Read an 1890 review of The Picture of Dorian Gray.

These days, if you use your book review to call an author a pervert and instruct him to abandon writing for the sake of public morality, most reputable editors will palm you a paltry kill fee and mothball your screed. Not so, it would seem, in 1890. Here’s how an outraged book critic for The […] Continue reading at 'Literrary Hub'

[ Literrary Hub | 2023-07-24 18:10:37 UTC ]

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25 Great Book Reviews From the Past 125 Years

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Book Review: ‘Saving Justice,’ by James Comey

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Lauren Oyler on America’s Alienating Literary Culture

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Considering Malcolm X and the Perfect Black Man

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Revisiting Katherine Paterson on Happy Endings in Children’s Books

In 1988, Katherine Paterson wrote in the Book Review that children need not only the happily-ever-after of fairy tales, but also “proper endings” in which “hope is a yearning, rooted in reality.” Continue reading at The New York Times

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Did Inner-Circle Trumpers Write Worthwhile Books?

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Mueller revisionism, and the culpability of the press

Under a presidency that, perhaps more than any in recent memory, tends to be rendered in starkly moralistic terms, there is perhaps no better case study of the rise-and-fall character arc than Robert Mueller. Where the right always hated Mueller’s probe into Trump, Russia, and the 2016 campaign,... Continue reading at Columbia Journalism Review

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Considering the American Voice

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When James Baldwin and Langston Hughes Reviewed Each Other

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‘Say Thank You Say I’m Sorry’

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Considering Whether Writers Are Born or Made

In this week’s issue, A.O. Scott writes about Wallace Stegner. In 1948, Stegner wrote for the Book Review about universities as a place for training writers. Continue reading at The New York Times

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World Literature Today Announces 2020 Student Translation Prize Winners

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