The Poets' Favorite Season
by Dan HitchensIf autumn is the poets’ favorite season, it is because autumn catches us in between, regretting and hoping, seeing the seed fall and imagining its growth. Continue Reading »
If autumn is the poets’ favorite season, it is because autumn catches us in between, regretting and hoping, seeing the seed fall and imagining its growth. Continue Reading »
Michel Houellebecq books are documents of an internal forensics of human decline that happen to take the form of stories. Continue Reading »
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s short story “Thank You for the Light” captures how Christ transfigures the mundane. Continue Reading »
Téa Obreht's second novel, Inland, brings the Balkans and the Arizona desert together. Continue Reading »
John Wilson recommends the writings of Isaac Bashevis Singer.
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A devout Jewish writer faced the horrors of war in his work. Continue Reading »
A bibliophile makes his picks for essential summer reading. Continue Reading »
If a work of literary art tells a unique and critical truth, then it is good—worth giving oneself to—and its beauty has not misled us. Continue Reading »
Marilynne Robinson's Gilead should be read as a summa pietatis rather than a summa theologiae. Continue Reading »