesMay 1, 2026 by Lynn Cahoon
    • Permanence
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Mackintosh has a spare and confident hand Her work is sometimes described as dreamlike certainly…"
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