Wicked” doesn’t need a movie adaptation to be relevant — it’s already a cultural phenomenon, even before the behemoth ...
Billy, associate professor of French and Francophone Studies, recently accepted the 2024 Ulloa Prize from the Mountain ...
Bay Street Theater's production of "A Streetcar Named Desire" opened this week with a standing ovation. This performance of the classic Tennessee Williams play is Explosive, riveting, and pure ...
The Mother Must Die' from Koraly Dimitriadis is a collection of short stories tracking intergenerational families, motherhood ...
If made official, the proposed rule would give Part D and Medicaid beneficiaries expanded coverage to antiobesity drugs ...
New biography reveals how India’s first woman anthropologist confronted Eugen Fischer’s racist theories in 1920s Germany, ...
The 40 pages of James Joyce’s The Dead, published 110 years ago as the final short story in Dubliners, have almost as much ...
Leyla Brittan '19 encourages aspiring authors to keep writing even when you aren’t creating the most beautiful prose, finding the beauty in the messy parts.
Here are the year’s notable fiction, poetry and nonfiction, chosen by the staff of The New York Times Book Review.
Juhea Kim’s riveting novel follows a ballerina in search of a comeback.
David Rowell writes about how the potent mixture of nostalgia, greed and streaming has shaped how we interact with music.
Book review by Dr Anne Sarzin Political scientist, author and public intellectual extraordinaire, Robert Manne has engaged ...