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The New Republic
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Novels
August 14, 2024
Magazine
Rumaan Alam
Rachel Cusk’s Inverted World
“Parade” turns the novel upside down.
March 11, 2024
Magazine
Gene Seymour
Percival Everett Is Messing With You
The author of “Erasure” and “James” has spent his career running rings around his readers.
March 22, 2022
Magazine
Adam Kirsch
Sheila Heti Steps Away From Autofiction
Her new novel “Pure Colour” investigates the eternal.
November 8, 2021
Magazine
Benjamin Kunkel
The Mystery of Patricia Highsmith’s Diaries
What made her so interested in cold-blooded, apparently motiveless killers?
August 25, 2020
Alex Shephard
Carl Hiaasen’s Secret to Writing a Good Trump Novel
The comic thriller “Squeeze Me” is set, like Hiaasen’s other books, in Florida—which turns out to make a big difference.
April 2, 2020
Magazine
Michelle Dean
A Fragmented Novel for the End of the World
Jenny Offill’s
Weather
captures the dread of a global catastrophe.
January 21, 2020
Magazine
Siddhartha Deb
Michel Houellebecq’s Fragile World
How much does the French author owe his popularity to the rise of virulent nationalism?
June 26, 2019
Magazine
Sarah Jones
Miriam Toews’s Quiet Revolution
The women in her new novel confront abuse and grapple with faith.
April 1, 2019
Magazine
Christine Smallwood
Sally Rooney’s Great Expectations
Her new novel captures a generation's beleaguered idealism.
May 5, 2017
Ryu Spaeth
How Should a Person Die?
Minae Mizumura's "Inheritance From Mother" takes on aging, family, and Japan's complicated relationship with the West.
March 14, 2017
Magazine
Sam Sacks
They Could Be Heroes
Today's biggest novelists are throwbacks to a simpler time.
December 12, 2013
The New Republic Staff
The Best Books of 2013
August 26, 2013
Hillary Kelly
Ten Other Posthumously Discovered Novels
Salinger isn't the only one
May 9, 2013
Maureen Corrigan
On Screen, 'Gatsby' is Beautiful—and Damned Boring
Five films later, Hollywood still doesn't get Fitzgerald's novel
August 27, 1951
Magazine
Elizabeth Bishop
Love From Emily
To Emily Dickinson, little besides love, human and divine, was worth writing about, and often the two seemed to fuse.
January 14, 1940
W.H. Auden
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