Showing posts with label and Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label and Fiction. Show all posts

The Democratic Presidential Debates: The Candidates in The New Yorker

Before the first Democratic primary debates of the 2020 election cycle, a collection of New Yorker coverage of Presidential candidates including Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Kamala Harris.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2Fxa3bh

The Bittersweet Poetry of “Lima :: Limón” 

Dan Chiasson reviews Natalie Scenters-Zapico’s latest poetry collection, “Lima :: Limón,” which probes the richness of contradiction.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2QrNGbP

Ayşegül Savaş on Imitation and Identity

Cressida Leyshon interviews Ayşegül Savaş about “Canvas,” her short story from the June 3, 2019, issue of The New Yorker.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2wo1Oth

“The Chorus,” by Craig Morgan Teicher

Poetry by Craig Morgan Teicher: “It’s, you know, the part that repeats, / the bit you’re supposed / to remember.”

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2QsiVDq

“Afghan Funeral in Paris,” by Aria Aber

Poetry by Aria Aber: “Each natural passing articulates / the unnatural.”

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2wydolT

“Canvas,” by Ayşegül Savaş

Fiction by Ayşegül Savaş: “Stories she thought had left her memory without a trace would come back to strike her with their strangeness.”

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2Qq67h1

Sunday Reading: School Drama

From The New Yorker’s archive, pieces by Lillian Ross, Melanie Thernstrom, Muriel Spark, David Samuels, Calvin Trillin, Don DeLillo, Dana Goodyear, Roger Angell, Jonathan Blitzer, and Jelani Cobb on the campus lives of high-school and university students.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2JG4zie

The Invisible City Beneath Paris

Robert MacFarlane writes about the network of underground tunnels under Paris, in an excerpt from the book “Underland: A Deep Time Journey.”

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2QmvvEj

Ingeborg Bachmann’s “Malina” Is the Truest Portrait of Female Consciousness Since Sappho

Rachel Kushner writers about Ingeborg Bachmann’s “Malina,” a 1971 novel about female desire and loss of self.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2Jzd4M3

The Rock Critic Robert Christgau’s Big-Hearted Theory of Pop

David Cantwell writes about the rock critic Robert Christgau and his essay collections “Book Reports: A Music Critic on His First Love, Which Was Reading” and “Is It Still Good to Ya? Fifty Years of Rock Criticism, 1967-2017.”

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2JWHhE9

In Elvia Wilk’s “Oval,” Earth, Capitalism, and the Human Species Sink Toward Doom

Katy Waldman reviews Elvia Wilk’s novel “Oval,” in which earth, capitalism, and the human species sink toward doom.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2HKsgCH

Ben Lerner Reads “Ross Perot and China”

Deborah Treisman hosts the author Ben Lerner, who reads his short story “Ross Perot and China,” from the May 27, 2019, issue of The New Yorker

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2VVyaee

Losing Religion and Finding Ecstasy in Houston

Personal History by Jia Tolentino: Christianity formed my deepest instincts, and I have been walking away from it for half my life.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2Wf3G6k

My Brother Tom’s Schizophrenia

Marin Sardy, the author of “The Edge of Every Day: Sketches of Schizophrenia,” writes about her brother’s struggles with schizoaffective disorder and homelessness, in their home state of Alaska.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2M18kRi

Ben Lerner on Adolescence and His Forthcoming Novel

Cressida Leyshon interviews Ben Lerner about “Ross Perot and China,” his short story from the May 27, 2019, issue of The New Yorker.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2Wj6ajX

“Business,” by Gregory Fraser

Poetry by Gregory Fraser: “The world / is my business, and the world is none of my business.”

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2LUqeVJ

“High Force,” by Frances Leviston

Poetry by Frances Leviston: “This was / infinity’s house, house of perpetual motion.”

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2WofnYx

“Ross Perot and China,” by Ben Lerner

Fiction by Ben Lerner: “When he turned to see what effect his speech had had, she was gone, jeans and sweater in a little pile with the pipe and lighter.”

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2LWVLGM

Sunday Reading: The Power of Political Satire

From The New Yorker’s archive, pieces by Ian Parker, Eric Schlosser, Emily Nussbaum, Adrian Chen, Louis Menand, and Tad Friend, on notable political satires, including “Dr. Strangelove” and “Veep,” and the impact of comedians like Jon Stewart.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2w6kIoz

Sudan’s Uprising, Bashir’s Fall, and My Father’s Passing

Isma’il Kushkush writes about the Sudanese President, Omar al-Bashir; Sudan’s changes over the years; the Sudanese people’s shifting relationship to the country; and his father’s recent death.

from Book Reviews and News, Literary Criticism, and Fiction http://bit.ly/2WWYVLu

The Sunday Read: ‘What Does It Mean to Save a Neighborhood?’

By BY JACK D’ISIDORO, AARON ESPOSITO, JOHN WOO AND COREY SCHREPPEL from NYT Podcasts https://nyti.ms/3E5bF7T