Fiction

Unreal City: Rilke’s Phantasmagoric Fiction Unreal City: Rilke’s Phantasmagoric Fiction

An appraisal of Rainer Maria Rilke's novel, The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge.

Nov 6, 2008 / Books & the Arts / Benjamin Lytal

Back Talk: Kelly Link

Back Talk: Kelly Link Back Talk: Kelly Link

The novelist and publisher discusses zombies, teen romance and her reaction to being labeled a "New Weird" writer.

Oct 30, 2008 / Books & the Arts / Christine Smallwood

Credenzas of Fragmentation: Lobo Antunes’s Decadent Despair Credenzas of Fragmentation: Lobo Antunes’s Decadent Despair

In António Lobo Antunes's new novel, a lost boy despairs of finding a real family in the wasteland of his past.

Oct 8, 2008 / Books & the Arts / Natasha Wimmer

Homing Patterns: Marilynne Robinson’s Fiction Homing Patterns: Marilynne Robinson’s Fiction

Marilynne Robinson's new novel explores faith, loneliness and the national passion play of race.

Sep 24, 2008 / Books & the Arts / William Deresiewicz

Salman Rushdie’s Imaginative New ‘Enchantress of Florence’ Salman Rushdie’s Imaginative New ‘Enchantress of Florence’

Salman Rushdie probes the limits of the imagination to produce his most coherent and readable novel.

Aug 27, 2008 / Books & the Arts / William Deresiewicz

Things Fall Apart Things Fall Apart

With two bodies of work recently reissued, now is a good time to wonder why novelist Patrick Hamilton is worth remembering.

May 29, 2008 / Books & the Arts / Fatema Ahmed

Tight Corners Tight Corners

When Richard Price moves from the urban ruins of New Jersey to the gentrified Lower East Side of Lush Life, things get complicated.

May 22, 2008 / Books & the Arts / Elaine Blair

In the Lost Realm of the Real In the Lost Realm of the Real

Michael Dibdin's detective Zen series sounds a melancholy note for an old Italy rife with political enemies.

May 22, 2008 / Books & the Arts / Carl Bromley

Searching for Traces Searching for Traces

There was little enthusiasm for revisiting the camps in Communist Hungary. Author Imre Kertész refracts that reluctance in fictional form.

May 22, 2008 / Books & the Arts / Ruth Scurr

Dead Letters Dead Letters

Austrian novelist Stefan Zweig saw himself as a Freud of fiction--a fellow spelunker in the caverns of the heart.

May 22, 2008 / Books & the Arts / William Deresiewicz

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