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The New Republic
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Books
August 2, 2014
Paul Berman
The Rise and Fall of a Radical Journalist
History handed Alexander Cockburn a great opportunity, but he blew it
August 2, 2014
Juliet Bellow
The Man Who Corporatized Our National Museums
How J. Carter Brown transformed the American art world
August 1, 2014
Martha Stout
Is Modern Culture Making Us Crazier?
The science behind America's deepening disturbance
July 31, 2014
Jonathan Israel
,
Lynn Hunt
Was Louis XVI Overthrown by Ideas?
July 31, 2014
Michael Kimmage
How Ronald Reagan Rode America's Delusions to the White House
Reviewing Rick Perlstein's 'The Invisible Bridge'
July 30, 2014
Hillary Kelly
The Most Iconic, Important Penguin Paperback Covers of All Time
July 30, 2014
Adam Kirsch
Ira Glass Is a Philistine for Saying Shakespeare Sucks, But He's in Good Company
Why writers have spent centuries attacking the Bard
July 28, 2014
Blaine Greteman
Can World of Warcraft Save Higher Education?
The latest ed trend seems like something you might have done in middle school
July 28, 2014
Uzodinma Iweala
A Book By Jimmy Carter Led Me to Work for Richard Branson
'Talking Peace' provided a perspective on leadership as a combination of stubbornness, a moral compass, and an appetite for risk
July 27, 2014
Franklin Foer
A Newly Rediscovered Novel Is the 'Catch-22' of World War I
July 23, 2014
Tom Bissell
You Are Now Entering the Demented Kingdom of William T. Vollmann
Home to goddesses, dreams, and a dangerously uncorrupted literary mind
July 21, 2014
Perri Klass
'Harriet the Spy' Predicted Our Surveillance State
A cold war children's book is surprisingly prescient
July 20, 2014
David Hajdu
Why Are There So Many Orphans in the Comics?
Roz Chast's take on child/parent relationships and aging
July 18, 2014
Andrew Ladd
We Get to See Director's Cuts of Our Favorite Movies. Why Not an "Author's Cut" for Books?
July 16, 2014
Hillary Kelly
63 Years Ago, We Knew That 'The Catcher in the Rye' Was Insufferable and Overrated
July 15, 2014
Anthony Grafton
The Millennia-Old History of the Apocalypse
July 14, 2014
Nadine Gordimer
Politics and Fiction
Morals are the husband and wife of literature
July 14, 2014
Adelle Waldman
Middlemarch Showed Me How to Live
My junior year at Brown, I was so unhappy that I dropped out. In Arizona, I met a man; and I read Middlemarch.
July 12, 2014
G.W. Bowersock
Remember the Greek Enlightenment?
Neither does Greece, to judge by its government
July 11, 2014
Jonathan Bate
Shakespeare Was an Epicurean
Tracing the Bard’s debt to the French essayist Michel de Montaigne
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