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What Lotería Means to Me—And My Writing

What Lotería Means to Me—And My Writing

Yvette Benavides on a Childhood Source of Identity,
Freedom, and Creativity

By Yvette Benavides | January 8, 2020

Sarah Moss on Ghost Walls, Violence Against Women, and Social Structures

Sarah Moss on Ghost Walls, Violence Against Women, and Social Structures

The Author of Ghost Wall in Conversation with Reading Women's Kendra Winchester

By Reading Women | January 8, 2020

Stacey Abrams is writing a book on voter suppression, and it's coming out in June.

Stacey Abrams is writing a book on voter suppression, and it's coming out in June.

By Corinne Segal | January 7, 2020

Chloé Hilliard on Confronting Racist Stereotypes in Hollywood's Casting Rooms

Chloé Hilliard on Confronting Racist Stereotypes in Hollywood's Casting Rooms

"Hollywood doesn’t like their black women subtle."

By Chloé Hilliard | January 7, 2020

Tayari Jones on the Necessary American History of Ann Petry's <em>The Street</em>

Tayari Jones on the Necessary American History of Ann Petry's The Street

“Crossing the line between belles lettres and pulp, Petry is
a pioneer of the literary thriller.”

By Tayari Jones | January 6, 2020

Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Feminist Press

Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Feminist Press

The FP Staff Shares Favorite Titles From the Last Half Century

By Literary Hub | January 6, 2020

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Stay Alive: Berlin, 1939-1945
  • Under Water
  • Paradiso 17
  • The Plans I Have for You
  • In Search of Now: The Science of the Present Moment
  • Stephen Sondheim: Art Isn't Easy

Letter to a Young Climate Activist on the First Day of the New Decade

By Rebecca Solnit | January 1, 2020

The Dawn of the Era of Feminine Excess

By Rachel Vorona Cote | December 20, 2019

How to Break in to Publishing If You're a Smalltown Brazilian Mayor in the 1930s

By Padma Viswanathan and Graciliano Ramos | December 20, 2019

Everything you need to know about why the internet is so mad at J. K. Rowling right now.

Everything you need to know about why the internet is so mad at J. K. Rowling right now.

By Corinne Segal | December 19, 2019

The Governor's Race That Made George Wallace a Hardline Segregationist

The Governor's Race That Made George Wallace a Hardline Segregationist

Peggy Wallace Kennedy on Her Father's 1958 Defeat

By Peggy Wallace Kennedy | December 19, 2019

One Man's Literary Crusade to Uncensor Sex in America

One Man's Literary Crusade to Uncensor Sex in America

On Gershon Legman, Original Sex-Positive Hipster Intellectual

By Susan G. Davis | December 18, 2019

Unearthing the Stories of Australia's Working Class

Unearthing the Stories of Australia's Working Class

Enza Gandolfo on Finding Herself in the Novels of Dorothy Hewitt

By Enza Gandolfo | December 18, 2019

Deported at the Dawn of the Syrian War

Deported at the Dawn of the Syrian War

After a Decade in the US, Lawand Kiki was Forced
to Leave for Damascus

By Mike Giglio | December 18, 2019

High Comedy and Misdemeanors: <br>The Shakespearean Drama at the Heart of Impeachment

High Comedy and Misdemeanors:
The Shakespearean Drama at the Heart of Impeachment

Liesl Schillinger on the Contemporary Resonance of Love’s Labour’s Lost

By Liesl Schillinger | December 17, 2019

A Season of Books Takes Stock<br> of #MeToo

A Season of Books Takes Stock
of #MeToo

Kaylen Ralph on She Said, The Education of Brett Kavanaugh, and Know My Name

By Kaylen Ralph | December 17, 2019

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Page 231 of 297
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    • Elizabeth Arnott on Secrets, Serial Killers' Wives, and Female Friendship in FictionMarch 27, 2026 by Hassan Tarek
    • Stay Alive: Berlin, 1939-1945
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Mr Buruma s book while triggered by old photos and letters from Leo s time…"
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