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Books
July 17, 2017
Evan Kindley
The Mysteries of John Ashbery
A new biography tells how the poet formed a taste for ambiguity and indirection.
July 17, 2017
Magazine
Win McCormack
Created Equal
How the divide between rich and poor has undermined the Constitution.
July 14, 2017
Zan Romanoff
How Eve Babitz and Francesca Lia Block Made Los Angeles Literary
The novels "Sex and Rage" and "Weetzie Bat" shine a light on the City of Angels.
July 12, 2017
Bill McKibben
What Would Thoreau Think of Climate Change?
On the author's 200th birthday, what "Walden" can teach us about our own time.
July 10, 2017
Bradley Babendir
How a Syrian Writer Takes on War
Osama Alomar's story collection "The Teeth of the Comb" looks at cruelty, compassion, and hope in the face of catastrophe.
July 7, 2017
Jo Livingstone
A True Romance, Then and Now
Sylvia Brownrigg’s new novel follows up on an affair between two women, 20 years after their first encounter.
July 6, 2017
Hannah Gais
What the Alt-Right Learned from the Left
Angela Nagle's new book "Kill All Normies" looks at how the alt-right stole its language and tactics from some unexpected places.
July 6, 2017
Amir-Hussein Radjy
Rewriting the Iranian Revolution
A new book attempts to portray the Shah of Iran as a frustrated democrat.
July 5, 2017
Jo Livingstone
Nick Laird Is Getting Free
His new novel asks: What happens when everyday life is overloaded with political significance?
July 3, 2017
Alex Shephard
Meet the Trump-splainers
How conservative hucksters have tried to define the intellectual foundation of an administration whose primary trait is incoherence.
July 3, 2017
Matthew C. Simpson
Benjamin Franklin and His Son, Divided by Independence
A new dual biography tells how the American Revolution drove the Franklins apart.
June 30, 2017
Magazine
Edward Hirsch
Czeslaw Milosz’s Invincible Reason
The author of 'The Captive Mind' became a political thinker who didn’t like politics.
June 28, 2017
Magazine
David Sessions
The Rise of the Thought Leader
How the superrich have funded a new class of intellectual.
June 28, 2017
Cora Currier
Yuri Herrera Rejects the Clichés of the Drug War
American audiences have come to expect "narcolit" from Mexican authors.
June 28, 2017
Ben Shattuck
Maartje Wortel Has Mastered the Art of the Aphorism
In "Goldfish and Concrete" the Dutch author proves that good things come in small packages.
June 27, 2017
Alex Shephard
The Right’s War Against Liberal Democracy
Nancy MacLean discusses her new book about James McGill Buchanan, who helped shape the modern right’s antipathy toward democracy itself.
June 23, 2017
Eric Herschthal
The Making of an Antislavery President
Fred Kaplan's new book asks why it took Abraham Lincoln so long to embrace emancipation.
June 22, 2017
Magazine
Mychal Denzel Smith
A Grief Observed
From Emmett Till to Trayvon Martin, the power and pain of black mourning.
June 22, 2017
Morgan Jerkins
The Old Problems of
New People
Danzy Senna's new novel examines the ambivalent privileges of passing.
June 22, 2017
Clio Chang
How the Rhetoric of Responsibility Hurts the Welfare State
Yascha Mounk's new book charts the rise of an approach that punishes the poor.
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