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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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January 31, 2014

War, in Panorama

January 31, 2014/ Joanna Scutts

How could they do it, those young men who, with every reason to live, walked deliberately into machine-gun fire? Joe Sacco gives us a panoramic view of the horror, the labor, and the losses of WWI.

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January 31, 2014/ Joanna Scutts/
Arts & Life, Politics & History
February 2014, Joanna Scutts
March 31, 2012

A Man Could Stand Up: On Downton Abbey’s Second Season

March 31, 2012/ Joanna Scutts

Unlike the soap operas with which it is often dismissively aligned, Downton Abbey is defined by change rather than stasis - by its beautifully produced attention to social evolution.

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March 31, 2012/ Joanna Scutts/
Arts & Life
Agatha Christie, Alan Hollinghurst, April 2012, d-h- lawrence, E-M- Forster, Evelyn Waugh, Ian McEwan, jane austen, Joanna Scutts, P- G- Wodehouse
September 30, 2011

Time Wounds All Heels

September 30, 2011/ Joanna Scutts

In Alan Hollinghurst's new novel The Stranger's Child the renown of a minor English poet balloons and distorts in each succeeding decade after his death

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September 30, 2011/ Joanna Scutts/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Alan Hollinghurst, Book Review, E-M- Forster, Evelyn Waugh, fiction, first world war, Joanna Scutts, literary criticism, lytton strachey, October 2011, virginia woolf
August 31, 2011

Oblivion

August 31, 2011/ Joanna Scutts

One of the most significant voices of the Harlem Renaissance was Jessie Redmon Fauset -- novelist, essayist, translator, and editor. She's become obscured behind many of the male writers she published, but Joanna Scutts returns her poignant work to the main stage

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August 31, 2011/ Joanna Scutts/
Features, Fiction, Politics & History, Absent Friends
Absent Friends, fiction, Joanna Scutts, September 2011, World War One
July 31, 2011

‘Some fights are bigger than others’

July 31, 2011/ Joanna Scutts

Brothers take opposing sides in World War One, in a gripping biography that reveals the history and politics of America's role in the conflict.

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July 31, 2011/ Joanna Scutts/
Arts & Life, Politics & History
August 2011, Biography Review, Book Review, History review, Joanna Scutts, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, World War One
June 30, 2011

Sophistication and Recklessness: Patrick Leigh Fermor

June 30, 2011/ Joanna Scutts

With Patrick Leigh Fermor's death, the world lost a gracious host, a tireless traveller, and one of the best prose stylists of the 20th century. We pause to appreciate him.

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June 30, 2011/ Joanna Scutts/
Absent Friends, Travel
first world war, July 2011, virginia woolf, world war II
May 31, 2011

A Raging Appetite

May 31, 2011/ Joanna Scutts

Food writing today requires guts - often quite literally. Gabrielle Hamilton's memoir transcends gross-out theatrics to portray a life in food, from abandonment to something like fulfillment.

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May 31, 2011/ Joanna Scutts/
Arts & Life
Book Review, Dostoevsky, Joanna Scutts, June 2011
January 31, 2011

The Greatness that was Downton

January 31, 2011/ Joanna Scutts

Julian Fellowes' "Downton Abbey" was shot in a castle, but it may have a nearer relationship to "Mad Men" than "Brideshead Revisited." Joanna Scutts tracks the evolution of the British costume drama.

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January 31, 2011/ Joanna Scutts/
Arts & Life
anthony trollope, Evelyn Waugh, February 2011, first world war, jane austen, Joanna Scutts, Second World War, theater, Thomas Jefferson
December 01, 2008

No Sign of Horror in the Heavens

December 01, 2008/ Joanna Scutts

Mary Borden’s long-forgotten 1929 memoir of World War I, The Forbidden Zone, takes its readers into the harrowing world of a front-line trauma nurse. Joanna Scutts joins her in the trenches and assesses the damage.

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December 01, 2008/ Joanna Scutts/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
December 2008, fiction, Joanna Scutts, literary criticism
February 29, 2008

The Least Glamorous Spy

February 29, 2008/ Joanna Scutts

Today the name Mata Hari evokes a villainess in a James Bond movie. Yet, as Joanna Scutts discovers, if you wipe away the makeup from the myth, you uncover a far sadder and more complex tale.

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February 29, 2008/ Joanna Scutts/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, history, Joanna Scutts, literary criticism, March 2008
December 31, 2007

The Life of the Tail Gunner

December 31, 2007/ Joanna Scutts

In her new novel Day, A.L. Kennedy places a World War II veteran on the set of a war movie; unfortunately, Joanna Scutts writes, the characters of her book are not much more dimensional than the movie set.

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December 31, 2007/ Joanna Scutts/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, January 2008, Joanna Scutts, literary criticism
December 14, 2007

The Uncertainty Principle

December 14, 2007/ Joanna Scutts
The Uncertainty Principle

Joanna Scutts reviews Soldier’s Heart by West Point professor Elizabeth D. Samet, whose memoir accomplishes the impressive feat of finding common ground between Army officers and English majors.

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December 14, 2007/ Joanna Scutts/
Politics & History
December 2007, history, Joanna Scutts, politics
October 31, 2007

The Dream After the Nightmare

October 31, 2007/ Joanna Scutts

When crises like 9/11 erupt, says Susan Faludi, America’s women wind up in lockdown. Joanna Scutts finds the national unconscious as unbalanced as ever in The Terror Dream.

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October 31, 2007/ Joanna Scutts/
Politics & History
history, Joanna Scutts, November 2007, politics
August 02, 2007

Peer Review: Onion Skins and Grass Cuttings

August 02, 2007/ Joanna Scutts

In our regular feature, Joanna Scutts is judge and jury over the reviewers of Günter Grass’s Peeling the Onion, who rather too frequently forgot they were supposed to be considering a book.

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August 02, 2007/ Joanna Scutts/
Fiction, Peer Review
August 2007, fiction
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