Fiction

Half a Life Half a Life

In The Lay of the Land, the final work in Richard Ford's acclaimed trilogy, Frank Bascombe picks up where he left off in Independence Day--taking road trips, describing houses and ...

Nov 16, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Benjamin Hedin

Representative Fictions Representative Fictions

An ambitious two-volume history of the novel explores its evolution across continents and centuries.

Nov 16, 2006 / Books & the Arts / William Deresiewicz

Science Fiction Science Fiction

Richard Powers's The Echo Maker speaks volumes about neuroscience, nature and environmental degradation. But it says little about what it means to be alive.

Sep 20, 2006 / Books & the Arts / William Deresiewicz

The Lives They Led The Lives They Led

Claire Messud's The Emperor's Children is a superb comedy of manners, a richly tragicomic view of three thirtysomething Ivy Leaguers in the days leading up to 9/11.

Sep 14, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Kate Levin

Londonistan Calling Londonistan Calling

Gautam Malkani's new novel explores the cross-section of youth culture, heritage and identity in London's polyglot, postcolonial neighborhoods.

Sep 7, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Gary Younge

Writers From the Other Asia Writers From the Other Asia

Four new books explore Korea's cold war hangover and the indelible mark left by its North-South division.

Aug 31, 2006 / Books & the Arts / John Feffer

The Global Village The Global Village

What does it mean to be from a place? In Monica Ali's new novel, Alentejo Blue, the collision of locals, expatriates and tourists shatters any simple answers to the question.

Jul 27, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Nell Freudenberger

The Plot Against America The Plot Against America

John Updike's Terrorist rips its plot from the headlines. But the book's Irish-Egyptian protagonist is paper-thin, and its jihad-lit plot remains stubbornly inanimate, devoid of pa...

Jun 26, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Jonathan Shainin

Boxed In Boxed In

In his new short story collection In Persuasion Nation, absurdist extraordinaire George Saunders offers a surreal depiction of the destruction of individuality through consumer meg...

Jun 8, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Vince Passaro

The Zionist Imagination The Zionist Imagination

As the founding father of the Zionist right, Vladimir Jabotinsky rejected Diaspora existence. Yet in his 1935 novel The Five he tenderly evoked it, offering a glimpse of something ...

Jun 8, 2006 / Books & the Arts / Jacqueline Rose

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