“Each of Us Has His or Her Own Camus”: An Interview with Catherine Camus
Robert Zaretsky interviews Catherine Camus about her father, Albert Camus, and his correspondence with Maria Casarès.
"For a long time now I haven't been I."
— Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet
Robert Zaretsky interviews Catherine Camus about her father, Albert Camus, and his correspondence with Maria Casarès.
Robert ZaretskyMar 4, 2018
Robert Zaretsky on the correspondence between Albert Camus and Maria Casarès.
Robert ZaretskyMar 4, 2018
Diana Arterian and Andrew Wessels interview each other about their debut books.
Andrew Wessels, Diana ArterianFeb 27, 2018
Bo Seo on the reception of Bob Dylan in China after the singer-songwriter’s Nobel Prize win.
Bo SeoFeb 25, 2018
The dark absurdities of postwar Iraqi literature.
Mark FirmaniFeb 24, 2018
Heidi North discovers a rich, gripping story in Craig Cliff’s New Zealand–set debut, “The Mannequin Makers.”
Heidi NorthFeb 24, 2018
Bruno Latour on climate change, the earth as termite mound, and why he only drinks Burgundy.
Steve PaulsonFeb 23, 2018
Jonathan Blake surveys several recent works on the refugee crises.
Jonathan S. BlakeFeb 21, 2018
Patrick Kurp on “The Day Will Pass Away: The Diary of a Gulag Prison Guard: 1935-1936” and “Stalinist Perpetrators on Trial.”
Patrick KurpFeb 21, 2018
“The citizen in a mall-city assumes submission as a constant pose: there is nowhere else.” Krithika Varagur on the malls of Jakarta.
Krithika VaragurFeb 12, 2018
A meticulous retelling of an ethnic massacre of the 1980s leaves no doubt who was responsible.
Gary SinghFeb 11, 2018
John Tytell ranges over “The Dawn Watch: Joseph Conrad in a Global World” by Maya Jasanoff.
John TytellFeb 10, 2018