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Politics
Umberto Eco on Donald Trump: 14 Ways of Looking at a Fascist
The Leading Republican Presidential Candidate is More
Mussolini Than Hitler
By
Lorraine Berry
| February 29, 2016
30 Books in 30 Days: Walton Muyumba on Ari Berman’s
Give Us the Ballot
COUNTING DOWN THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARDS FINALISTS
By
Walton Muyumba
| February 25, 2016
How We Fictionalize Our Politics
On writing history and ideology into fictional lives
By
Tobias Carroll
| February 18, 2016
What Bill Cosby Taught Me About Sexual Violence and Flying
Kiese Laymon on Justice, Honesty, and American Violence
By
Kiese Laymon
| February 16, 2016
"Seriously, This Is Insane." And Other Debate Reactions.
Translating the GOP and Democratic Debates into Plain English
By
Henry Beard and Christopher Cerf
| February 16, 2016
Was Antonin Scalia the Most Literary Supreme Court Justice?
The Intersection of Law and Literature on the Supreme Court, By the Numbers
By
Ami A. Dodson and Scott Dodson
| February 15, 2016
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Pander, Lie, Equivocate: The New Hampshire Primary Debates
By
Henry Beard and Christopher Cerf
| February 9, 2016
Why James Baldwin's Truth Still Holds Today
By
Eddie S. Glaude Jr.
| February 5, 2016
You Don’t Have to Be a Veteran to Write About War
By
Matt Gallagher
| February 2, 2016
How the
New York Times
Fails to Depict the Reality of War
David Shields on Front Page Photos That Strip Combat of its Suffering
By
David Shields
| February 2, 2016
Deciphering a Trump-Free Debate
Translating the Spin from the Last Iowa Free-For-All
By
Henry Beard and Christopher Cerf
| February 1, 2016
Donald Trump, All-American Know-Nothing Nativist
As Sinclair Lewis Foretold, It Can Always Happen Here
By
David L. Ulin
| February 1, 2016
A Novel of Putin's Russia That Got Its Writer Beaten Up
The Courage of Reporter-Turned-Novelist Oleg Kashin
By
Will Evans
| January 25, 2016
Writing While Black
On Cliche, Stereotype, and the Struggle to Describe Blackness
By
Morgan Jerkins
| January 22, 2016
A Very Odd Night in a Possibly Fake North Korean Village
In Which Food Poisoning is Diagnosed as "Culture Shock"
By
Magnus Bartas and Fredrik Ekman
| January 21, 2016
There's No Place For Joy in Today's Moscow
Sergei Lebedev Mourns a City Sealed in Silence
By
Sergei Lebedev
| January 20, 2016
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Page 226 of 231
Taking Dramatic License in Historical Fiction
January 22, 2026
by
Kelly Scarborough
Making a Killing on Wall Street: Why the Corporate World Is Perfect for Thrillers
January 22, 2026
by
Kristine Delano
6 Thrillers That Reveal the Dark Sides of Fame
January 21, 2026
by
Jessie Garcia
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"