Brandeis’s Brain: On “Louis D. Brandeis: American Prophet”
Thomas Healy on Jeffrey Rosen's "Louis D. Brandeis: American Prophet".
Thomas Healy on Jeffrey Rosen's "Louis D. Brandeis: American Prophet".
John Domini on Kim Addonizio's "Mortal Trash" and "Bukowski in a Sundress".
In "Ear to the Ground", Ulin and Kolsby have fun poking at the excesses of Hollywood in a relevant social novel somewhere on the shelf near James M. Cain.
Ruth Gilligan on Belinda McKeon's "Tender".
Erica Ruth Neubauer on Swan Huntley's "We Could Be Beautiful".
Geoffrey Wildanger on John Robert's "Revolutionary Time and the Avant-Garde".
Lucas Anderson on William R. Kelly’s “Criminal Justice at the Crossroads”.
Alex Segura's "Down the Dark Street" offers a new high point for south Florida crime fiction.
Tarn Wilson on Christine Hale's "A Piece of Sky, A Grain of Rice".
Barrie Jean Borich on Christine Crosby's "A Body, Undone".
With the Olympics just on the horizon, Jez Smadja reviews "Rio de Janeiro: Extreme City".
Kristina Marie Darling reviews recent collections by Lisa Fay Coutley, Anne Boyer, and Suzanne Scanlon.
Ramsey Mathews on Joy Williams's "Ninety-nine Stories of God".
Jessica Gross on Virginia Heffernan's "Magic and Loss: The Internet as Art".
Stephanie Burt explains the poetry of aphorism in the work of contemporary poets Kay Ryan and Andrew Maxwell.
26-year-old virgin Julia spends her summer seeking someone to deflower her, and thus cure her existential angst, in Emma Rathbone’s debut novel “Losing It”.