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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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December 28, 2014

Book Review: Dublin - The Making of a Capital City

December 28, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

David Dickson's comprehensively researched, readable book details the long and complicated history of Dublin

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December 28, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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December 2014
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December 26, 2014

Book Review: American Apocalypse

December 26, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A new history presents a history of 20th-Century American radical evangelism that will go down very well on the Liberty University campus

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December 26, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
american history, December 2014
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December 23, 2014

Book Review: Snow and Steel

December 23, 2014/ Open Letters Monthly

The bloodiest American encounter of the Second World War took place in a vast and icebound forest; a sprawling new history tells the story of the Battle of the Bulge

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December 23, 2014/ Open Letters Monthly/
Monthly Cover
December 2014, military history, world war two
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December 18, 2014

Book Review: Enter Pale Death

December 18, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

An enormous, bad-tempered horse tramples to death the wife of its aristocratic owner - but Joe Sandilands of Scotland Yard comes to suspect foul play in Barbara Cleverly's new mystery

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December 18, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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December 2014
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December 15, 2014

Book Review: Renegade Revolutionary

December 15, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

He was ugly, ill-dressed, and eccentrically fond of dogs - but he was also the most experienced military man in the American colonies, restlessly chaffing under the command of George Washington. He was General Charles Lee, and a wonderful new book tells his story.

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December 15, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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December 2014
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December 13, 2014

Book Review: Chaucer's Tale

December 13, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

Long before he would be venerated as the father of English poetry, Geoffrey Chaucer had a really, really bad year. An engaging new book tells the story of how he coped - and the great work that followed.

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December 13, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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December 2014
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December 11, 2014

Book Review: The Life of Roman Republicanism

December 11, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A new book looks at the writings of Cicero, Sallust, and Horace to understand the mind of their times.

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December 11, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
classics, December 2014
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December 05, 2014

Book Review: Massacre

December 05, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

In 1871, thousands of aggrieved Parisians banded together to create an independent socialist community lodged inside their home city, and it functioned as a living dream - until it was brutally destroyed. A new book tells the story of the Paris Commune.

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December 05, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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December 2014
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November 30, 2014

Star Trek: Foul Deeds Will Rise

November 30, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

An older Captain Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise-A voyage to the edge of the Federation to help two warring planets make peace - and there they encounter a long-lost figure from their past

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November 30, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
December 2014, notes for a star trek bibliography, star trek
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November 30, 2014

James Wood and the Fall of Man

November 30, 2014/ Sam Sacks

Book critic James Wood is a fascinating collection of contradictions: an apostate true believer, a champion of experimental fiction, an earnest searcher in empty temples. Sam Sacks reads one of our foremost readers.

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November 30, 2014/ Sam Sacks/
Literary Criticism
December 2014, fiction, literary criticism, Sam Sacks
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November 30, 2014

A Long Time in the Making

November 30, 2014/ Alice Brittan

Nora Webster may be Colm Tóibín’s slightest novel yet, but his later novels are born from and echo this wise and intimate investigation of the interior life.

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November 30, 2014/ Alice Brittan/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, Colm Tóibín, December 2014, fiction, literary criticism
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November 30, 2014

Pointez, Pointez!

November 30, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

Hugely talented biographer Andrew Roberts has written a big biography of Napoleon Bonaparte - but when it comes to such a well-known figure, are readers in danger of fatigue de bataille?

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November 30, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
Arts & Life, Politics & History
Book Review, December 2014, Napoleon, Steve Donoghue
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November 30, 2014

Our Year in Reading 2014

November 30, 2014/ Open Letters Monthly

Our unabashedly bookish editors and friends look back on some of the highlights from 2014's reading.

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November 30, 2014/ Open Letters Monthly/
Features, Our Year in Reading
December 2014, Dorothy Dunnett, Elisa Gabbert, gore vidal, greg waldmann, J-M- Coetzee, jo walton, John Cotter, Justin Hickey, maureen thorson, Our Year in Reading, rohan maitzen, Rosemary Mitchell, Sam Sacks, Second World War, Stephen Akey, Steve Donoghue
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November 30, 2014

Double Consciousness

November 30, 2014/ Scott Abbott

Literature by post-Yugoslavian writers is often about identity in flux. That includes the books of David Albahari, one of the most widely read of contemporary Serbian authors and one of the most worth reading.

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November 30, 2014/ Scott Abbott/
Literary Criticism
Book Review, December 2014, fiction, literary criticism, Scott Abbott
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November 30, 2014

Something Beyond the Chaos

November 30, 2014/ Robert Minto

The author made immortal by the novel Dune also wrote a career's worth of short stories. Robert Minto looks at the first-ever complete collection of those stories.

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November 30, 2014/ Robert Minto/
Fiction, Literary Criticism, Science Fiction
Book Review, December 2014, fiction, frank herbert, literary criticism, Robert Minto
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November 30, 2014

Unwise Counsel

November 30, 2014/ Greg Waldmann

Leon Panetta, old Washington fixture and former member of the Obama administration, criticizes the president in his new memoir. But does he have anything to say?

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November 30, 2014/ Greg Waldmann/
Politics & History
Bill Clinton, Book Review, December 2014, hillary clinton
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November 30, 2014

An Interview with Katy Bohinc

November 30, 2014/ Open Letters Monthly

Maureen Thorson interviews Katy Bohinc, poet and author of Dear Alain.

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November 30, 2014/ Open Letters Monthly/
Poetry, Arts & Life
December 2014, Interview, maureen thorson, Poetry
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November 30, 2014

#NotAllNazis

November 30, 2014/ Michael O’Donnell

What would you do if your artistic survival suddenly depended on the whims of a brutal dictatorship? How far would you compromise? How much would you risk? A new book studies artists in the Third Reich.

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November 30, 2014/ Michael O’Donnell/
Education, Arts & Life, Politics & History
December 2014, fine art, theater
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November 30, 2014

Cabin with Porthole

November 30, 2014/ Sarah Ann Winn

a poem

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November 30, 2014/ Sarah Ann Winn/
Poetry
December 2014, Poetry
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November 30, 2014

The Fighter

November 30, 2014/ Jack Hanson

Norman Mailer was as fiery and mercurial a letter-writer as he was a novelist and journalist - and ten times as prolific. A big new volume collects the highlights of a lifetime in the post.

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November 30, 2014/ Jack Hanson/
Fiction, Literary Criticism, Arts & Life
Book Review, December 2014, fiction, Jack Hanson, literary criticism, Norman Mailer
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