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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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May 06, 2016

Book Review: Karl Doenitz and the Last Days of the Third Reich

May 06, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

A new book looks at the little-known figure of Hitler's chosen successor

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May 06, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
May 2016
May 04, 2016

Book Review: Prisoners of Hope

May 04, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

A generation ago, President Johnson enacted a stunning array of social legislation, the full audacity of which has often been overshadowed by the other aspects of LBJ's presidency. A new book shines a light on the Great Society.

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May 04, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
Lyndon Johnson, May 2016
May 03, 2016

Book Review: The First Nazi

May 03, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

How much of the evil of Adolf Hitler can be traced to an infamous general of the First World War?

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May 03, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
May 2016
May 02, 2016

Discussion: Middlemarch for Book Clubs

May 02, 2016/ Open Letters Monthly

Open Letters Senior Editor Rohan Maitzen discusses her new ebook, Middlemarch for Book Clubs

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May 02, 2016/ Open Letters Monthly/
Fiction
fiction, George Eliot, May 2016, rohan maitzen, Steve Donoghue
May 01, 2016

Book Review: Valiant Ambition

May 01, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

The infamous treachery of Benedict Arnold gets a vigorous and richly detailed new retelling by the bestselling author of In the Heart of the Sea.

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May 01, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
George Washington, May 2016
April 30, 2016

Second Glance: The Secret of Prometheus

April 30, 2016/ Robert Minto

The oldest texts can seem familiar, but they repay attention with strangeness. Robert Minto delves into the religious origins and unresolved mysteries of Prometheus Bound.

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April 30, 2016/ Robert Minto/
Poetry
Goethe, May 2016, Poetry, Voltaire
April 30, 2016

A Period of Most Powerful Transition

April 30, 2016/ Zach Rabiroff

In his world-ranging new popular history Heyday, Ben Wilson looks at the Great Exhibition of 1851 as a focal point of the 19th-century grand dream of commerce and culture. Zach Rabiroff reviews.

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April 30, 2016/ Zach Rabiroff/
Arts & Life
May 2016
April 30, 2016

Atomic Turquoise Bat Mitzvah

April 30, 2016/ Justin Hickey

A startling alien legacy is dug up out of the ground in Sylvain Neuvel's stellar debut novel Sleeping Giants. Justin Hickey reviews.

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April 30, 2016/ Justin Hickey/
Fiction, Science Fiction
Book Review, fiction, May 2016
April 30, 2016

Change the Way They Live

April 30, 2016/ Greg Waldmann

As Andrew Bacevich relates in his important new book, US involvement in the Middle East has been characterized by confusion, mistakes, and blundering military force. Greg Waldmann reviews America's War for the Greater Middle East.

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April 30, 2016/ Greg Waldmann/
Politics & History
Bill Clinton, Book Review, george w bush, May 2016, ronald reagan
April 30, 2016

from To Duration

April 30, 2016/ Peter Handke

a poem, translated by Scott Abbott

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April 30, 2016/ Peter Handke/
Poetry
May 2016, peter handke, Poetry, Scott Abbott
April 30, 2016

'Yes, Yes, Yes!'

April 30, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

To be immortalized by Shakespeare is often also to be caricatured by him; a sumptuous new biography of King Henry IV admirably brings its royal subject out of the Bard's shadow.

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April 30, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
May 2016, shakespeare, Steve Donoghue
April 30, 2016

Simulacrum

April 30, 2016/ Daniel Green

The intense problematics of Don DeLillo's literary preoccupations are on full display in his latest, Zero K. Dan Green explores the legacy of an author's postmodernism.

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April 30, 2016/ Daniel Green/
Fiction
Don DeLillo, fiction, May 2016, Thomas Pynchon
April 30, 2016

EXISTENTIAL REPTILE REVERIE

April 30, 2016/ Abigail Beckel

a poem

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April 30, 2016/ Abigail Beckel/
Poetry
May 2016, Poetry
April 30, 2016

Second Glance: Njal’s Saga

April 30, 2016/ Matt Ray

Njal's Saga is a myth based on history, a narrative about the effect of religion on a culture of revenge. Matt Ray takes us to medieval Iceland.

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April 30, 2016/ Matt Ray/
Fiction
fiction, May 2016
April 30, 2016

From Some Mountain Summit High in the Air: Lord Acton and History

April 30, 2016/ Luciano Mangiafico

History remembers him as the author of the famous dictum about power corrupting, but Lord Acton led an intense and fascinating life. Luciano Mangiafico tells his story.

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April 30, 2016/ Luciano Mangiafico/
Monthly Cover
fiction, May 2016
April 30, 2016

It’s a Mystery: “Folly is like regret, it knows no limits”

April 30, 2016/ Irma Heldman

Old loyalties lead to explosive new dangers in two new mystery-thrillers set in North Carolina and Northern Ireland.

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April 30, 2016/ Irma Heldman/
Features
Irma Heldman, It's a Mystery, May 2016, mystery fiction
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It’s a Mystery book reviews by Irma Heldman

Open Letters Monthly Archive Feature Second Glance

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