The Threat to the United States
Robert Slayton looks to the past to find ominous tidings.
Robert Slayton looks to the past to find ominous tidings.
Gabriel Hart looks at “Lazy Eyes,” a new small-press collection of horror stories by James Nulick.
Ruth Wilson Gilmore joins Kate Wolf and Eric Newman to talk about her new collection, “Abolition Geography: Essays Toward Liberation.”
Aditya Narayan Sharma considers the legacy and growing global reach of Malayalam literature.
Rachel Hadas considers three recently released poetry anthologies.
Angelo Hernandez-Sias talks with Emily Hall about her new novel, “The Longcut.”
Mairead Small Staid reviews Celia Paul’s new mixed-genre memoir, “Letters to Gwen John.”
Rachel Hadas appreciates the urgent concoctions of “Thorny,” a collection of poems by Judith Baumel.
Sterling Cunio shares an excerpt from his recent book, “The Sentences That Create Us: Crafting a Writer’s Life in Prison.”
Paul J. Pastor reviews Sylvia Legris’s new collection of poetry, “Garden Physic.”
Amy Danzer talks to Toya Wolfe about her debut novel, “Last Summer on State Street.”
Scott Burton interviews Alexander Maksik about his new novel, “The Long Corner.”
Jason Christian considers “The Last Days of Roger Federer: And Other Endings” by Geoff Dyer.
Priscilla Posada reviews Caren Beilin’s new novel, “Revenge of the Scapegoat.”
Jason DeYoung reads Shushan Avagyan’s new translation of Viktor Shklovsky’s classic work, “On the Theory of Prose.”