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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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June 14, 2007

Fumbling Men

June 14, 2007/ Jeff O’Keefe

Don DeLillo’s new novel Falling Man confronts our naked desire to understand 9/11. Jeff O’Keefe tells us how it fares.

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June 14, 2007/ Jeff O’Keefe/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, June 2007, literary criticism
June 04, 2007

IX from Trilce

June 04, 2007/ Sampson Starkweather

A transcontemporization of César Vallejo by Sampson Starkweather

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June 04, 2007/ Sampson Starkweather/
Poetry
June 2007, Poetry
June 02, 2007

Salad Days

June 02, 2007/ Hugh Merwin

Teaching a man to fish isn’t enough: you’ve also got to teach him to cook what he catches. Hugh Merwin challenges the usefulness of Barbara Kingsolver’s folksy Animal, Vegetable, Miracle.

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June 02, 2007/ Hugh Merwin/
Arts & Life
June 2007
June 01, 2007

One Man’s César Vallejo

June 01, 2007/ John Cotter

John Cotter guides us through Clayton Eshleman’s translations of the startling, invigorating poetry of César Vallejo, one of the earliest and most underrepresented of the modernists.

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June 01, 2007/ John Cotter/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
Clayton Eshleman, John Cotter, June 2007, literary criticism, Poetry
May 31, 2007

H.H. Kirst and the Problem of Evil

May 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

What do we do with great novels by a writer who was also a Nazi? Steve Donoghue investigates the terrible conundrum of H.H. Kirst.

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May 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Absent Friends, fiction, June 2007, literary criticism, Steve Donoghue
May 31, 2007

The Evasionist

May 31, 2007/ Sam Sacks

Sam Sacks reviews the fun and flawed new novel The Yiddish Policemen’s Union and tries to answer the question on everybody’s lips: what exactly is Michael Chabon doing?

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May 31, 2007/ Sam Sacks/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, June 2007, literary criticism, Sam Sacks
May 31, 2007

Weems Redux

May 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

Alan Axelrod’s Blooding at Great Meadows perpetuates a few too many myths about George Washington. Fortunately, we have Steve Donoghue to set the hagiographers straight.

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May 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
history, June 2007, politics, Steve Donoghue
May 31, 2007

He Died

May 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

Bulldog attorney Vincent Bugliosi investigated the JFK assassination and wrote the world's longest book about it. We re-read it for the sad anniversary of that day in Dallas.

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May 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
history, June 2007, Steve Donoghue
May 31, 2007

Three From Coach House Books

May 31, 2007/ Adam Golaski

Adam Golaski champions the “difficult read” in his review of the poetry of a. rawlings, Christian Bök, and Nathalie Stephens.

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May 31, 2007/ Adam Golaski/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
Adam Golaski, June 2007, literary criticism, Poetry
May 31, 2007

God-bothering

May 31, 2007/ Amanda Bragg

After tallying up the fallacies in God is Not Great, Amanda Bragg concludes that Christopher Hitchens is less concerned with enlightened dissent than with cashing in on a craze

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May 31, 2007/ Amanda Bragg/
Politics & History
history, June 2007
May 31, 2007

Peer Review: Running Toward the Truck

May 31, 2007/ John Cotter

Newspaper book pages are under threat. In our monthly feature, John Cotter assesses the reviews of Jonathan Lethem’s novel You Don’t Love Me Yet to learn what (if anything) in our print reviews is worth saving.

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May 31, 2007/ John Cotter/
Literary Criticism
John Cotter, June 2007, literary criticism, peer review
May 31, 2007

Mount Wharton

May 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

Steve Donoghue converses with the critics in his review of Hermione Lee’s page-turning but harrowingly huge biography of Edith Wharton

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May 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, June 2007, literary criticism, Steve Donoghue
May 31, 2007

Limitless Apocalypse

May 31, 2007/ Karen Vanuska

Karen Vanuska reviews Jim Crace’s post-apocalyptic novel The Pesthouse, in which Americans seek salvation by emigrating to Europe. Hmm, think Crace might be trying to tell us something…?

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May 31, 2007/ Karen Vanuska/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
fiction, June 2007, Karen Vanuska, literary criticism
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It’s a Mystery book reviews by Irma Heldman

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