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The Daily Beast Review: Hue 1968
…the battle with extraordinary skill and dexterity, anchoring the narrative firmly in the experiences of scores of participants—mostly American Marines and soldiers, some South Vietnamese, and a surprisingly large number…
The Duality of Two-Step Devil’s Cover
…joke. “Six is the devil’s number,” I said. “Seven reclaims the eggs for God.” “Oh, you would not believe how many people refuse to order ‘deviled’ eggs,” the server…
Celebrating National Poetry Month
…Mexico City Blues is Kerouac’s most important verse work that incorporates all the elements of his theory of spontaneous composition. Memories, fantasies, dreams, and surrealistic free association are lyrically combined…
This Halloween, Read Spooky!
…free. “More than a shivery treat… [The Daylight Gate] touches on nearly every aspect of witchcraft, both historical and imaginative… sober, precise, and solemnly beautiful… Utterly spellbinding.”—Washington Post …
Read dangerously this Banned Books Week (and Beyond)!
…booksellers, publishers, journalists, teachers, and readers of all types—in shared support of the freedom to seek and to express ideas, even those some consider unorthodox or unpopular.” We’re celebrating by…
Grove at Home: November 1-7
…my ‘reports’ into female sexuality, I no longer felt free to carry out my research to the best of my ability in the country of my birth. The attacks included…
Grove at Home: November 1-7
…“I renounced my US citizenship in 1995. After a decade of sustained attacks on myself and my work, particularly my ‘reports’ into female sexuality, I no longer felt free to…
Grove at Home: August 9—15
…The Common. Read the full post with Cree’s song-by-song commentary… John Freeman on the park, The Park, and the bookstore How does John Freeman do it? A tireless writer,…
Preparing for Yan Lianke’s blistering new book, The Day the Sun Died
…he recently told Words Without Borders’ Chenxin Jiang, “Every Chinese author thinks that their own writing is free and uncurbed, but only because we’re not aware of the restrictions we…
Why are we still so obsessed with Lizzie Borden?
…anything to be free. What she got instead was infamy. See is the product of 11 years of that obsession, and it’s a prickly, unsettling wonder: a story so tactile…