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  • Craft and Criticism
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What Can We Still Take from Philip Larkin?

What Can We Still Take from Philip Larkin?

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | May 17, 2021

When Ralph Ellison Experienced a Forty-Year Writing Block

When Ralph Ellison Experienced a Forty-Year Writing Block

The History of Literature Podcast Explores the Longest Fallow Periods

By History of Literature | May 10, 2021

On Salman Rushdie’s Devotion to the Art of Fiction

On Salman Rushdie’s Devotion to the Art of Fiction

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast
with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | May 3, 2021

How Djuna Barnes Joined the Lost Generation

How Djuna Barnes Joined the Lost Generation

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast
with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | April 26, 2021

What It’s Like to Read Thucydides in 2021

What It’s Like to Read Thucydides in 2021

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast
with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | April 19, 2021

Five Ways to Read Henry James

Five Ways to Read Henry James

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast
with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | April 12, 2021

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Big Kiss, Bye-Bye
  • Bad Bad Girl
  • The Ten Year Affair
  • Nobody's Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice
  • Motherland: A Feminist History of Modern Russia, from Revolution to Autocracy
  • Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution

Revisiting the Work of Frances Burney, “Mother of English Fiction”

By History of Literature | April 5, 2021

Reckoning with Nabokov’s Classic, Controversial Lolita

By History of Literature | March 29, 2021

In Praise of “Bookish Broad” Willa Cather

By History of Literature | March 22, 2021

On Gabriel García Márquez’s Search for Truth in Nostalgia

On Gabriel García Márquez’s Search for Truth in Nostalgia

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | March 15, 2021

On the Turbulent Life and Dramatic Death of Yukio Mishima

On the Turbulent Life and Dramatic Death of Yukio Mishima

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | March 8, 2021

On the Brief Life and Towering Accomplishments of Lorraine Hansberry

On the Brief Life and Towering Accomplishments of Lorraine Hansberry

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | March 1, 2021

Anna North on Reimagining a Wild West... That's Good to Mothers

Anna North on Reimagining a Wild West... That's Good to Mothers

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast with Jacke Wilson

By History of Literature | February 22, 2021

On the Lovability of Keats

On the Lovability of Keats

Anahid Nersessian Talks to Jacke Wilson on the History of Literature Podcast

By History of Literature | February 16, 2021

Chigozie Obioma: ‘I Really Do Believe That Fiction Should Say More Than One Thing’

Chigozie Obioma: ‘I Really Do Believe That Fiction Should Say More Than One Thing’

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast

By History of Literature | February 8, 2021

Searching for Mr. Darcy in Jane Austen's Would-Be Suitor, Tom Lefroy

Searching for Mr. Darcy in Jane Austen's Would-Be Suitor, Tom Lefroy

This Week on the History of Literature Podcast

By History of Literature | February 1, 2021

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    • 7 Novels That Explore Motherhood's ComplexitiesNovember 4, 2025 by Donna Freitas
    • To Break Up with Friends, or to Murder Them: 5 Novels Featuring Fatal Friendship FailingsNovember 4, 2025 by Jenna Satterthwaite
    • The Trauma Behind the "Good Old Days": Christina Henry on the Dark Trap of Nostalgia in FictionNovember 4, 2025 by Christina Henry
    • Big Kiss, Bye-Bye
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Not much happens In fact there is much in the text that is not made…"
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