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@LAReviewofBooks

A multimedia literary and cultural arts magazine with an enduring commitment to the written word.

Los Angeles, CA
Menyertai 2010 Mac

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  1. Cannibalism is visible today in the fear of underclasses, as if there’s only so much to go around. On Goya:

  2. Hurricane Harvey is as close as the Trump presidency is going to come to a deus ex machina:

  3. Linda Kinstler reports from Navahrudak, Belarus, a town with a deep history and a link to the Trump administration:

  4. "'This is more than a riot,' stated a Detroit police officer. 'This is war.'" Scott Kurashige writes:

  5. The Catholic Church reached a political peak in the US during the Obama administration. writes:

  6. Alexia Underwood interviewed Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, author of KINTU:

  7. Jillian Tamaki's BOUNDLESS plays with the malleable conventions of graphic storytelling. Sarah Chihaya writes:

  8. To be Cuban is, in many ways, to wish to be someone and somewhere else. Dan Lopez on Achy Obejas:

  9. "There’s something dreamlike about hitting the open road and becoming a hobo." An interview with Cecil Castellucci:

  10. Can art save us from fundamentalism?

  11. James Baldwin was a literary blues singer. Clifford Thompson writes:

  12. Read Silviano Santiago's "The Cosmopolitanism of the Poor," translated by Magdalena Edwards and Paulo Lemos Horta:

  13. “Exile inevitably calls into question what it means to be Cuban—on and off the island; then, now, and in the future”

  14. Navahrudak, Belarus was known as poet Adam Mickiewicz's hometown, until Jared Kushner gave it a new claim to fame:

  15. Early 20th-century US was not just racist, but "the leading racist jurisdiction" and a model for the Nazis:

  16. 'Voyage to the Beginning of the World' dramatizes types of poverty which are often erased:

  17. Silviano Santiago on the stable, anachronistic Portuguese village, and the unstable, postmodern global village:

  18. Cannibalism is visible today in the fear of underclasses, as if there’s only so much to go around. On Goya:

  19. “Tell Jared there’s a standing invitation, but maybe don’t bring Trump.” On the Kushners' ancestral Belarusian home:

  20. Linda Kinstler reports from Navahrudak, Belarus, a town with a deep history and a link to the Trump administration:

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