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Craft and Criticism
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Politics
Trump's Shameful, Cruel Ban on People Like Me
His Presidency Can Never Be Normalized, But My Shame Has Been
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| July 28, 2017
Is It Still Possible to Satirize America?
When "Absurdist, Futuristic Satire" Becomes Reality
By
Sean Gandert
| July 28, 2017
Mary Gaitskill's Classic Essay on John McCain
From the 2008 Presidential Campaign
By
Mary Gaitskill
| July 28, 2017
We Want Our Refugees and Exiles to Be Victims
"I am Now Obliged to Tell a Story, But Only the One Particular Story"
By
Ece Temelkuran
| July 27, 2017
Telling Their Own Stories: On Black Women's Leadership Memoirs
"This is the Story of a Colored Woman Living in a White World"
By
Brittney C. Cooper
| July 24, 2017
Where Does Palestine Begin?
"When a house gets demolished in East Jerusalem, does it stop being Palestine?"
By
Yasmin El-Rifae
| July 21, 2017
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Decolonial Theory Should Not Be Safely Contained Within the Classroom
By
Evelyn Araluen
| July 21, 2017
The Lies We Tell Ourselves About Gentrification
By
Brandon Harris
| July 20, 2017
Baldwin vs. Buckley: A Debate We Shouldn't Need, As Important As Ever
By
Gabrielle Bellot
| July 20, 2017
Disposable People, Dying to Build a City in the Desert
Behind the Exploitative Labor Practices that Inspired
Temporary People
By
Beenish Ahmed
| July 20, 2017
Jane Austen, Political Symbol of Early Feminism
On the Appearance of a Literary Icon at the First Women's Marches
By
Devoney Looser
| July 18, 2017
Looking at the Other in the Midst of War
Sarah Sentilles on Empathy, Art, and Abu Ghraib
By
Sarah Sentilles
| July 17, 2017
Thoreau on Trump, Twitter, and Fake News
The Ongoing and Depressing Relevance of a 200-Year-Old Thinker
By
Emily Temple
| July 12, 2017
Howard Zinn on Henry David Thoreau and When to Resist an Immoral State
“The law will never make men free; it is men who make the law free.”
By
Howard Zinn
| July 12, 2017
When Are You Going To Write About Black People?
On the Responsibility of Writers, White and Black, to Write the Other
By
Brian Platzer
| July 11, 2017
Judith Butler on the Poetry of Guantanamo
"In Some Ways, Literature and the Arts Help to Make the World Bearable"
By
Sam O'Hana
| July 7, 2017
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The Best Psychological Thrillers of 2025
December 10, 2025
by
Molly Odintz
Period Perfection: 8 Historical Mystery Novels That Transport Readers
December 10, 2025
by
Julie Mulhern
Nick Croydon on Alan Turing, Bletchley Park, and the Importance of Research in Crafting Thrillers
December 10, 2025
by
Nick Croydon
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"