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Staff

Please, No More Poetry: The Poetry of derek beaulieu

By Staff × Bookcase

Iris Has Free Time

By Staff × Bookcase

29 March (1931): Sherwood Anderson to Charles Bockler

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

There are days when I am afraid of people. This is one of them…

Staff Picks: Andrew Kuo, Bill Brandt

By Staff × In Conversation

It’s as if lab scientists have data-modeled the neural pathways of a synesthete who happens to be an expert on color theory. It’s hard to think of paintings more appropriate to the Age of Nate Silver…

28 March (1947): Raymond Chandler to Edgar Carter

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

In addition to writing detective novels, Raymond Chandler enjoyed a successful career in film and television. Here, he shares some of his views on the unscriptability of Scripture with his television agent, Edgar Carter. To Edgar Carter March 28, 1947 … Continued

27 March (1894): Anton Chekhov to Lydia Mizinova

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Though you scare me by saying you are going to die soon, and you twit me for throwing you over, thanks anyway. I know perfectly well you aren’t going to die and nobody threw you over…

26 March (1928): James Joyce to Harriet Shaw Weaver

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

James Joyce was translating one of Aesop’s fables, “The Ant and the Grasshopper” for his book Finnegans Wake. In this meticulous letter to his editor and patron Harriet Shaw Weaver, he tries to explain many of his word choices by way of … Continued

25 March (1914): Franz Kafka to Felice Bauer

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Lasting from September 1912 to October 1917, Franz Kafka’s correspondence with Felice Bauer overlapped with his writing The Metamorphosis, In the Penal Colony, and the beginning of his work on The Trial.  Although stiflingly self-conscious, Kafka was a fervent womanizer, carrying on numerous … Continued

22 March (1943): Wallace Stevens to Gilbert Montague

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

Here, Stevens explains the grounding for his Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction to a former classmate. This abstract work, really more like a treatise in verse, sought to develop a narrative to fill the void left by conventional religion.    690 Asylum … Continued

21 March (1925): F. Scott Fitzgerald to John Peale Bishop

By Staff × This Day in "Lettres"

In the letter below, F. Scott Fitzgerald writes drunkenly to fellow writer John Peale Bishop, who he had known their college days at Princeton. Fitzgerald outlines a “new work, a historical play based on the life of Woodrow Wilson.”   … Continued

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