Fiction


Currently


2008

  • <i>The Gardens of Ciudad Ju&aacute;rez</i>, 2006

    Alone Among the Ghosts

    Marcela Valdes : Mexico

    Roberto Bolaño's last novel, 2666, is his most profound exploration of art and infamy, craft and crime, the writer and the totalitarian state.

  • City of Shards

    Siddhartha Deb : Lebanon

    Elias Khoury and the literature of witness.

  • Unreal City

    Benjamin Lytal

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

  • Kelly Link

    Back Talk: Kelly Link

    Christine Smallwood

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

  • Credenzas of Fragmentation

    Natasha Wimmer

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

  • Marilynne Robinson

    Homing Patterns

    William Deresiewicz : Books

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

  • Salman Rushdie

    Meetings, Purchases, Pleasures

    William Deresiewicz

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

  • Things Fall Apart

    Fatema Ahmed

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

  • Tight Corners

    Elaine Blair

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

  • In the Lost Realm of the Real

    Carl Bromley

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

  • Searching for Traces

    Ruth Scurr

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

  • Dead Letters

    William Deresiewicz

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

  • The Age of the Wooden Spoon

    The Age of the Wooden Spoon

    Benjamin Lytal

    The radical subjectivity and reckless politics of Norwegian writer Knut Hamsun find new expression in recent English translations and editions. Subscribe

  • The Counter-Family

    Chris Lehmann

    British author Jonathan Coe departs from grand social transformations and turns to the domestic sphere in The Rain Before It Falls.

  • Man Out of Time

    Mark Sorkin

    In Hari Kunzru's captivating new novel My Revolutions, a former anti-Vietnam terrorist is dredged up after half a lifetime underground.

  • Where Now? Let's Go!

    Joanna Scott

    The nonsensical funhouse of Donald Barthelme's fiction celebrates the cosmic joke of life and the pathos of grappling with it.

  • Seems Like Old Times

    Gary Phillips

    This week's episode: Dieter Countryman reminisces about the good ol' days of selling the first Gulf War; Connie Waller gets his freak on in Vegas.

  • Internal Combustion

    Melissa Holbrook Pierson

    Could Russell Banks be retooling himself as a fabulist? Subscribe

  • A Garden of Monsters

    Carmen Boullosa : South America

    The imaginary fascists in Roberto Bolaño's ironic encyclopedia Nazi Literature in the Americas bear a complex relationship to reality.

  • Foes

    William Deresiewicz : South Africa

    J.M. Coetzee, now out with a new novel and a collection of essays, reminds us what a master he is at turning life into narrative.

  • The Dot Matrix

    Laila Lalami : Iraq

    In I'jaam: An Iraqi Rhapsody, novelist Sinan Antoon explores themes of love, loss, identity and resistance in the face of political oppression. Subscribe

  • Fly Papers

    Lorna Scott Fox : France

    An English translation of Lydie Salvayre's The Power of Flies demonstrates how this novelist and practicing psychiatrist has earned more nervous respect than love in France.

2007

  • Car Talk

    Colin Fleming

    A mock-heroic travelogue by Julio Cortázar and his wife captures the contemplative life on the road. Subscribe

  • Memorable Gestures

    Tony Eprile

    Michael Ondaatje shows off his trademark narrative tricks in his new novel Divisadero, but the magic is wearing thin. Subscribe

  • Many Exits

    Matt Weiland

    Philip Roth's Exit Ghost considers whether we're astonished by death or the life that precedes it. Subscribe

Most Read

Issues »

Most Emailed

Issues »

Popular Topics