Challenging the Perception of the Wayward Girl

An interview with Saidiya Hartman

Yannise Jean [YJ]: For this book, you took a different approach by structuring it like a fictional narrative. I think this structure really helps the reader get into the character's heads. Was this your intention during the outlining stages of your book? Saidiya Hartman [SH]: I write nonfiction. As I started to write ...
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Challenging the Perception of the Wayward Girl

Elegies for Lost Children

An Interview With Valeria Luiselli

Eventually, the narrator’s own children go missing, culminating in a 20-page single sentence climax that breaks every convention, and that the reader is unable to look away from. On top of this wide range of themes, Luiselli also creates a novel-within-a-novel – a book called “Elegies for Lost Children” that ...
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Elegies for Lost Children

Essential Services

When people risk their lives to care for us, they deserve our care too

Although I was in a stage of disbelief about the crisis to come that now seems darkly comical, and I had only come along for the ride, I understood the purpose of everything but the water. We buy water in anticipation of a significant weather event, I said: but under ...
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Essential Services

Pay Attention to the Language Itself

An interview with Lydia Davis

 --  “The Fly,” Lydia Davis A classic short story -- yes, short story -- from the writer whom the Los Angeles Times Book Review has called “one of the quiet giants in the world of American fiction.” In Essays One, the reader is treated to a compilation of Davis’s commentaries, explorations, and ...
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Pay Attention to the Language Itself

Over Our Dead Bodies

Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Hamilton” and the lessons of contemporary history

Perhaps it is inevitable that middlebrow culture seems particularly meaningful at moments of disarray. When Donald Trump won the presidential election in November 2016, the hottest cultural phenomenon was Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Hamilton: An American Musical, and each song — ostensibly about the American Revolution and its aftermath — seemed to ...
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Over Our Dead Bodies

This Body Is a Gift: Natalie Diaz

The award-winning poet on her new book, Postcolonial Love Poem

To celebrate this achievement, we're reprinting this interview with the author, originally posted in April 2020. Native Americans account for just 0.8 percent of the population of the United States. Yet according to four decades’ worth of data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, almost 2 percent of ...
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This Body Is a Gift: Natalie Diaz

Ideas Are Our Weapons

As the world moves under our feet, and we self-isolate, we are still a community of thinkers

With these words, we invite you to leave the world of illness, of darkened classrooms, empty streets and overwhelmed intensive care units. Come with us instead to visit the so-called “New York intellectuals,” a world where Howe, Mack, Richard Hofstadter, Hannah Arendt, Mary McCarthy, and others wrote, edited, read and ...
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Ideas Are Our Weapons

Our Man: the Life and Times of Diplomat Richard Holbrooke

An interview with biographer George Packer about war and humanity in the foreign service

Charlotte Slivka [CS]: Thank you, George, for agreeing to do this interview, I really appreciate it and the whole community does especially in the face of the NBCC awards ceremony being postponed due to COVID-19. George Packer [GP]: That was a real downer but I’m happy to do it. Are you ...
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Our Man: the Life and Times of Diplomat Richard Holbrooke

A Promiscuous Formalist

An Interview With Brian Teare

Richard Sharp [RS]: In “Clear Water Renga” you place each stanza on the page to create what looks like a river flowing downstream. How do you decide on forming your work and how does it impact the message specific to that poem overall? Brian Teare [BT]: I’m a promiscuous formalist. Promiscuous ...
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A Promiscuous Formalist

An Antidote for a Pandemic? A Good Book

As we struggle with forces beyond our control, remembering smaller comforts and pleasures can soothe, if perhaps not cure, what ails us

Instead, it was: I bet the book I ordered three weeks ago has arrived! And it had. It was but the work of a moment to walk down the street and knock on the closed shop door. It cracked open, and we saw our local bookseller hovering in the darkness at ...
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An Antidote for a Pandemic? A Good Book