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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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July 31, 2015

The Truth of a Thing

July 31, 2015/ Rohan Maitzen

Kate Atkinson’s Life After Life emphasized the contingency of any single story. In contrast, her new novel focuses on one life lived to the full. But for better or for worse, Atkinson can’t resist the lure of metafiction…

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July 31, 2015/ Rohan Maitzen/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, fiction, July 2015, literary criticism, rohan maitzen
July 30, 2015

Book Review: The Eagle in Splendour

July 30, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

"How a Court LOOKS," remarked a courtier to one of England's more successful modern-day monarchs, "is at least as important as how a Court WORKS." A re-issued study from Philip Mansel looks at form and function in the court of Napoleon Bonaparte

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July 30, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
July 2015
July 28, 2015

Book Review: For God and Kaiser

July 28, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

"Austria," quipped Talleyrand, "has the tiresome habit of always being beaten" - but Richard Bassett's vigorous new history of the Imperial Austrian Army begs to differ!

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July 28, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
July 2015
July 26, 2015

Book Review: Braddock's Defeat

July 26, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

A French army and a British army stumble upon each other in the wilderness of the New World, and their conflict changes the nature of the world's biggest war

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July 26, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
George Washington, July 2015
July 26, 2015

Book Review: Rome's Revolution

July 26, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

The epic change in ancient Rome from a Republic to an Empire hinged on one man: Julius Caesar. A new history tells the familiar story.

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July 26, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Ancient Rome
July 2015, keeping up with the romans
July 26, 2015

Book Review: The Two-State Delusion

July 26, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

A veteran state conflict analyst looks at the mother of such conflicts: the long strife between Israel and Palestine

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July 26, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
July 2015
July 25, 2015

Book Review: The Last Leaves Falling

July 25, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

A teenager in Kyoto tries to face the last months of his life as a samurai would - with a little help from his friends

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July 25, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Teen Fiction
fiction, July 2015
July 24, 2015

Book Review: The Meursault Investigation

July 24, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

The famous bloody encounter at the center of Albert Camus' novel The Stranger is re-imagined from a new perspective in Kamel Daoud's widely-praised debut

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July 24, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction
fiction, July 2015
July 23, 2015

Book Review: The Black Coat

July 23, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

In the wake of Bangladesh's bloody Liberation War, a hapless nonentity suddenly finds himself impersonating a beloved national leader

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July 23, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction
fiction, July 2015
July 22, 2015

Book Review: Sicily

July 22, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

Veteran historian John Julius Norwich attempts to cram over 800 years of Sicilian history into 300 pages - and because he's John Julius Norwich, he very nearly succeeds

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July 22, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
July 2015
July 22, 2015

Book Review: The Fall

July 22, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

Federal contractor Jack Taylor takes an unprecedented high-altitude space jump - but when he breaks the sound barrier and makes his landing, he finds himself in a different reality

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July 22, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Science Fiction
fiction, July 2015
July 21, 2015

E. L. Doctorow

July 21, 2015/ Open Letters Monthly

E. L. Doctorow

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July 21, 2015/ Open Letters Monthly/
Monthly Cover
July 2015
July 21, 2015

Book Review: Last First Snow

July 21, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

In Max Gladstone's latest "Craft" sequence novel, what looks like a straightforward neighborhood gentrification suddenly threatens to unleash the wrath of the gods themselves

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July 21, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Science Fiction
fiction, July 2015
July 20, 2015

Interview: Debut author Geoffrey Storm

July 20, 2015/ Open Letters Monthly

Debut author Geoffrey Storm started down the usual path - writing conferences, agents - but then decided to take the route so many new authors are taking and self-publish his first novel. He talks with Open Letters about that process.

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July 20, 2015/ Open Letters Monthly/
Arts & Life
Interview, July 2015
July 19, 2015

Book Review: The Year's Best Science Fiction, 2015

July 19, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

The latest monumental anthology from Gardner Dozois of the best the sci-fi genre has to offer

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July 19, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Our Year in Reading, Science Fiction
fiction, gardner dozois, July 2015, Our Year in Reading
July 18, 2015

Book Review: Beyond Words

July 18, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

In his beautifully-written new book, ecologist Carl Safina takes a broader look at the emotional and mental lives of nonhuman animals

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July 18, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
July 2015
July 16, 2015

Book Review: In a Dark Wood

July 16, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

A professor of Italian clings to Dante's Divine Comedy when confronted with an unthinkable tragedy in his own life

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July 16, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
dante, July 2015
July 16, 2015

Book Review: Joan of Arc

July 16, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

The half-legendary Maid of Orleans gets a refreshingly wide-angled new history from Helen Castor

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July 16, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
Joan of Arc, July 2015
July 15, 2015

Book Review: The Quiet Man

July 15, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

A memoir of the first President Bush, written by his former Chief of Staff

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July 15, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
George H W Bush, July 2015
July 15, 2015

Book Review: Palimpsest

July 15, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

In a mere 200 pages on the history of writing, Matthew Battles takes readers from ancient China and Sumeria to Gutenberg to - oh my, are we out of time already?

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July 15, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
July 2015
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