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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

Open Letters Monthly

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October 23, 2011

Classics Reissued: The Essential X-Men Vol. 2

October 23, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

X-Men fans new and old can rejoice in this hefty re-issued collection of classic tales

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October 23, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
comics, graphic novels, john byrne, October 2011
October 20, 2011

Book Review: Barn Owl

October 20, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

A beautiful new book on one of the most recognizable and evocative of all birds, the barn owl

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October 20, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
Birds, natural history, October 2011
October 17, 2011

Now in Paperback: Antony and Cleopatra

October 17, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

New in paperback: an excellent dual biography of one of history's most famous couples.

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October 17, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
October 2011
October 14, 2011

Book Review: 1066

October 14, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

A sharply realistic new history of the Norman invasion and conquest of England

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October 14, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
October 2011
October 10, 2011

Book Review: The Dovekeepers

October 10, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

An ambitious historical novel (about the Jewish fortress of Masada) from a well-loved contemporary novelist

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October 10, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
contemporary fiction, historical fiction, October 2011
October 09, 2011

Book Review: Exodus from the Alamo

October 09, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

A revisionary new account takes a hammer to every cherished myth about the heroic last stand at the Alamo.

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October 09, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
american history, history, October 2011
October 09, 2011

Book Review: Caravaggio

October 09, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

A lively new biography of the artist whose work - and life - lives on the borderland of light and dark

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October 09, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
biography, October 2011
October 01, 2011

Book Review: Theodora

October 01, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

A lively and refreshingly blunt novel about one of the most fascinating - and polarizing - women in ancient history

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October 01, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
fiction, historical fiction, October 2011
September 30, 2011

Now in Paperback: the RSC/Modern Library Shakespeare

September 30, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

A new series of eye-opening Shakespeare paperbacks, suitable for bus, train, and trolley.

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September 30, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
Monthly Cover
October 2011, shakespeare
September 30, 2011

American Aristocracy - Letter from Boston: Toward a New History

September 30, 2011/ Douglass Shand-Tucci

Boston, so often reproved for living in its memories, may well be poised to lead the future, not in spite of its history but because of it.

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September 30, 2011/ Douglass Shand-Tucci/
Features, Arts & Life
American Revolution, Emily dickinson, Henry Adams, henry james, John Adams, Mark Twain, October 2011, T-S- Eliot, William James
September 30, 2011

Time Wounds All Heels

September 30, 2011/ Joanna Scutts

In Alan Hollinghurst's new novel The Stranger's Child the renown of a minor English poet balloons and distorts in each succeeding decade after his death

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September 30, 2011/ Joanna Scutts/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Alan Hollinghurst, Book Review, E-M- Forster, Evelyn Waugh, fiction, first world war, Joanna Scutts, literary criticism, lytton strachey, October 2011, virginia woolf
September 30, 2011

Down and Out in Luanda and Lisbon

September 30, 2011/ Joshua Lustig

Novelist António Lobo Antunes' books are searing and wildly original indictments of Portugal's needlessly protracted and bloody colonization of Angola.

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September 30, 2011/ Joshua Lustig/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, Cold War, fiction, J-M- Coetzee, Joshua Lustig, literary criticism, October 2011, Vietnam, Voltaire, W-W- Norton
October 01, 2011

A Crucible of the Human Spirit Guy

October 01, 2011/ Laura Kolbe

Ben Lerner's arresting first novel sets a funhouse mirror before the author's own formative years as a poet, poseur, and pill-popper in Madrid.

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October 01, 2011/ Laura Kolbe/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Book Review, fiction, Fiction Review, John Ashbery, Keats, literary criticism, October 2011
September 30, 2011

On the Scent: A Certain Vintage

September 30, 2011/ Elisa Gabbert

Our resident nose racks up facts on the tinctures of yesteryear, many of which still prove possible to capture and some of which are well worth sniffing out

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September 30, 2011/ Elisa Gabbert/
Arts & Life
October 2011
October 01, 2011

One Encounter: El Jaleo

October 01, 2011/ John Cotter

What good are reproductions and what do we lose in keeping them? Our writer returns to a famous painting after a dozen years and finds more than he'd imagined

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October 01, 2011/ John Cotter/
Arts & Life, One Encounter
October 2011, One Encounter
September 30, 2011

Disembodied Embodiment

September 30, 2011/ Anna Elena Eyre

The late Akilah Oliver's poetry uses language to escape the trap of consciousness--verse "as rapture, as rupture" alike

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September 30, 2011/ Anna Elena Eyre/
Literary Criticism, Poetry
literary criticism, October 2011, Poetry, Poetry Review
September 30, 2011

Endearment

September 30, 2011/ Anna Lena Phillips

a poem

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September 30, 2011/ Anna Lena Phillips/
Poetry
October 2011, Poetry
September 30, 2011

Chairman of the Board

September 30, 2011/ Steve Donoghue

Lodestar or mirror? Passé or ne plus ultra? Elizabeth II has presided with consistency over an inconsistent age. And what have we learned of her?

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September 30, 2011/ Steve Donoghue/
A Year With The Windsors, Features, Politics & History
A Year With The Windsors, October 2011, Prince George, Queen Elizabeth, Queen Mary, Queen Victoria, Steve Donoghue, Winston Churchill
September 30, 2011

The Birth of a Salesman

September 30, 2011/ Morten Høi Jensen

Eleven years after her breakout novel The Last Samurai, Helen DeWitt returns to satirize the chattering nonsense of the corporate world.

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September 30, 2011/ Morten Høi Jensen/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
Bill Clinton, Book Review, christopher hitchens, fiction, Fiction Review, literary criticism, October 2011
September 30, 2011

Rime Redux

September 30, 2011/ Sara Henkin

A new graphic novel reworks Coleridge's classic confrontation between man and nature for our times, taking us on a grand tour of environmental degradation.

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September 30, 2011/ Sara Henkin/
Literary Criticism, Poetry, Arts & Life
literary criticism, October 2011, Poetry
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