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April 17, 2016

Book Review: Selected Poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay

April 17, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

America's Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Edna St. Vincent Millay gets an elegant new Selected Poems volume

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April 17, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Poetry
April 2016, Edna St- Vincent Millay, Poetry
April 16, 2016

Norman Lebrecht's Album of the Week - Argerich and Barenboim

April 16, 2016/ Norman Lebrecht

Martha Argerich and Daniel Barenboim, born a year apart in Buenos Aires to Jewish mothers of Russian extraction, have left it until their mid-seventies to discover common ground.

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April 16, 2016/ Norman Lebrecht/
CD of the Week
April 2016
April 15, 2016

Book Review: The Empire That Would Not Die

April 15, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

Abandoned by the West and battered by the Islamic caliphate, the eastern Roman Empire shrank and withdrew but did not fall - a new history asks why

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April 15, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
April 2016
April 13, 2016

Book Review: The Fever of 1721

April 13, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

When smallpox struck the city of Boston in 1721, battle lines were drawn over how to deal with it - and strange alliances formed

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April 13, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
April 2016
April 11, 2016

Book Review: Tales from the Long Twelfth Century

April 11, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

At the center of a lively, personality-driven new book about the twelfth century is the contentious family of King Henry II

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April 11, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
April 2016
April 08, 2016

Norman Lebrecht's Album of the Week - Lutoslawski: Concerto for Orchestra

April 08, 2016/ Norman Lebrecht

Unlike most composers, Lutoslawski's star has risen since his death. A new pairing of pairing of orchestral works shows why.

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April 08, 2016/ Norman Lebrecht/
CD of the Week
April 2016
April 08, 2016

Book Review: Thoreau's Wildflowers

April 08, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

A lovely new volume offers a selection of Henry David Thoreau's heartfelt writings about flowers

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April 08, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
April 2016
April 06, 2016

Book Review: The Whole Harmonium

April 06, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

A sympathetic new biography of the poet Wallace Stevens

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April 06, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
April 2016
April 03, 2016

Book Review: Dante - The Story of His Life

April 03, 2016/ Steve Donoghue

A thorough new biography explores the life of the great Florentine poet in detail

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April 03, 2016/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
April 2016, dante
April 01, 2016

Norman Lebrecht's Album of the Week: Pasternak and Scriabin

April 01, 2016/ Norman Lebrecht

Out of Russia's close-knit musical world, Ludmila Berlinskaya brings us Scriabin--and works from his son and the son of a man who painted him.

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April 01, 2016/ Norman Lebrecht/
CD of the Week
April 2016, Norman Lebrecht
March 31, 2016

On Edwin O’Connor’s The Last Hurrah

March 31, 2016/ Jack Beatty

In his essay on a new reprint of Edwin O'Connor's great and indispensable novel of old-style American ward politics, Jack Beatty introduces readers to the serious comedy of The Last Hurrah.

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March 31, 2016/ Jack Beatty/
Fiction, Arts & Life, Politics & History
April 2016, fiction
March 31, 2016

Requiem with Yellow Butterflies: The World Mourns García Márquez

March 31, 2016/ James Halford

How do we memorialize a literary titan who shaped his own mythology? The story of legendary writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez gained its protean final chapter in the wave of obituaries after his death in 2014.

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March 31, 2016/ James Halford/
Fiction, Arts & Life
April 2016, fiction
March 31, 2016

A Question of Character

March 31, 2016/ Robert Minto

In an entertaining new study of Sartre, Camus, de Beauvoir and company, the existentialist movement becomes a personality-driven piece of public performance.

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March 31, 2016/ Robert Minto/
Literary Criticism, Arts & Life
April 2016, Book Review, fiction, literary criticism, philosophy, Robert Minto
March 31, 2016

Orestes in Spandex

March 31, 2016/ Zach Rabiroff

Fifty years ago, a daring writer and a quirky artist created an offbeat character who became one of the most famous superheroes in the world. A look at the early days of Spider-Man.

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March 31, 2016/ Zach Rabiroff/
Arts & Life
April 2016, comics, stan lee, steve ditko, Zach Rabiroff
March 31, 2016

Same Bloody Rhythm

March 31, 2016/ Greg Waldmann

A new book reminds us that good reporting on the Middle East is more important than ever, and more dangerous.

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March 31, 2016/ Greg Waldmann/
Politics & History
April 2016, Book Review
March 31, 2016

April and my Plastic Sunflowers

March 31, 2016/ Sonnet Mondal

a poem

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March 31, 2016/ Sonnet Mondal/
Poetry
April 2016, Poetry
March 31, 2016

Incriminating Bits

March 31, 2016/ Rebecca Hussey

Maggie Nelson’s gripping revisionist memoir of a murder could be considered anti-narrative non-fiction: it at once participates in storytelling and critiques it.

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March 31, 2016/ Rebecca Hussey/
Arts & Life
April 2016, Book Review, Rebecca Hussey
March 31, 2016

Against the Beautiful Moment

March 31, 2016/ Matt Ray

You can set up a flash mob with Twitter, but you can't run a government with it; Jodi Dean's Crowds and Party looks at protests in the age of social media.

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March 31, 2016/ Matt Ray/
Politics & History
April 2016, Book Review, donald trump, Matt Ray
March 31, 2016

Interior, with Music

March 31, 2016/ Liza Katz

The tension between the material and the abstract creates the complex music that threads through Ben Mazer's new volume of poetry, The Glass Piano.

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March 31, 2016/ Liza Katz/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
April 2016, Ben Mazer, literary criticism, Poetry, Poetry Review
March 31, 2016

It’s a Mystery: “Good fortune rarely walks you out the door to your car”

March 31, 2016/ Irma Heldman

The 11th novel in Philip Kerr's Bernie Gunther series and the 2nd novel in John Lawton's Joe Wilderness series share plenty of thrills and character insights in common.

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March 31, 2016/ Irma Heldman/
Features
April 2016, Book Review, Irma Heldman, It's a Mystery
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It’s a Mystery book reviews by Irma Heldman

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