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January 08, 2014

Norman Lebrecht's Album of the Week - André Tchaikovsky

January 08, 2014/ Norman Lebrecht

For many years he was known as the man who left his skull to the Royal Shakespeare Company for use in the gravediggers’ scene in Hamlet. But a new album showcases André Tchaikovsky's inimitable music.

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January 08, 2014/ Norman Lebrecht/
CD of the Week
January 2014
January 07, 2014

Book Review: The Long Voyage

January 07, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

An extremely generous collection of letters by the great 20th century tastemaker in books, Malcolm Cowley

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January 07, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
harvard university press, January 2014
January 06, 2014

Book Review: The Harlot's Tale

January 06, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

The indomitable 17th century midwife Bridget Hodgson returns in another thrilling murder mystery

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January 06, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
January 2014
January 05, 2014

Book Review: Superman - A Celebration of 75 Years

January 05, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

DC Comics rolls out a lovely anthology of some high points in the long career of the Man of Steel

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January 05, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
comics, dc comics, January 2014
December 31, 2013

The Impossible Affliction

December 31, 2013/ Steve Danziger

Having tried therapy and medication to treat his anxiety disorder, Scott Stossel turned to writing. His new book, part memoir, part cultural history, may be an essential document of our agitated age.

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December 31, 2013/ Steve Danziger/
Arts & Life
January 2014, Steve Danziger
December 31, 2013

Fifty Years to an Early Grave: The Bittersweet Career of Wallace Markfield

December 31, 2013/ Matt Nesvisky

Wallace Markfield's debut has faded from the literary landscape. That's too bad, writes Matt Nesvisky, as this highly polished novel captures an important moment in American Jewish life.

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December 31, 2013/ Matt Nesvisky/
Features, Absent Friends
Absent Friends, January 2014
December 31, 2013

Atwood 4 Mayor

December 31, 2013/ Heather Jessup

What — and who — is required to maintain a public persona of the magnitude of Margaret Atwood’s? A new book explores the phenomenon and implications of literary celebrity.

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December 31, 2013/ Heather Jessup/
Arts & Life
Book Review, January 2014, Margaret Atwood
December 31, 2013

What Passes for Hope

December 31, 2013/ Justin Hickey

One could argue, from the evidence of cable TV ratings, that we've entered the age of the anti-hero. But why are they so popular? Adam Sternbergh's debut novel provides some unexpected answers.

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December 31, 2013/ Justin Hickey/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, fiction, george r- r- martin, January 2014, Justin Hickey, literary criticism
December 31, 2013

No Picnic

December 31, 2013/ Daniel Green

To literary scholar Laura Frost, the great 20th century modernists created readerly pleasures not through familiar comforts but by transforming difficulty and strangeness into something exciting and new. Daniel Green tests the theory.

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December 31, 2013/ Daniel Green/
Fiction, Politics & History
Aldous Huxley, Book Review, d-h- lawrence, Daniel Green, fiction, James Joyce, January 2014, Jean Rhys, Lionel Trilling, Ulysses
December 31, 2013

January 2014 Issue

December 31, 2013/ Stephen Akey

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December 31, 2013/ Stephen Akey/
Literary Criticism, Monthly Cover, Poetry
January 2014, literary criticism, Poetry, Stephen Akey
December 31, 2013

exorcisms

December 31, 2013/ Fitz Fitzgerald

a poem

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December 31, 2013/ Fitz Fitzgerald/
Poetry
January 2014, Poetry
December 31, 2013

Dreaming Different Dreams: The Early Russian Dissenters

December 31, 2013/ Michael Johnson

The Russian dissident writers are largely unknown in the West today, but their work was an inspiration at a time when their compatriots were forbidden to dream different dreams.

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December 31, 2013/ Michael Johnson/
Politics & History
January 2014, Michael Johnson
December 31, 2013

Muses Far From Home

December 31, 2013/ Jane Shmidt

Romance, nostalgia and beguiling delusions are hallmarks of Lara Vapnyar's novels, including her sinuous newest, The Scent of Pine

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December 31, 2013/ Jane Shmidt/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, fiction, January 2014, literary criticism
December 31, 2013

Strange Reckoning

December 31, 2013/ Steve Donoghue

She was the daughter, the sister, and the wife of kings in one of England's most turbulent periods, but Alison Weir's new biography is the first to make us feel we really know Elizabeth of York.

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December 31, 2013/ Steve Donoghue/
Arts & Life, Politics & History
alison weir, Biography Review, Book Review, Edward III, January 2014, Steve Donoghue
December 31, 2013

Title Menu: Books and Birth

December 31, 2013/ Sam Sacks

Sam Sacks midwifes a new feature into existence with a list of books containing memorable scenes about childbirth.

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December 31, 2013/ Sam Sacks/
Features
bible, frank herbert, January 2014, Sam Sacks
December 31, 2013

It’s a Mystery: “There’s no trap so deadly as the trap you set for yourself”

December 31, 2013/ Irma Heldman

Two fine, first-rate thrillers usher in the New Year. One centers on a major drug bust in a cutting edge contemporary setting, the other tackles one of the most baffling and notorious crime sprees of the Victorian era.

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December 31, 2013/ Irma Heldman/
Features
Book Review, Irma Heldman, It's a Mystery, January 2014, mystery fiction
December 31, 2013

A Palace and a Prison at Each Hand: Lord Byron in Italy (part 1 of 2)

December 31, 2013/ Luciano Mangiafico

Byron was mad, bad, and dangerous to know -- and eventually his amorous, adventurous spirit led him to Italy.

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December 31, 2013/ Luciano Mangiafico/
Poetry, Arts & Life, Politics & History
January 2014, Lord Byron, Luciano Mangiafico, Poetry
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It’s a Mystery book reviews by Irma Heldman

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