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Book Previews

Most Anticipated: The Great Spring 2024 Preview

Editor - 4.2.2024
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Profiles

Several Attempts at Understanding Percival Everett

Tadhg Hoey - 4.11.2024
I knew from the dozens of other interviews I had read with him that Everett doesn’t love doing press. “I wonder why?” he joked to me.
Tadhg Hoey - 4.11.2024
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Person to Person

Kate Briggs Isn’t Trying to Be Original

Jaeyeon Yoo - 4.9.2024
"I’ve never been interested in making a claim to originality."
Jaeyeon Yoo - 4.9.2024
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Reviews

In Alexandra Tanner’s ‘Worry,’ Illness Is the Status Quo

Irene Katz Connelly - 3.28.2024
In a novel where sisterhood entails constant conflict, illness provides an unexpected emotional salve.
Irene Katz Connelly - 3.28.2024
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Essays

The Other Boy and the Heron

John Maher - 3.27.2024
The heron has a robust mythological history across many cultures, and while the meanings differ, many deal with death, rebirth, and transformation.
John Maher - 3.27.2024
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Person to Person

Álvaro Enrigue Won’t Romanticize Mexican History

Nick Hilden - 3.26.2024
"'You Dreamed of Empires' is at open war with the romantic representations of the Mexican past."
Nick Hilden - 3.26.2024
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Person to Person

Yomi Adegoke Contains Multitudes

Tara Okeke - 3.21.2024
People struggle to hold multiple ideas in their heads at once, and so attempt to pigeonhole female writers, but I am very comfortable leaning into duality.
Tara Okeke - 3.21.2024
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Essays

The Virtue of Slow Writers

Lauren Alwan - 3.19.2024
The slow writer embraces the protracted and unpredictable timeline, seeing it not as fraught or frustrating but an opportunity for openness and discovery.
Lauren Alwan - 3.19.2024
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Person to Person

Xochitl Gonzalez Wants to Reframe Art History

Liv Albright - 3.15.2024
"The only reason I was interested in the story was to give Ana Mendieta agency."
Liv Albright - 3.15.2024
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Essays

Deafness Is Not a Silence:
On the Suppression of Sign Language

Sarah Marsh - 3.14.2024
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Person to Person

Dan Sinykin on Fiction, Scholarship, and Academic Twitter

Brendan Chambers - 3.13.2024
"Academic Twitter is something of a compulsion for me. My wife hates it."
Brendan Chambers - 3.13.2024
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Reviews

At Long Last, a Translation Worthy of ‘Pedro Páramo’

Nick Hilden - 3.12.2024
The latest translation of 'Pedro Páramo' is a mystifying work, in the dual sense that it is confounding and that its language possesses an almost mystical quality.
Nick Hilden - 3.12.2024
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Essays

Tennis Lessons from David Foster Wallace

B.J. Hollars - 3.7.2024
I was, and still am, the most reviled type of tennis player.
B.J. Hollars - 3.7.2024
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Person to Person Writers on Writers

“She Pierces the World”: Olga Ravn on Doris Lessing

Nick Hilden - 3.6.2024
"She's pissed off. I guess that's why a lot of people don't want to read her. But it gives a book intensity."
Nick Hilden - 3.6.2024
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Excerpts

Old Lesbian Love

Sandra Gail Lambert - 3.5.2024
The sexual objectification of the body, of our bodies, is less an insult these days and more of a goal. 
Sandra Gail Lambert - 3.5.2024
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Excerpts

The French Cartoonist
Who Limned New York City

Marc Lecarpentier - 2.29.2024
"While Paris is gray-blue, New York is very, very colorful."
Marc Lecarpentier - 2.29.2024
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Essays

The Path Is No Path: On Not Becoming a Poet

Bryan VanDyke - 2.28.2024
What makes a poet a poet? There is of course no simple answer. You could argue that self-declaration is enough. You could also argue there must be a measure.
Bryan VanDyke - 2.28.2024
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Excerpts

How English Took Over the World

Rosemary Salomone - 2.27.2024
English has become not just the “language of Europe”—it has become the dominant lingua franca of the world.
Rosemary Salomone - 2.27.2024
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