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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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May 02, 2014

Book Review: Risky Game

May 02, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A muscular NFL demigod is stalked by a spunky blogger in Tracy Solheim's latest "Out of Bounds" novel

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May 02, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
May 2014, romance novels
May 02, 2014

Book Review: Hope Ignites

May 02, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A hard-hearted cattle rancher is intrigued by the young Hollywood movie star filming shoot on his property in Jaci Burton's latest "Hope" novel

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May 02, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
May 2014, romance novels
May 02, 2014

Book Review: Willing Sacrifice

May 02, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A battle-hardened warrior must fight for the very memory of the woman he loves in Shannon Butcher's latest 'Sentinel Wars' novel

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May 02, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
May 2014, romance novels
May 02, 2014

Book Review: The Sweetheart Rules

May 02, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

Three old ladies watch over a town in Florida where broken hearts go to mend in Shirley Jump's follow-up to "The Sweetheart Bargain"

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May 02, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
May 2014, romance novels
May 01, 2014

Book Review: The Transformation of the World

May 01, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A sprawling new history of the world during the 'long' 19th century

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May 01, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
May 2014
April 30, 2014

Circumspice

April 30, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

Ronald Reagan single-handedly ended the Cold War at Reykjavik in 1985. And if you believe that, his loyal aid Ken Adelman has a book to sell you.

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April 30, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
Book Review, May 2014, ronald reagan, Steve Donoghue
April 30, 2014

Skilled in the Ways of the Desert

April 30, 2014/ Charlotte Mathieson

A fascinating new book tells the remarkable stories of five ‘improbable’ women who defied convention to explore the much mythologised landscape of the Middle East.

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April 30, 2014/ Charlotte Mathieson/
Arts & Life, Politics & History
Book Review, Charlotte Mathieson, May 2014
April 30, 2014

The Important Difference

April 30, 2014/ Carrie Dawson

Is it really the immigrant writer’s job to represent third-world suffering for the sake of first-world catharsis? In All Our Names, Dinaw Mengestu resists the pressure to substitute autoethnography for art.

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April 30, 2014/ Carrie Dawson/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, fiction, literary criticism, May 2014
April 30, 2014

Left Wanting

April 30, 2014/ Steve Danziger

Elia Kazan's unwavering confidence in his own brilliance was the spur to his successes as a director and the source of his infamy as a Cold War canary. A new collection of his letters makes his outsized personality seem even larger.

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April 30, 2014/ Steve Danziger/
Arts & Life
Book Review, film, May 2014, Steve Danziger
April 30, 2014

Paper Mausoleums

April 30, 2014/ Matthew Stevens

Rock music is all about inflaming the senses. Rock biographies, on the other hand, are built from facts and reasoned explanations. Matthew Stevens looks at a study of the life of Big Star frontman Alex Chilton, and wonders what fans can get out of it.

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April 30, 2014/ Matthew Stevens/
Arts & Life
Book Review, May 2014, music
April 30, 2014

‘A Quiet Conscience Sleeps in Thunder’

April 30, 2014/ David Schloss

a poem

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April 30, 2014/ David Schloss/
Poetry
May 2014, Poetry
April 30, 2014

pantograph

April 30, 2014/ Cathy Eisenhower

a poem

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April 30, 2014/ Cathy Eisenhower/
Poetry
May 2014, Poetry
April 30, 2014

Title Menu: 8 books where bad decisions make good protagonists

April 30, 2014/ Kathleen Rooney

Characters never go wrong when their poor life choices make for fascinating reading. Kathleen Rooney supplies us with eight unmissable examples.

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April 30, 2014/ Kathleen Rooney/
Features, Fiction, Literary Criticism
Edith Wharton, fiction, Jean Rhys, Kathleen Rooney, literary criticism, Margaret Atwood, May 2014
April 30, 2014

Strange Troubador

April 30, 2014/ Jack Hanson

Joseph Roth spent his life fighting the kind of lazy dangers that arise from the rot of empire, even as his life and his letters embodied so many of them.

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April 30, 2014/ Jack Hanson/
Arts & Life
Book Review, Jack Hanson, May 2014
May 01, 2014

The Selves in Ourself

May 01, 2014/ John Cotter

In Valeria Luiselli's debut novel, a young Mexican woman imagines the real life of a long-dead man whose writings she has forged in the voice of a famous American poet. Then things get complicated.

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May 01, 2014/ John Cotter/
Fiction, Literary Criticism, Monthly Cover
fiction, literary criticism, May 2014
April 30, 2014

Echo Chamber Blues

April 30, 2014/ Justin Hickey

Marvel Comics is mopping up at the box office, but what of its rival DC? Our resident expert fisks the also-rans and reminds us about an epic story still waiting to be adapted.

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April 30, 2014/ Justin Hickey/
Arts & Life
comics, film, jack kirby, John Buscema, Justin Hickey, May 2014
April 30, 2014

So Why Write?

April 30, 2014/ Paul Griffin

As the world's supply of writers outpaces the world's demand for their books, the financial returns for writing have fallen to laughable levels. Then why keep doing it? Paul Griffin explores the problem of writing and money.

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April 30, 2014/ Paul Griffin/
Fiction
Book Review, fiction, May 2014
April 30, 2014

Ariel: Shelley in Italy

April 30, 2014/ Luciano Mangiafico

Like so many before him, the celebrated Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley had a tangled and complicated history with Italy, equal parts inspiration and frustration. Luciano Mangiafico tells the story

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April 30, 2014/ Luciano Mangiafico/
Arts & Life, Politics & History
Luciano Mangiafico, May 2014
April 30, 2014

It’s a Mystery: “The past lies like a nightmare upon the present”

April 30, 2014/ Irma Heldman

A troika of mysteries—one a gripping debut, Precious Thing by Colette McBeth, the others superb new novels from two very special authors: Peter Robinson returns with Children of the Revolution and Donna Leon is back with By Its Cover.

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April 30, 2014/ Irma Heldman/
Features
Book Review, Donna Leon, Irma Heldman, It's a Mystery, May 2014, mystery fiction
April 30, 2014

From the Archive: Prediction

April 30, 2014/ Mark Wallace

a poem

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April 30, 2014/ Mark Wallace/
Poetry
May 2014, Poetry
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Features

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It’s a Mystery book reviews by Irma Heldman

Open Letters Monthly Archive Feature Second Glance

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