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On the Refugee Stories That Begin Where
Casablanca
Ends
Tabea Alexa Linhard Explains Why Refugee History is Everyone’s History
July 14, 2023
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Megan Fernandes on the Literary Uses of a Room
"Rooms are springboards for time and time is for the poets."
July 14, 2023
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Marc Schulz on The Comparison Trap of Our Modern Age
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Reconstructing Our Attention in the Era of Infinite Digital Rabbit Holes
Tobias Rose-Stockwell on the Devices that Hold Our Most Scarce Resource Hostage
July 14, 2023
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Many Voices, Many Truths: On the Benefits of Polyvocal Stories
How Hannah Michell Transcends the Single Perspective
July 14, 2023
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Laura Trethewey on the Race to Map the Oceans
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C.W. Goodyear on James Garfield, Most Pathologically Reasonable of American Presidents
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Kevin R. Free on Developing Relationships with Authors and Characters
The 2023 Golden Voice Narrator in Conversation with Jo Reed
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Classic children’s books, rewritten for
The Federalist
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July 13, 2023
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Imposters, Insiders, and Interlopers: Amy Rowland on Writing About Rural America
“It doesn’t matter if you’re worthy of doing it. It matters that it’s worthy of doing.”
July 13, 2023
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How the 9/11 Attacks Sparked a Never-Ending Wave of Gentrification
Jesse Rifkin on the Lost World of New York City Nightlife
July 13, 2023
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Uncanny Valleys: Eight Books That Map Worlds Not Quite Like Ours
Daniel Hornsby Recommends Ling Ma, Joss Lake, and More
July 13, 2023
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More Than Just A Pretty Face: On the Multifaceted Marianne Faithfull
Elizabeth Winder Considers the Women Behind The Rolling Stones
July 13, 2023
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Ten Books That Slouch Toward the Total Pain of Desire
Johanna Hedva Recommends Esther Yi, Javier Marias, and More
July 13, 2023
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Why Regency Romance Needs to Give Its Characters of Color Greater Agency
Amita Murray on
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Bridgerton
, and Navigating the Genre as a Brown Writer of South Asian Descent
July 13, 2023
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Alan Murray on the Role of Corporate America in Social Progress
The Author of
Tomorrow’s Capitalist
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Nikhil Krishnan on Why Oxford’s Early 20th-Century Philosophers Still Matter
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James Shapiro: Shakespeare Was NOT More Than One Person
The Author of
1599
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Beth Nguyen on Memoir, Mothering, and Refugeedom
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The latest anemic “state of the novel” discourse
Rachel Kushner shares some books from the syllabus of her Stanford creative writing class
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