Fabulous, Tragic Kurt Tucholsky
One of the best-paid German journalists in the 1920s, Kurt Tucholsky was the canary in the coal mine of the Weimar Republic.
"For a long time now I haven't been I."
— Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet
One of the best-paid German journalists in the 1920s, Kurt Tucholsky was the canary in the coal mine of the Weimar Republic.
Franz BaumannAug 19, 2017
Eka Kurniawan’s “Vengeance Is Mine, All Others Pay Cash” is a deeply ambitious book that can’t help but be funny.
Bradley BabendirAug 16, 2017
Max Holleran reviews “The House of Government: A Saga of the Russian Revolution” by Yuri Slezkine.
Max HolleranAug 16, 2017
An excerpt from “The House of Government: A Saga of the Russian Revolution” by Yuri Slezkine, published this month by Princeton University Press.
Yuri SlezkineAug 16, 2017
Fady Joudah reflects on his translations of the Palestinian poet Ghassan Zaqtan.
Fady JoudahAug 15, 2017
Chabon apologizes for Israel even when he’s critiquing it. But in 2007, he wrote a novel with an alternate history that sheds a light on the actual present.
Nava EtShalomAug 15, 2017
Alex Lichtenstein reviews two new books on the Marikana Massacre.
Alex LichtensteinAug 15, 2017
Turkish intellectual Sevan Nişanyan talks to Nick Ashdown about his escape from prison.
Nick AshdownAug 14, 2017
Tess McNulty reviews Madeleine Bourdouxhe's "La Femme de Gilles," recently republished by Melville House.
Tess McNultyAug 13, 2017
Melynda Fuller appreciates “A Twenty Minute Silence Followed by Applause,” an extended essay on Marcel Marceau by Shawn Wen.
Melynda FullerAug 9, 2017
Anjali Vaidya reflects on Anjum Hasan’s cosmopolitan urban wanderers.
Anjali VaidyaAug 8, 2017
Nathan Scott McNamara discusses the isolation from which Fleur Jaeggy writes “I Am the Brother of XX.”
Nathan Scott McNamaraAug 7, 2017