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Filling in Time Reading Vasily Grossman While Waiting for S

Public Books and the Sydney Review of Books have partnered to exchange a series of articles with international concerns. Today’s article, “Filling in Time Reading Vasily Grossman While Waiting for S,” by Maria Tumarkin, was originally published by the SRB on April 28, 2023. What a time to be reading about Annie Ernaux’s self-obliterating affair with S from the Soviet embassy in Paris, not that...

The post Filling in Time Reading Vasily Grossman While Waiting for S appeared first on Public Books.

Derry Girls and the Absurdity of Adulthood

A work of absurdist art that entertains, but also carries a surprisingly grown-up message about taking responsibility for the state of our politics.

The post Derry Girls and the Absurdity of Adulthood appeared first on Public Books.

B-Sides: Colson Whitehead’s “Apex Hides the Hurt”

“Whitehead’s satire takes aim … at a capitalist system that senses the profits to be made from proclaiming that systemic racism is a thing of the past.”

The post B-Sides: Colson Whitehead’s “Apex Hides the Hurt” appeared first on Public Books.

B-Sides: George Eliot’s “The Spanish Gypsy”

If George Eliot was interested in religious coexistence, she was also interested in unbelief.

The post B-Sides: George Eliot’s “The Spanish Gypsy” appeared first on Public Books.

Really Unreal: Salman Rushdie’s “Victory City”

Rushdie’s fifteenth novel casts doubt on the very production of historical knowledge.

The post Really Unreal: Salman Rushdie’s “Victory City” appeared first on Public Books.

As Society Evolves, So Too Does the University

Faculty and students can—and must—govern their own institutions, so that universities maintain their vital power.

The post As Society Evolves, So Too Does the University appeared first on Public Books.

Finding Your “Voice”: Author-Read Audiobooks

Does the author-read audiobook offer a perfect confluence between person, authorial persona, voice, and aesthetic form?

The post Finding Your “Voice”: Author-Read Audiobooks appeared first on Public Books.

Milwaukee Socialists’ Triumph & Global Impact

In 1910, the new mayor didn’t promise speed, but pledged “to do all our limited means permit to make Milwaukee a better place for every citizen.”

The post Milwaukee Socialists’ Triumph & Global Impact appeared first on Public Books.

The Labor of Play

Games like Wordle and CALL OF DUTY equally stem from capital's attempt to conquer leisure time. Is there a better way to play?

The post The Labor of Play appeared first on Public Books.

When Medusa Meets #MeToo

Greek mythology has long been a by-word for elitism. Is it really a good idea to use its images for contemporary gender justice?

The post When Medusa Meets #MeToo appeared first on Public Books.

A Novel the CIA Spent a Fortune to Suppress

Mr. President shows widespread corruption around a fictional Guatemalan dictator. This did not please the country’s real dictators.

The post A Novel the CIA Spent a Fortune to Suppress appeared first on Public Books.

More Than Hearts and Minds?

Armageddon Time is undercut by the very forces it hopes to expose: white complicity, forged through the exploitation of Black life.

The post More Than Hearts and Minds? appeared first on Public Books.

Natalia Molina on “A Place at the Nayarit”

Writing Latinos is a new podcast featuring interviews with Latino authors discussing their books and how their writing contributes to the ever-changing conversation about the meanings of latinidad.

The post Natalia Molina on “A Place at the Nayarit” appeared first on Public Books.

Protesters of the World, Unite

Individual protests, like those in Hong Kong, may be defeated. But the global protest movement is only beginning.

The post Protesters of the World, Unite appeared first on Public Books.

Cracks in the Louvre Abu Dhabi

The museum has made its splash, but if it wants to be more than a work of starchitecture, it requires deeper collections and bolder curatorial vision.

The post Cracks in the Louvre Abu Dhabi appeared first on Public Books.

Franzen’s Anger

“Throughout Franzen’s life in public, he has figured himself as embattled, enemy-beset.”

The post Franzen’s Anger appeared first on Public Books.

Tender Gossip: Darryl Pinckney’s “Come Back in September”

Is there a writing life than can safely dispense with categories like identity and commitment, which count so much in how we live now?

The post Tender Gossip: Darryl Pinckney’s “Come Back in September” appeared first on Public Books.

Death in Mexico Means Something Different Now

Mexico once cultivated a “special relationship” with death. But cultural globalization and rising violence is weakening that bond.

The post Death in Mexico Means Something Different Now appeared first on Public Books.

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