Book Review: Selected Poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay
/America's Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Edna St. Vincent Millay gets an elegant new Selected Poems volume
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America's Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Edna St. Vincent Millay gets an elegant new Selected Poems volume
Read MoreMartha 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.
Read MoreAbandoned 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
Read MoreWhen smallpox struck the city of Boston in 1721, battle lines were drawn over how to deal with it - and strange alliances formed
Read MoreAt the center of a lively, personality-driven new book about the twelfth century is the contentious family of King Henry II
Read MoreUnlike most composers, Lutoslawski's star has risen since his death. A new pairing of pairing of orchestral works shows why.
Read MoreA lovely new volume offers a selection of Henry David Thoreau's heartfelt writings about flowers
Read MoreA sympathetic new biography of the poet Wallace Stevens
Read MoreA thorough new biography explores the life of the great Florentine poet in detail
Read MoreOut 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.
Read MoreIn 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.
Read MoreHow 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.
Read MoreIn an entertaining new study of Sartre, Camus, de Beauvoir and company, the existentialist movement becomes a personality-driven piece of public performance.
Read MoreFifty 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.
Read MoreA new book reminds us that good reporting on the Middle East is more important than ever, and more dangerous.
Read MoreMaggie Nelson’s gripping revisionist memoir of a murder could be considered anti-narrative non-fiction: it at once participates in storytelling and critiques it.
Read MoreYou 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.
Read MoreThe tension between the material and the abstract creates the complex music that threads through Ben Mazer's new volume of poetry, The Glass Piano.
Read MoreThe 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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