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The New Republic
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Books
May 6, 2016
Hilary Reid
A Century of Conflicted, Complicated Motherhood in Art
A new art book aims to show that biology is not destiny.
May 4, 2016
Magazine
Samuel Moyn
You Must Remember This
Do our memorials to the dead do more harm than good?
May 4, 2016
Eric Herschthal
When All Men Were Created Separate, But Equal
After the revolution, former slaves and native populations were forced to segregate from the new Republic.
May 3, 2016
Magazine
Alan Wolfe
The Myth of the Limousine Liberal
There are far more conservatives being driven around in limos these days than liberals.
May 2, 2016
Magazine
Jo Livingstone
How Literature Became Word Perfect
Before the word processor, perfect copy was the domain of the typist—not the literary genius.
May 2, 2016
Justin Taylor
All That Was Left of Them
Luke Mogelson's 'These Heroic, Happy Dead' illustrates the perils of writing war fiction.
May 2, 2016
Audrea Lim
How Fracking Funds the Radical Right
The same fracking bosses are the heroes of one book and the villains of another.
April 29, 2016
Alex Shephard
America’s greatest living novelist is still keeping it weird.
April 28, 2016
Patrick Iber
The Spain Orwell Never Saw
Adam Hochschild's book is a post-Cold War history of the Spanish Civil War.
April 27, 2016
Alex Shephard
Len Riggio fought the publishing industry and won. Then he fought Amazon and lost.
April 27, 2016
Magazine
Tony Tulathimutte
Back to the Future
Don DeLillo’s techno-prophetic novel hungers for tradition.
April 26, 2016
Alex Shephard
The Hugo Awards are still a mess.
April 26, 2016
Magazine
Jonathan W. Gray
Son of the Black Panther
Ta-Nehisi Coates takes on one of Marvel's iconic superheroes, reinvigorating the Black Panther for a new generation.
April 26, 2016
Jeffrey Zuckerman
The Metamorphoses of Marie NDiaye
In “Ladivine,” the French writer promises a perfect psychological novel—before blazing a new path entirely.
April 25, 2016
Sarah Jaffe
Feminism For Sale
We need collective political action, not "marketplace feminism."
April 22, 2016
Jim Downs
Out of the Bathhouse and Into the Bookstore
How the Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop created a new space for gay New Yorkers.
April 21, 2016
Ryu Spaeth
Happy 200th birthday, Charlotte Brontë.
April 20, 2016
Morten Høi Jensen
The Least British Shakespeare
A new book argues that every other country is better at bringing his plays to life.
April 19, 2016
Sarah Marshall
Bedtime Stories About Jail
Children’s books are finally taking on a pressing subject: mass incarceration and how it affects families.
April 19, 2016
Chelsea G. Summers
Fifty Shades of Shakespeare
In a new memoir, an obsession with the Bard and spanking transforms what it means to live a sensual life.
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