A Slow, Inquiring Narration
/A translation of Peter Handke's latest novel shows the author exploring the essence and possibilites of narration.
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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.
A translation of Peter Handke's latest novel shows the author exploring the essence and possibilites of narration.
Read MoreA smart and gripping new novel brings the Salem Witch mania to life.
Read MoreBoris Dralyuk's new translation of Isaac Babel's Odessa Tales brings its Jewish gangsters back to more vibrant life than ever. Robert Minto reviews.
Read MoreIan McEwan's latest novel has an ingenious premise--but does it deliver on its promise? Rohan Maitzen reviews Nutshell.
Read MoreFantasy author Rjurik Davidson returns with the second novel of minotaurs, magic, and political unrest. Justin Hickey reviews The Stars Askew.
Read MoreThe NYRB Classics reprints three seminal novels by the elusive author who wrote under the pen name Henry Green. Jack Hanson reviews.
Read MoreWhat has not already been written about Virginia Woolf? A new critical biography offers ideas about how to read both her work and her life.
Read MoreA new novel about a notorious Viennese clinic aims to do justice to the lives of those the Nazis declared were utterly without value.
Read MoreThe hitman who kills hitmen is contracted by a semi-rogue FBI agent to take on a particularly delicate - and dangerous - side-mission
Read MoreIn Moonstone, Icelandic author Sjón tells a story of 1918 Iceland through the longings and alienation of a sixteen-year-old orphan named Mani. Robert Minto reviews.
Read MoreThe stories in debut author Alexander Weinstein's collection portray a near-future world of intrusive personal techology - a world that every day resembles our own a bit more. Dalton Gentry reviews.
Read MoreA crippled young man in a forgotten hospital has armored himself against the rotten hand he's drawn in life - until he falls in love with a new patient.
Read MoreThe life of the main character in Nathan Hill's stunning debut novel is turned upside-down when the madwoman on the nightly news turns out to be his mother.
Read More"The Wonderments" allow the hero of Bill Broun's spellbinding debut novel Night of the Animals to talk to the animals in Regent's Park Zoo. Justin Hickey reviews.
Read More2016 marks the 50th anniversary of the publication of Mesa Selimovic's modernist Yugoslavian masterpiece; Pedja Jurisic looks at Death and the Dervish today.
Read MoreThe masterful essays in Gregory Wolfe's The Operation of Grace range from Mel Gibson to Thomas More, from Annie Dillard to Christopher Hitchens. Martyn Wendell Jones reviews.
Read MoreA strong-willed young woman and a visionary young man navigate a 16th-century Germany in chaos in order to find their destiny
Read MoreThis year in our annual Summer Reading feature, our writers recommend favorite books that take us on journeys - through time, around the world, or just out of ourselves.
Read MoreOnce upon a time, Westerns were a staple of American fiction. Now they've all but disappeared. Zach Rabiroff asks why cowboys rode off into the sunset.
Read MoreEver since Mary Shelley wrote her weird masterpiece two centuries ago, it's been impossible to keep a good monster down. In the Shadow of Frankenstein gives readers two dozen pastiches that keep the Creature alive.
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