You are using an
outdated
browser.
Please
upgrade your browser
and improve your visit to our site.
Skip Navigation
The New Republic
The New Republic
LATEST
BREAKING NEWS
POLITICS
CLIMATE
CULTURE
MAGAZINE
NEWSLETTERS
PODCASTS
GAMES
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
LATEST
BREAKING NEWS
POLITICS
CLIMATE
CULTURE
MAGAZINE
NEWSLETTERS
PODCASTS
GAMES
The New Republic
The New Republic
The New Republic
Books
June 28, 2016
Magazine
Malcolm Harris
Mom’s Invisible Hand
What men got wrong about the economy.
June 27, 2016
Alex Shephard
Don DeLillo isn’t on Twitter and will never be on Twitter.
June 27, 2016
Sarah Marshall
What I Learned About Feminism From a Conservative Woman’s Book
Andrea Tantaros's 'Tied Up In Knots' reveals an important lesson.
June 24, 2016
Magazine
William Giraldi
Fifty Shades of Moby-Dick
Did an illicit love affair give birth to the Great American Novel?
June 23, 2016
Ken Chen
What’s The Matter With Poetry?
For Ben Lerner, poems are the perfect medium for failure. So how can they negotiate with the politics of real life?
June 21, 2016
Magazine
Rachel Kushner
Popular Mechanics
How factory revolts inspired a new form of the novel.
June 20, 2016
Magazine
Alex Shephard
Pulp Friction
If Barnes & Noble goes out of business, it’ll be a disaster for book lovers.
June 20, 2016
Malcolm Harris
Who Are the Trolls?
A folklore expert tries to understand the people who ruin the internet.
June 17, 2016
Sarah Weinman
Lois Duncan’s Teenage Screams
The author of ‘I Know What you Did Last Summer’ defined teen terror for a generation.
June 16, 2016
Adam Gaffney
The Dawn of Antidepressants
Have antidepressant drugs ever truly worked—and does that matter?
June 16, 2016
Francine Prose
How Frankenstein’s Monster Became Human
Two hundred years ago, Mary Shelley spent a night telling ghost stories at the Villa Diodati in Switzerland.
June 15, 2016
Anna Wiener
The Meaning of Online Life
Virginia Heffernan's new book argues that the internet is a work of art.
June 15, 2016
Jeffrey Zuckerman
To Fell a Forest
"Barkskins," Annie Proulx’s first novel in more than a decade, is a sweeping epic told through the history of America’s woodlands.
June 14, 2016
Alex Shephard
The Brontë Society has become Wuthering Fight Club.
June 14, 2016
Magazine
Thessaly La Force
Cult Following
Emma Cline's 'The Girls' is a dark drama about female desire in 1960s California.
June 13, 2016
Joanna Scutts
Genius
and the Masculine Mania of Publishing
In A. Scott Berg’s book, and in the new film, the worn-out trope of the male literary genius gets one more day in the sun.
June 13, 2016
Rafia Zakaria
Against ‘Survival Feminism’
Jessica Valenti's memoir refuses to blame the victims of sexual harassment.
June 9, 2016
Alex Shephard
Ian McEwan’s new novel is basically
Look Who’s Talking
.
June 9, 2016
Jessica Johnson
The Tyranny of Taste
Once a function of class, taste has become an exercise in randomness. But isn't there anything still unique about us?
June 8, 2016
Max Nelson
Radically Different Fictions of Fatherhood
New books by Max Porter and Adam Ehrlich Sachs take on the all-male family unit.
Our Writers
Kate Aronoff
Climate & Energy
Matt Ford
Law & The Courts
Melissa Gira Grant
LGBTQ Rights
Jason Linkins
Power & Plutocracy
Timothy Noah
Politics & Economy
Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling
Breaking News
Edith Olmsted
Breaking News
Hafiz Rashid
Breaking News
Greg Sargent
Politics & Democracy
Grace Segers
Congress & Elections
Alex Shephard
Politics & Media
Heather Souvaine Horn
Climate Change
Michael Tomasky
Politics & Ideas
About
The New Republic
’s history
66
67
68
69
70