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This is a well-researched and accessible account of how and how often the system locks up the wrong people and keeps them locked up.
Read MoreHorse represents a victory lap (pun intended), a confident follow-up to the artist’s astonishing success with his self-release of Powderhorn Suites.
Read MoreApril weather may be unpredictable, but the bond between grandparents and children is not. Here are some new books that celebrate that special relationship.
Read MoreBill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company’s Curriculum II is no intellectual exercise. It is a gut-wrenching journey into the heart of darkness, offset by flashes of compassion and light.
Read MoreThis year’s version of the iconic festival features a number of premieres, some restorations, and some screenings of well-loved cult classics, as well as a number of special guests.
Read MoreWhereas Hong Sangsoo’s filmography abounds with coming-of-age stories featuring young characters embarking on their romantic/sexual and professional lives, two of these three films spotlight middle-aged characters, with one specifically dealing with disease and mortality.
Read MoreHere’s this week’s poem, Patrick Pritchett’s “Entropy.”
Read MoreThe biographer makes her case with evident joy, drawing on wide-ranging research to supply a lucid, sympathetic homage to Emilie Loring’s indefatigable determination and sunny-side up literary sensibility.
Read MoreThe Smithereens have released only two albums of original material since 1999, so it was pleasantly surprising when The Lost Album, consisting of a dozen songs recorded in 1993 but never released by the band, appeared last September.
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Arts Feature: Best Movies (With Some Disappointments) of 2025