art collecting

  • Feature

    Feature

    THE UNWINDING, by George Packer. If there is hope in these stories, it lies in the resilience of the ordinary characters Packer writes about with empathy, patience, and respect—in what he calls “the ability of people to survive in the middle of strong winds blowing.”

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    SHRAPNEL by William Wharton. Shrapnel wounds haphazardly—it can glance off the surface or lodge deep in the body. In William Wharton’s World War II memoir, it becomes a metaphor for the war’s psychic impact.

  • Feature

    Page-Turner at The New Yorker, July 1 2014. Uncovering the story of Ted Peckham and his thriving male-escort service in 1930s New York.

  • Feature

    Feature

    Poets & Writers, May/June 2014. With their new magazine, Scratch, Jane Friedman and Manjula Martin are busting through the last literary taboo: money.

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    THE STEADY RUNNING OF THE HOUR, by Justin Go. “The plot, with its combination of world war, doomed romance and exotic locations, seems designed to catch the attention of Hollywood producers in search of another “English Patient.”

  • Interview

    Interview

    BARBARA EHRENREICH, author of “Living with a Wild God”. “It’s rare to come across a memoir, perhaps especially by a woman writer, that is so much more focused on a philosophical coming of age than with emotional or sexual discovery.”

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    THE SCARLET SISTERS, by Myra MacPherson. “MacPherson hammers home the point that, even in 2014, powerful men treat women’s bodies as political bargaining chips. These Victorian sisters’ blast of protest against a restrictive and hypocritical status quo remains something to celebrate.”

  • Feature

    Feature

    THE GREAT WAR, By Joe Sacco. The panorama darkens as we move from behind-the-lines activity to the combat zone, from preparations to attack: a dark-grey wash marks nightfall, with small white patches picking out candlelit dugouts and distant explosions.

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    CARELESS PEOPLE, by Sarah Churchwell. It is art that eases our frustrations with a plot in which the “careless” escape and the dreamers are cut down, and it is to art that we are left wanting, ceaselessly, to return.

  • Feature

    Feature

    THE ART GENOME PROJECT. At first glance, Artsy.net looks like the minimalist homepage of a wealthy museum. But it’s what you can’t see—how the images are categorised and organised—that sets the site apart.

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    THE HEIR APPARENT, by Jane Ridley. It’s hard not to see parallels between Bertie’s fate and that of his great-great-grandson Prince Charles, now 65: to spend adult life searching for something to do while waiting for Mother to die.

  • Feature

    Feature

    FASCIST SYMPATHIES. Unable to stabilize the market or the world, readers turned inward and saw themselves anew—as fixable machines, captives of an unbridled will or endlessly renewable resources.

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    BOOK OF AGES, by Jill Lepore. This luminous story of the life of Benjamin Franklin’s sister is stitched together from fragments and scraps, a life’s “remains”: literature and descendants.

  • Interview

    Interview

    JESMYN WARD, author of “Men We Reaped.” “Part of what I’m trying to accomplish in the book is to shock people out of their complacency.”

  • Review Essay

    Review Essay

    SPARTA, by Roxana Robinson. The unit fragments and the soldier finds himself alone, more deeply alone than he was before he enlisted, more alone than he has ever been.

  • Feature

    Feature

    ON MARJORIE HILLIS. “Live Alone and Like It” is a brisk and bracing self-help guide for women who, by choice or accident, find themselves “settling down to a solitary existence.”

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    I AWAIT THE DEVIL’S COMING, by Mary MacLane. It’s 1901 and she’s nineteen years old, stuck in Butte, Montana, and bored to the point of desperation.

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    ZELDA SAYRE was 17 when she met Scott Fitzgerald, a green-eyed Yankee from Princeton, at a military ball in Montgomery, Ala., the town she ruled like a princess.

  • Interview

    Interview

    JIM GAFFIGAN, author of “Dad is Fat.” “I’m not one of these people who says, “I hate my kids,” and I’m not all sappy about my kids – I’m just kind of befuddled. Doing my best.”

  • Interview

    Interview

    ALAN HUFFMAN, author of “Here I Am.” “He was interested in what conflict revealed about individuals, whether they were soldiers, rebels, or civilians caught in the crossfire.”

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    THE BOOK OF MY LIVES, by Aleksandar Hemon. Hemon is a smart, funny, and cynical eyewitness, who writes honestly about his near-suicidal dread of what war would do to his family, city, and country.

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    THE GIRLS OF ATOMIC CITY, by Denise Kiernan. Kiernan’s characters represent a cross-section of the society of Oak Ridge, whose roles ranged from janitors, nurses, and secretaries to mathematicians, chemists, and physicists.

  • Interview

    Interview

    ROSIE SCHAAP, author of “Drinking with Men.” “There’s an assumption that a woman on her own at the bar must be sad, or must have nowhere else to be. Or must be looking to hook up, or to drink for free. None of these perceptions sits well with me.”

  • Book Review

    Book Review

    DOTTER OF HER FATHER’S EYES, by Mary M. and Bryan Talbot. Like Lucia Joyce, Mary learns early on that her father’s work means that his moods and outbursts must be quietly tolerated.