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The book continually underlines the important cultural role little magazines played, and how women were central to their existence as founders, editors, contributors, critics, and patrons.
Read MoreThis extraordinary cultural figure has yet to receive the biography she deserves.
Read MoreMy guess is that if Sundance survives, it won’t look like the Sundance we know.
Read MoreThis week’s poem: Tess Riordan’s “sunrise, 500 b.c.e.”
Read MoreThis moving, at times beautiful, production evokes Michael K’s vision of purity, a rejection of collective cruelty and madness that asserts human dignity’s last stand — as an animal.
Read MoreThere’s always a fair bit of horror in the mix, as well as thrillers and dramas. Each entry has a chilly darkness at its core — these are stories that often abound with themes of cruelty, grief, terror, and dread.
Read MoreAt some point during the writing of the book, Ken Turan must have realized, sadly, that the Mayer/Thalberg/MGM story has been done to death. All he could do was what he did: tell well what had been told well before.
Read MoreThree stories highlight the special benefits of friendship — between the old and young, and among children of different backgrounds.
Read MoreThis book is an anti-biography that argues Leonardo had little interest in autobiographical self-promotion and claims that the many gaps in the historical record prevent him from cohering as a biographical subject
Read More“Darkenbloom” is a hefty novel, in which a blood-stained, depraved swath of history is laid bare by in-depth examination of a narrow geographical sample (think “One Hundred Years of Solitude”, or, for that matter, “Gone With the Wind”).
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