In a world that fetishizes speed, the act of reading a long novel feels almost perverse. But perhaps longness is what we need most these days.
A brief interview with the author, in which he explains how he came to join a trek along a seasonal Kashmiri ice road.
The 2009 Pulitzers are very different than the 1999 Pulitzers, much like the world described by the winners.
The pollster appears to have completely invented the facts behind his sensationalist op-ed, claiming that there are as many professional bloggers as attorneys in the U.S.
The ten most common titles of submissions that we’ve received in the past two years.
Micropayments, raising subscription rates, poets reading online, and more.
Our contributors have good news from Guggenheim and Carnegie, plus new books from Charles Wright, Rita Dove, Laleh Khadivi, Charles Simic, and others.
If you are going to purge your bookstore of gay and lesbian literature, you should do a proper job of it.
Ted Genoways Carolyn Kormann, Matthew Fishbane, William Finnegan, Lawrence Weschler, Ted Conover will talk about our new issue on April 16.
They might be a harbinger of the downfall of civil society, but they’re awfully convenient.