year in culture 2014
Dec. 10, 2014
The 10 Best Books of 2014 Give praise to Marilynne Robinson’s Lila .
The Walking Cure: Talking to Cheryl Strayed About What Made Wild Work She went into the wilderness to confront the loss of her mother, and herself. Against all odds, the book she wrote about it was a huge success.
vulture recommends
Oct. 29, 2014
Your Complete Ebola-Quarantine Reading Guide Governor Andrew Cuomo suggested his memoir. We say try these titles instead.
linguistics
Oct. 17, 2014
fall preview 2014
Aug. 25, 2014
literary life
June 3, 2014
The Meaning of Ping : Electric Signals and Our Search for Connection Even outside the hunt for Flight 370, they’re a question and the answer.
Book Review: Schulz on The Sixth Extinction A book that is both serious-minded and invites exclamation points into its margins.
vulture lists
Jan. 16, 2014
Schulz: The 5 Best Punctuation Marks in Literature George Eliot’s em-dash — plus, T.S. Eliot’s ellipses … (not to mention Vladimir Nabokov’s parentheses).
What Is It About Middlemarch ? Rebecca Mead’s new book, My Life in Middlemarch, inspired me to revisit Eliot’s masterpiece.
year in culture 2013
Dec. 10, 2013
Kathryn Schulz’s Top 10 Books of 2013 The Flamethrowers , A Constellation of Vital Phenomena , and more.
Dec. 6, 2013
The 10 Best Books of the Year 1. The Flamethrowers, by Rachel Kushner
“I walked out of the sun, unfastening my chin strap. Sweat was pooling along my collarbone, trickling d […]
end of culture
Nov. 10, 2013
11 Lost Literary Classics You Can Download for Free Plus: Eight massive online troves of great reading material.
it’s complicated
Nov. 7, 2013
standing ovation
Oct. 10, 2013
Schulz on Alice Munro’s Deserved Nobel Our book critic “can think of no other writer so spare, so precise, so emotionally scrupulous.”
book review
Sept. 15, 2013
Kathryn Schulz on Doctor Sleep Once it stops being bad, how good is it?
fall preview 2013
Aug. 25, 2013
What Our Critics Are Anticipating This Fall What they can’t wait to read, see, and hear this season.
book review
June 27, 2013
Schulz on Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie America’s awkward dance around race, through the eyes of a Nigerian novelist and her characters.
Book Review: The Riddle of the Labyrinth It’s about, among other things, history, mythology, ancient civilizations, linguistics, puzzles, code-breaking, Homer, Arthur Conan Doyle, and brainy female academics.
Schulz: Why I Despise The Great Gatsby It is the only book I have read five times despite failing to derive almost any pleasure at all from the experience.
On Running, Freedom, and the Boston Bombing An attack on the liberty that the community of runners knows.
kathryn schulz
Mar. 3, 2013
Schulz on Anne Carson’s Time-Traveling, Mind-Bending Red Doc> This sequel, of sorts, to Autobiography of Red is sadder than its predecessor, and stranger, too.
book review
Feb. 10, 2013
Kathryn Schulz on Amity Gaige’s Novel Schroder “It’s a mark of how good Schroder is that, upon finishing it, I immediately went out and read the rest of her work.”
Jan. 4, 2013
The Self in Self-Help We have no idea what a self is. So how can we fix it?
year in culture 2012
Dec. 2, 2012
Kathryn Schulz’s Top 10 Books of 2012 Including Alice Munro’s newest short stories and Christopher Hitchens’s last meditations.
book review
Nov. 11, 2012
battle royale
Oct. 24, 2012
Oct. 19, 2012
Lost in Reincarnation Movie critic vs. book critic on the Wachowskis’ adaptation of Cloud Atlas.
Michael Chabon May Just Be the Perfect Writer for the Obama Age With his latest novel, Telegraph Avenue , Chabon proves that he has the chutzpah of hope.
book review
Aug. 31, 2012
Book Review: Schulz on Zadie Smith’s NW She’s pointing her literary compass in a new direction.
kathryn schulz
July 16, 2012
Encyclopedia Brown Was Our Gateway Detective Our book critic remembers how Donald J. Sobol’s young private eye introduced her to intellectual pleasure.
kathryn schulz
June 3, 2012
Maurice Sendak: The King of All the Wild Things Book critic Kathryn Schulz on the man behind a whole raft of beastie boys.
May 3, 2012
Writing in the Dark Confessions of a literary night owl.
Apr. 27, 2012
Cuckoo Our body clocks have social jet lag. And it’s making most of us a little crazy.
What Happened to the Coming-Out Memoir? Two things: I stopped seeking them out, and the culture became more gay friendly.
Mar. 30, 2012
Not-So-Fun Homes Two lesbian literary titans take on their greatest demon: Mom.
July 1, 2011
Trickster Makes the World A musician conjures a mesmerizing alternate history of his own lame life in the novel Stone Arabia.
Mar. 17, 2011
Group Think Tina Rosenberg joins a popular club for nonfiction writers.