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Open Letters Monthly

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March 31, 2010

April 2010 Issue

March 31, 2010/ Open Letters Monthly

from "It Would Look Like..." (Project Row Houses) by Stephanie Diamond

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March 31, 2010/ Open Letters Monthly/
Monthly Cover
April 2010
March 31, 2010

A Fire Bell in the Night

March 31, 2010/ Thomas J. Daly

President Polk isn't exactly a household name, and a new book seeks to change that. Will the facilitator of genocide and the originator of civil war get a fair shake? Read on!

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March 31, 2010/ Thomas J. Daly/
Politics & History
April 2010
March 31, 2010

Stephanie Diamond's Social Practice

March 31, 2010/ Jessica Breiman

“Images are entryways. Into memories, into someone’s world, into someone’s story.” And Diamond keeps every one of those images.

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March 31, 2010/ Jessica Breiman/
Monthly Cover
April 2010
March 31, 2010

Carson McCullers and Her Crowd

March 31, 2010/ John G. Rodwan, Jr.

She's been praised by Oprah and cut by Joyce Carol Oates; the nature of Carson McCullers' prose has always confounded some readers and pleased others. We read her again.

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March 31, 2010/ John G. Rodwan, Jr./
Fiction, Literary Criticism
April 2010, Book Review, fiction, gore vidal, John G- Rodwan Jr, john updike, literary criticism
March 31, 2010

Pay Attention, Cynewulf

March 31, 2010/ Lazaro Lopez

The warrior tribes who chipped away at Rome's Western empire were pretty rough on each other, too. A new book examines the fight for fledgling Europe.

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March 31, 2010/ Lazaro Lopez/
Politics & History
April 2010, Book Review
March 31, 2010

Raymond Burr Is Not in this Movie

March 31, 2010/ Gillian Devereux

You expected a monster movie, /the straight line progression of vandalism and death. /But this plot's triangular, a love story predicated /on deceit and betrayal /

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March 31, 2010/ Gillian Devereux/
Poetry
April 2010, Poetry
March 31, 2010

Adeste Fideles

March 31, 2010/ Krista Ingebretson

Woe to the critic who calls Edith Grossman's translations "seamless." In her combative new treatise she argues for a greater recognition of the artistry of translation--but how many liberties can a translator take while staying true to the original?

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March 31, 2010/ Krista Ingebretson/
Literary Criticism
April 2010, fiction, literary criticism, Poetry
March 31, 2010

Rapture Crash

March 31, 2010/ Steve Brachmann

There's a frightening possibility at the heart of Jaron Lanier's new manifesto You Are Not a Gadget: how often do we subjugate our own personalities to the fixed designs of computer software?

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March 31, 2010/ Steve Brachmann/
Video
April 2010
March 31, 2010

The Once and Future Arthur

March 31, 2010/ Kristin Brower Walker

He pulled a sword from a stone and became a legend, and for a thousand years, that legend has changed and shifted. Two new Young Adult novels take up the old familiar story in new ways.

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March 31, 2010/ Kristin Brower Walker/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
April 2010, fiction, literary criticism
March 31, 2010

Strategikon

March 31, 2010/ Steve Donoghue

The glory that was Rome lived on - in a strange new form - for a thousand years in the East, despite being beset by enemies on all sides. A new study illuminates how they managed it.

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March 31, 2010/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
April 2010, Book Review, Steve Donoghue
March 31, 2010

She Paints for Them

March 31, 2010/ Finch Bronstein-Rasmussen

Sofonisba Anguissola was the best-known female painter of the Renaissance, but before that, she was art instructor to a willful young queen. A new novel revives those sad, glorious days.

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March 31, 2010/ Finch Bronstein-Rasmussen/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
April 2010, Book Review, fiction, literary criticism, virginia woolf
March 31, 2010

The Music In Between Words and Werewolves

March 31, 2010/ Marc Vincenz

Our own Marc Vincenz conducts a gothic conversation with the Canadian poet Jeramy Dodds

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March 31, 2010/ Marc Vincenz/
Poetry
April 2010, Poetry
March 31, 2010

You Oughta Know that (Music) is a Battlefield

March 31, 2010/ Megan Kearns

"Sisters are doin' it for themselves" ... but the Spice Girls? Marisa Meltzer's "Girl Power" picks some strange hall-of-famers, and gets Megan Kearns shaking her head, "with friends like these ..."

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March 31, 2010/ Megan Kearns/
Arts & Life
April 2010, Book Review
March 31, 2010

PAX Ludorum

March 31, 2010/ Phillip A. Lobo

Over the last weekend in Boston, thousands of video gamers gathered for PAX East, one of the largest East Coast gatherings of, er, their kind. Intrepid Phillip Lobo was on the scene.

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March 31, 2010/ Phillip A. Lobo/
Monthly Cover
April 2010
March 31, 2010

The Napping Anthropologists

March 31, 2010/ Tuc McFarland

They have been with us for fourteen thousand years, and they're sleeping on the couch right now; a new book takes a comprehensive yet personal look at dogs.

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March 31, 2010/ Tuc McFarland/
Arts & Life
April 2010, Book Review
March 31, 2010

It’s a Mystery: “Three things come unbidden: fear, love, and jealousy”

March 31, 2010/ Irma Heldman

In her latest novel, False Mermaid, Erin Hart once again connects an ancient Celtic crime to a thoroughly modern mystery.

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March 31, 2010/ Irma Heldman/
Features
April 2010, Irma Heldman, It's a Mystery, mystery fiction
March 31, 2010

A Year with Short Novels: On Lifting Veils

March 31, 2010/ Ingrid Norton

The Lifted Veil, George Eliot's dalliance with Gothic horror, turns out to be nearly as dense and cerebral as her masterpieces; though of course, in keeping with the theme of this monthly feature, it's far far shorter.

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March 31, 2010/ Ingrid Norton/
Features
A Year with Short Novels, April 2010, fiction, Ingrid Norton
March 31, 2010

As If In a Glorious Hell

March 31, 2010/ Rita Consalvos

In her debut collection of stories, Tiphanie Yanique attempts to capture in prose the complexities of modern-day life and racial identity in a Caribbean behind the tourism ads.

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March 31, 2010/ Rita Consalvos/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
April 2010, fiction, literary criticism
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It’s a Mystery book reviews by Irma Heldman

Open Letters Monthly Archive Feature Second Glance

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