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Books
April 18, 2019
Jeet Heer
Gene Wolfe Was the Proust of Science Fiction
Out of the trauma of war, Wolfe found redemption in Catholicism and his voice in futuristic, philosophical novels.
April 10, 2019
Jacob Soll
The Making of an Anti-Semitic Myth
Francesca Trivellato’s book on the history of credit debunks a bigoted cliché.
April 9, 2019
Magazine
Meehan Crist
Down to Earth
Why is the story of climate catastrophe so hard to tell?
April 4, 2019
Magazine
Geoffrey Wheatcroft
Never Sorry
Eric Hobsbawm’s awkward embrace of the Establishment
April 4, 2019
Ana Cecilia Alvarez
Valeria Luiselli’s Impossible Novel
To tell a story of migrant children and the American family following them, “Lost Children Archive” needed a wider lens.
April 2, 2019
Magazine
Max Holleran
The Dean
Out of the ruins of war, Walter Gropius made a vital political community.
April 1, 2019
Magazine
Christine Smallwood
Sally Rooney’s Great Expectations
Her new novel captures a generation's beleaguered idealism.
March 25, 2019
Patrick Iber
How the Cold War Defined Scientific Freedom
The idea that liberal democracies shielded science from politics was always flawed.
March 20, 2019
Magazine
Jeet Heer
Adventures in Modernism
The unlikely, energizing friendship of Hugh Kenner and Guy Davenport
March 8, 2019
Max Fox
In Search of Brooklyn’s Queer Past
Hugh Ryan’s book traces a largely forgotten history.
March 6, 2019
Antonia Hitchens
How Eve Babitz Found Home
A new biography evokes the enchanted sprawl and smog of Los Angeles in the 1970s.
March 4, 2019
Rachel Vorona Cote
A Single Life Full of People
Briallen Hopper elevates the relationships American culture has overlooked and deflated.
March 1, 2019
Jo Livingstone
He Said, She Said
James Lasdun’s "Afternoon of a Faun," about a rape allegation, bears an eerie relation to his memoir of a stalking.
February 28, 2019
Morgan Jerkins
The Weight of Experience
In his writing on disordered eating and body image, Kiese Laymon grapples with a legacy of disenfranchisement.
February 26, 2019
Matthew C. Simpson
An Engineer of Subversive Ideas
Denis Diderot loved the things that made others uneasy: ambiguity, change, doubt, and the pleasures of the flesh.
February 20, 2019
Andrew Lanham
An Activist’s Fight for Citizenship
A new book traces the struggle over democracy, rights, race, and gender in Puerto Rico.
February 13, 2019
Magazine
Rachel Riederer
The Future of Meat Is Vegan
A plan to eliminate animal farming relies on science and startups.
February 12, 2019
Magazine
Patrick Iber
Off the Map
How the United States reinvented empire
February 4, 2019
Becca Rothfeld
A Sadistic Master Storyteller
The many varieties of misery in the dazzling short stories of Machado de Assis
January 30, 2019
Alex Shephard
Howard Schultz Learned All the Wrong Lessons From His Childhood
Why is the former Starbucks CEO obsessed with the national debt? Because his father fell on hard times.
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