A Poet of the Soil

The legacy of a writer who struggled with his celebrity

The Letters of Seamus Heaney selected and edited by Christopher Reid

Patience, Practice, Perseverance

How Octavia E. Butler became a writer

Will the Real Vergil Please Stand Up?

Making sense of the life of a poet about whom we know so little

The Friend Zone

Mary Wollstonecraft’s ideas on what makes a marriage tick were downright radical for their time

Declassified

How genre-bending tales of espionage emerged from a childhood of pain, anger, and deception

A Private Spy: The Letters of John le Carré Edited by Tim Cornwell; Viking, 752 pp., $40

Freedom Tales

Long before the contentious school board fights of today, Lydia Maria Child tried to help America’s children understand their country’s racial transgressions

Dissident Lit
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Vladimir Nabokov and the novel that nourished the souls of a generation of would-be revolutionaries

She Was the Toast of the World

The dramas and diaries of Edna St. Vincent Millay

The Birth of the Egghead Paperback

How one very young man changed the course of publishing and intellectual life in America

At the Corner of Byron and Shelley

Poetry and philhellenism at the Greek bicentennial

Remembering Brad

What a stroke of luck when some of your favorite books were written by one of your dearest friends

A Mind on Fire

In his acclaimed trilogy of intellectual biographies, Robert D. Richardson sought to help us overcome the burden of the past

Words Preserved Against a Day of Fear

Remembering Joseph Brodsky

Searching for Amos Oz in Jerusalem

The acclaimed novelist, who died in 2018, translated Israeli reality

Norma Maclean

Norman Maclean and Me

Advice for living and drinking from the author of A River Runs Through It

Finding Your Voice

How one writer discovered his when he stopped looking for it and learned instead to listen

Southern Cassandra

Lillian Smith was a writer and a radical who called out her region’s lies about sex and race

A Pleasure to Read You

Shouldn’t literature enchant, surprise, and teach us? And to make this happen, shouldn’t we be the most expert readers we can be?

March Madness

Why I Can’t Stand Little Women’s Jo March

Bringing In the Horse

Virgil’s account of the sacking of Troy has similarities to the political situation of our day

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