Stuart Nadler's debut collection, The Book of Life, has been aptly compared to Bernard Malamud's work. Like Malamud, Nadler crafts stories that are
No comments yet.
Sign in to comment.
Other articles with overlapping topics.
I return to The Street again and again. I first read the novel when I working as a bookseller out on West 4th St. in New York. A man I sold books with
His writing didn’t contain the trickery and the sheen that the larger American poetry audience demands—and things never became easy for him, that’s why he
From birth, we’re surrounded by animals. We cling to stuffed animal friends, wear clothing adorned with bunnies and bears, and listen to stories of anthropomorphized creatures. The first books we encounter, too, are often tributes to animals. As a child,
Being invited to interview a writer that one admires is so rewarding, and I’m thrilled that I got the chance to speak with Zinzi Clemmons about her new book Freedom: Essays. We need Clemmons’s voice. We need her critique. It
In the medieval period it was common for translators to insert commentary on their theories and methods directly into the text.
“The few words it contains are indecipherable, of no language. (The letters look Hebrew—if you don’t know Hebrew and have never seen Hebrew letters before.)”