Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers,” by Adrienne Rich, is a blazing portrait of an artist and her work. Our critic A.O. Scott admires its ...
Why do we love to drink wine? As we’re slap-bang in the middle of Lent, it occurs to me that rather than tempt you (should ...
Poetry should be celebrated every day of the year, but this World Poetry Day, we'd like to take a moment to introduce you to ...
Two poems from the new collection Clay Eaters by Gregory Kan, launched this week at Unity Books Wellington. Satellite view of ...
Saxophonist Javon Jackson plays at Sculler’s Jazz Club in Boston on March 22nd. His newest albums include the collaboration ...
as Frost, who had every reason to veil his sexual velleities for his friend’s wife when he wrote about them in public, would ...
In A24's latest screenplay book, Celine Song's luminous 2023 gem is further examined and unpacked. Read the full excerpt.
A forgotten copy of Shakespeare’s famous Sonnet 116 was found tucked away in a 17th-century manuscript in the Oxford Library.
Charles Baudelaire is our most religious 19th-century poet. It’s just that his poetry does religion in the mode of anti-religion.
In the midst of turbulent times, it can be hard not to fixate on the troubles of the present moment. Here's how hope can ...
By accepting that love can be both steady and electric, we open ourselves up to a richer, more fulfilling form of intimacy.
For generations, society has dictated who women should be and how they should behave. But when women conform too much to these expectations, the same society steps in to correct them.