Norman Spinrad’s 1972 novel “by Adolph Hitler" is a still-relevant attack on the connection between our concepts of heroism and fascism.
Read MoreNorman Spinrad’s 1972 novel “by Adolph Hitler" is a still-relevant attack on the connection between our concepts of heroism and fascism.
Read MoreSkipping Don Herron’s renowned tour, two New Yorkers try to take a walk in Hammett’s gumshoes for themselves.
Read MoreAnd you thought Joan Didion, William Faulkner and Dave Eggers only wrote books.
Read MoreYeats, Tolkien, Woolf — YouTube is a time capsule of authors’ voices you probably never thought you’d ever hear.
Read MoreProm-night jitters? Save room on your dance card for these literary misfits.
Read MoreRead an excerpt of an alternate history novel in which drugs are legal — and which was written while the author was incarcerated for his own drug-related crimes.
Read MoreWe look back on the five stories that best represent the nihilistic mythology of H. P. Lovecraft.
Read MoreAlthough he is undoubtedly the most famous fictional spy, James Bond is nowhere near the first agent of espionage in literature.
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