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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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December 01, 2017

OLM Favorites: Seer Blest

December 01, 2017/ Sam Sacks
OLM Favorites: Seer Blest

Frank Kermode consumed all of the tumultuous 20th century's literary theories without being consumed by them. A look at the work of this wisest of secular clerics.

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December 01, 2017/ Sam Sacks/
Arts & Life
December 2017, literary criticism, Sam Sacks
December 01, 2017

OLM Favorites: Macaroni and Cheese

December 01, 2017/ Rohan Maitzen
OLM Favorites: Macaroni and Cheese

"You come as opportunely as cheese on macaroni" is a terrible line, a symptom of all the reasons George Eliot's Romola is a failure. But is failure really such a bad thing? Maybe a novelist's reach should exceed her grasp.

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December 01, 2017/ Rohan Maitzen/
Arts & Life
December 2017, literary criticism, rohan maitzen
December 01, 2017

OLM Favorites: A Great and Sustaining Mystery

December 01, 2017/ Greg Waldmann
OLM Favorites: A Great and Sustaining Mystery

Anthony Burgess the novelist had dreams of being a composer. He had little success, but along the way he delved deep into the nature and meaning of music.

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December 01, 2017/ Greg Waldmann/
Arts & Life
December 2017, greg waldmann, literary criticism, music, Anthony Burgess, literary studies, musicians, biography
December 01, 2017

OLM Favorites: Not A Boating Accident

December 01, 2017/ Steve Donoghue
OLM Favorites: Not A Boating Accident

It wouldn’t be summer without a giant killer shark novel, so Steve Donoghue goes for a fun swim with the, er, mother of them all, Meg: Hell’s Aquarium.

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December 01, 2017/ Steve Donoghue/
Arts & Life
December 2017, literary criticism, Steve Donoghue
December 01, 2017

OLM Favorites: Rarest Spun Heavenmetal

December 01, 2017/ Justin Hickey
OLM Favorites: Rarest Spun Heavenmetal

A Clockwork Orange turned 50 this year and received the gift of an anniversary edition. Justin Hickey looks anew at the novel Anthony Burgess claimed to have knocked off in three weeks, and which made him famous.

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December 01, 2017/ Justin Hickey/
Arts & Life
Anthony Burgess, December 2017, Justin Hickey, literary criticism, science fiction
November 30, 2017

OLM Favorites: Aid in the Labyrinth

November 30, 2017/ Maureen Thorson

Randall Jarrell was suspicious of attempts to turn criticism into a science: he wrote as a reader, for other readers, with the work itself foremost in his mind.

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November 30, 2017/ Maureen Thorson/
Arts & Life
December 2017, literary criticism, maureen thorson, Poetry
November 30, 2017

OLM Favorites: The Madwoman and the Critic

November 30, 2017/ Elisa Gabbert

On Kate Zambreno’s Heroines and the crime of dismissive criticism in both Bookforum and The LA Review of Books.

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November 30, 2017/ Elisa Gabbert/
Arts & Life
December 2017, Elisa Gabbert, literary criticism
November 30, 2017

OLM Favorites: Learning How To Read-William Goldman's The Temple of Gold

November 30, 2017/ Stephen Akey

In Stephen Akey's personal essay, the sex and squalor of William Goldman's The Temple of Gold appeals to the thirteen-year-old he was when he first encountered it - and prompts an adult reassessment.

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November 30, 2017/ Stephen Akey/
Arts & Life
December 2017, literary criticism, Stephen Akey
December 01, 2017

OLM Favorites: Trouble in Mind

December 01, 2017/ Dorian Stuber

What would it mean if history were a joke, a shaggy dog story? J. G. Farrell’s bleakly funny Troubles reflects the struggle of post-war British literature to come to terms with the inheritance of modernism.

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December 01, 2017/ Dorian Stuber/
Arts & Life
December 2017, Dorian Stuber, literary criticism
December 01, 2017

OLM Favorites: The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit

December 01, 2017/ Steve Danziger

William S. Burroughs's notorious Cut-up Trilogy was his fiercest broadside against what he felt was the tyranny of linear thought. Steve Danziger delves into their Word Hoard.

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December 01, 2017/ Steve Danziger/
Arts & Life
biography, December 2017, literary criticism, Steve Danziger
November 30, 2017

OLM Favorites: This Drifty State of Being

November 30, 2017/ Liza Birnbaum

Two Idiots: Dostoevsky's classic and the new novel by Elif Batuman. What, if anything, do they have in common, and what do their differences say about each author's attitude toward fiction?

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November 30, 2017/ Liza Birnbaum/
Arts & Life
December 2017, literary criticism
November 30, 2017

No Trace of Lipstick

November 30, 2017/ Rohan Maitzen

An outstanding new biography argues convincingly that Olivia Manning is one of the most undervalued woman novelists of the 20th century. But was Manning a “woman novelist”? She thought not.

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November 30, 2017/ Rohan Maitzen/
Arts & Life
literary criticism, October 2017, rohan maitzen
October 31, 2017

A Bygone Present

October 31, 2017/ Jennifer Helinek

An eerie atmosphere and finely-watched details are among the strange strengths of Fiona Mozley's odd debut novel Elmet - and among its weaknesses.

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October 31, 2017/ Jennifer Helinek/
Fiction
fiction, Jennifer Helinek, literary criticism, November 2017
October 31, 2017

Meta-Pleasure

October 31, 2017/ Alex Sorondo

The bewildering literary project author Mark Danielewski has undertaken - 27 mammoth and genre-defying novels in one series - continues.

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October 31, 2017/ Alex Sorondo/
Fiction
Alex Sorondo, fiction, literary criticism, November 2017
September 30, 2017

Memory Sickness

September 30, 2017/ Jennifer Helinek

Madeleine Thien's Dogs at the Perimeter - getting its first US publication - uses the Khmer Rouge atrocities as a backdrop against which to explore its characters' various losses.

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September 30, 2017/ Jennifer Helinek/
Fiction
fiction, Jennifer Helinek, literary criticism, October 2017
August 31, 2017

Beyond “Ma”

August 31, 2017/ Jennifer Helinek

A new novel re-imagines the beloved character of "Ma" from Laura Ingalls Wilder's "Little House" books.

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August 31, 2017/ Jennifer Helinek/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, literary criticism, September 2017
August 31, 2017

Searching for Him

August 31, 2017/ Britta Böhler

Zinzi Clemmons' much-discussed debut novel blurs the line between memoir and fiction; Britta Böhler reviews What We Lose.

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August 31, 2017/ Britta Böhler/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, literary criticism, September 2017
August 31, 2017

The Continuing Enterprise of the Poem

August 31, 2017/ Melissa Beck

Veteran translator David Ferry tackles that Mount Everest of the translator's art, Virgil's Aeneid.

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August 31, 2017/ Melissa Beck/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
fiction, literary criticism, Poetry, September 2017
July 31, 2017

Seeing Through Hypocrisy

July 31, 2017/ Bailey Trela

Elfriede Jelinek’s Charges is a response to the European refugee crisis, but can fiction address reality by stripping it of all its details?

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July 31, 2017/ Bailey Trela/
Fiction, Literary Criticism, Arts & Life
August 2017, fiction, literary criticism, theater
July 31, 2017

Try the Right Angle

July 31, 2017/ Britta Böhler

Since his 1997 debut, novelist Daniel Kehlmann has been subverting the familiar comforts of science and society. Up next: his new book You Should Have Left.

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July 31, 2017/ Britta Böhler/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
August 2017, fiction, literary criticism
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