Lost and Forgotten
Although his own writings are little known today, Malcolm Cowley became one of the great champions of American literature.
The Insider: Malcolm Cowley and the Triumph of American Literature
by Gerald Howard
February 26, 2026 issue
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Elena Siebert
Brenda Wineapple’s most recent book is Keeping the Faith: God, Democracy, and the Trial That Riveted a Nation, about the 1925 Scopes trial. She teaches in the Creative Writing MFA program at Columbia. (February 2026)
Lost and Forgotten
Although his own writings are little known today, Malcolm Cowley became one of the great champions of American literature.
The Insider: Malcolm Cowley and the Triumph of American Literature
by Gerald Howard
February 26, 2026 issue
A Helluva Town
A new history of New York City during World War II captures the glory, tawdriness, poverty, narcissism, beauty, and grime of this “aggregation of villages.”
Gotham at War: A History of New York City from 1933 to 1945
by Mike Wallace
October 9, 2025 issue
Peaceable Revolutions
In her history of American social movements, Linda Gordon argues that they are vital and transformative partnerships that, by challenging the status quo, are indispensable to the health of the nation.
Seven Social Movements That Changed America
by Linda Gordon
April 10, 2025 issue
In Search of the Real Hannah Crafts
The Bondwoman’s Narrative is thought to be the first novel by a Black woman to describe slavery from the inside, but only recently have scholars discovered her true identity.
The Life and Times of Hannah Crafts: The True Story of The Bondwoman’s Narrative
by Gregg Hecimovich, with a foreword by Henry Louis Gates Jr.
August 15, 2024 issue
Stifled Rage
Louisa May Alcott worked obsessively to become a successful writer, which meant that despite her gift for tart observation she often retreated into homilies and platitudes.
A Strange Life: Selected Essays of Louisa May Alcott
edited and with an introduction by Liz Rosenberg, and a preface by Jane Smiley
April 18, 2024 issue
‘The Voice of Unfiltered Spirit’
In the poetry of Jones Very, whom his contemporaries considered “eccentric” and “mad” and who often believed the Holy Spirit was speaking through him, the self is detached from everything by an intoxicated egoism.
God’s Scrivener: The Madness and Meaning of Jones Very
by Clark Davis
February 8, 2024 issue
At Odds with Two Worlds
Susanna Moore writes of the past with quiet insight, through the eyes of women who frequently move from a form of innocence to some collision with history.
The Lost Wife
by Susanna Moore
May 25, 2023 issue
Living in Words
A new biography explores the life and work of the influential abolitionist Lydia Maria Child, who wrote prodigiously about the social, political, and cultural issues of her time.
Lydia Maria Child: A Radical American Life
by Lydia Moland
November 3, 2022 issue
A Fable of Agency
Kristen Green’s The Devil’s Half Acre recounts the story of a fugitive slave jail, and the enslaved woman, Mary Lumpkin, who came to own it.
The Devil’s Half Acre: The Untold Story of How One Woman Liberated the South’s Most Notorious Slave Jail
by Kristen Green
May 26, 2022 issue
New England Ecstasies
The transcendentalists thought all human inspiration was divine, all nature a miracle.
The Transcendentalists and Their World
by Robert A. Gross
March 10, 2022 issue
Dickinson’s Improvisations
A new edition of Emily Dickinson’s Master letters highlights what remains blazingly intense and mysterious in her work.
Writing in Time: Emily Dickinson’s Master Hours
by Marta Werner
July 1, 2021 issue
A Posthumous Life
The great-grandson of a president and the grandson of another, Henry Adams struggled to break free of a personal history intimately tied to that of the country.
The Last American Aristocrat: The Brilliant Life and Improbable Education of Henry Adams
by David S. Brown
April 8, 2021 issue
Modernist, Humanist, Compromised Faulkner
Faulkner’s chroniclers have to reconcile the novelist’s often repellent political positions with the extraordinary meditations on race, violence, and cruelty in his fiction.
The Life of William Faulkner: The Past Is Never Dead, 1897–1934
by Carl Rollyson
The Life of William Faulkner: This Alarming Paradox, 1935–1962
by Carl Rollyson
The Saddest Words: William Faulkner’s Civil War
by Michael Gorra
January 14, 2021 issue
Longfellow’s Gentle Phantoms
Cross of Snow: A Life of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
by Nicholas A. Basbanes
October 22, 2020 issue
Our First Authoritarian Crackdown
Wendell Bird’s ‘Criminal Dissent: Prosecutions Under the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798’
Criminal Dissent: Prosecutions Under the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798
by Wendell Bird
July 2, 2020 issue
Dress Rehearsal for the Revolution
American Demagogue: The Great Awakening and the Rise and Fall of Populism
by J.D. Dickey
March 12, 2020 issue
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