All Souls Rising
An anthology of African American literature arrives right on time.
An anthology of African American literature arrives right on time.
Sara-Kate Astrove asks Susan Shapiro about her memoir, “The Forgiveness Tour: How to Find the Perfect Apology.”
Paul Maziar talks with Charlotte Mandell about her new translation of Breton and Soupault’s “The Magnetic Fields.”
Tara K. Menon looks at the novels of Sarah Moss, detailing how she has become one of the writers who best captures contemporary unease.
Firmin DeBrabander writes about the construction of privacy in modern times and the failures of community it has wrought.
Carter Brace considers the legacy of the 1921 Tulsa massacre.
David M. Higgins and Matthew Iung consider the complicated history of cyberpunk comics.
Kate Durbin interviews Zenobia Frost about her new book, “After the Demolition.”
Andy Fitch interviews Thomas Wright from the Brookings Institute about titanic shifts and whiplash in US foreign policy.
Natasha Vhugen introduces the newest member of LARB's Reckless Reader program, Good Books.
Karen Fang finds hope in Mu Pan’s playfully misanthropic art.
A newly translated novel by a major Dutch author tackles the relationship between Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath.
Collisions between the real and imagined world seem inevitable, and it makes sense that artists would be offering new ways to think about this phenomenon.