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Netflix dropped Dept. Q this May, and it’s already stealing the spotlight, although honestly, it’s easy to see why.
In V.E. Schwab’s “Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil,” three women turned into vampires are thrown into a centuries-long drama of love, power and hunger.
The movie retellings are great. Pride and Prejudice is a joy to revisit. But it is a frothy, far-less-popular novel that draws me back over and over: Northanger Abbey.
In her essay Going Global: Filmic Appropriation of Jane Austen in India, critic Meenakshi Bharat writes that Indian ...
The cold war was built on assumptions that Americans and Russians lived opposite lives. ‘What if that was a lie?’ the Irish ...
Celebrated English novelist Frederick Forsyth passed away on Monday, 9 June, at the age of 86 in Buckinghamshire, England ...
As a faculty member at Bread Loaf, the oldest and most prestigious writing conference in the country, Sonoma author Lynn Freed would get the attention of her students by arriving elegantly dressed and ...
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AllAfrica on MSNAfrica: 3 Things Ngũgĩ Wa Thiong'o Taught Me - Language Matters, Stories Are Universal, Africa Can ThriveCelebrated Kenyan writer and decolonial scholar Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o passed away on 28 May at the age of 87. Many tributes and obituaries have appeared across the world, but we wanted to know more about ...
Simon Thompson looks at the story behind ten great unmade films… “What if…?” scenarios are something which truly gnaw at the human psyche, in almost every context. Socially, romantically, and ...
Buckley: The Life and the Revolution That Changed America, by Sam Tanenhaus. Penguin, 1,040 pages.
Step inside and you’re immediately enveloped in what can only be described as the physical manifestation of comfort. The interior walls are adorned with exposed brick that tells stories of decades ...
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