Everett pulls off a masterly linguistic confection, in which enslaved people use Black English only as a wary affectation.
February is about more than romance, and this excitginb batch of new fantasy releases is more than proof of that.
God Comes with a Hair Dryer by Anandi Kar is an anthology of poems brimming with nostalgia, resilience, and a yearning for ...
Leah Koch, a co-owner of the romance bookstore, describes how the genre has changed and what makes it special.
The 1980s was a decade known for the birth of the last of Generation X and big-hair bands. It also produced some of the best ...
Ashley M. Jones, the Poet Laureate of Alabama, looks forward to sharing her poetry as part of the Hoag Lecture Series at the ...
Our film critic reviews the animated category’s candidates, which are playing at Coolidge Corner, and picks his choice to win ...
Chatbots are rapidly changing how we connect to each other—and ourselves. We’re never going back.
How the University of Miami’s Special Collections library came to possess one of its rarest, most valuable works — three ...
It’s often deemed the first color, the strongest color, the color that stands for color itself. So why does it keep slipping ...
In the latest episode of "The Envelope" video podcast, director Coralie Fargeat explains how she prepared star Demi Moore to film "The Substance" and "The Brutalist" filmmaker Brady Corbet discusses ...
Gay actor Rupert Everett has authored anoter book, "The American No," a collection of seven stories and a screenplay that ...
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