The Best Books of 2018: Works in Translation!
/The yardstick here is not solely accuracy of translation, but the worth of the English-language results.
Read MoreAn Arts & Literature Review
The yardstick here is not solely accuracy of translation, but the worth of the English-language results.
Read MoreThe pure has been sifted from the pandering and here are the gems I found!
Read More2018 presented a bracing variety of enterprising reprints.
Read MoreSpace programs all around the world are testing ever more ambitious plans and this book belongs in the library of every readers who’s been following that journey.
Read MoreReaders ready for an adventurous alternative to the many Japanese short story collections that have preceded it will find it here.
Read MoreOpen Letters talked with author Ben Goldfarb about this sometimes-maligned fixture of the natural world.
Read MoreThe first novel ever published in California and the first written by a Native American.
Read MoreMy return issue of the New Yorker arrived just the other day; I fixed myself a sandwich, and then settled in to a reading experience I hadn't had in years.
Read MoreOne of the latest entries in the redoubtable Loeb Classical Library series,
Read MoreThe return of Stevereads!
Read MoreAs Charles Homer Haskins pointed out in his humbly durable masterpiece The Renaissance of the 12th Century, the Dark Ages weren’t dark at all. Fiercely cold most of the time (due to a bout of climate change), but not dark in the sense of shuttered. Beknighted, but not benighted.
The great scholar John Addington Symonds (whose absence from bookstore shelves bloody well qualifies him for honoring here in Absent Friends, somewhere down the line) put it very prettily when he observed that any age without Michelangelo, Leonardo, and Raphael must necessarily seem dark. The ostentatious showboating of the Italian Renaissance is the problem in a nutshell when it comes to thinking about the innocent ages that come before.
Read MoreA debatably wise man once said that the best-seller was a gilded tomb for a mediocre talent. As with all easy aphorisms, it’s only 90 percent true.
The riddle is solved one of two ways: either the writer of the best-seller stumbled blindly upon a winning formula that one time only, or the writer always knew what they were doing and some combination of chance and synergy caused that one book to take flight.
An arts and literature review.
Steve Donoghue
Sam Sacks
Britta Böhler
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Eric Karl Anderson
Olive Fellows
Jack Hanson
Jennifer Helinek
Justin Hickey
Hannah Joyner
Zach Rabiroff
Jessica Tvordi