The latest from Columbia poet Gabriel Fried explores thin places between expressions of gender, between faith and doubt.
A vivid personal journey through 1950s Kerala—witnessing India’s transformation, Nehru’s leadership, and the socio-economic changes of a newly independent nation.
The esteemed critic Harold Bloom, a native speaker of Yiddish, called Chaim Grade one of the four greatest writers in the ...
One of the few authors who has garnered national treasure status, Morpurgo recommends his all-time favourite books ...
On Bookends with Mattea Roach, the American author dives into the wild history of the disease, why it persists today and ...
When I won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2023, I received a personal letter from Pope Francis, very moving, written by ...
From Dante Day celebrations to the switch to daylight saving time and new UK-Italy flight routes, here’s what to expect in ...
Professor Joel Christensen condemns Utah’s new Western canon mandate, calling it an attack on academic freedom and a move ...
Neu!'s Michael Rother and Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore discuss art and music ahead of a March 30 show in New York.
When the world outside is worrisome and strange, we seek the proven solace ... my enjoyment of them,” Lewis writes, “sometimes by meeting with what at first I could not enjoy.” ...
Short and strange, “Things ... What We’re Reading Discover notable new fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. Like Sylvie and Jérôme, Anna and Tom move as one: they talk neither to each other ...
The late Adrienne Shelly's beloved 2007 indie film takes a circuitous route from screen to stage and back to screen.