Issue #33
Issue #32
- Te Wiki o te Reo Māori.
- What's in your kete?
- They called her the witch. >>Hurricane Season.
- Are these the best local book designs this year?
- Book for Word.
- Even the simplest words have secrets. >>Homesick.
- An anthropologist's perspective. >>Magdalena.
- Attend or "attend" the NZ Young Writers' Festival.
- On Nathalie Léger. >>By Nathalie Léger.
- Q&A with Issa Watanabe. >>Migrants.
- "I somehow became caught up in my grandfather the way one gets caught in rain.'' >>Minor Monuments.
- Non-fiction's lost performative.
- A digitised complete run of the influential 1960s magazine Avant Garde.
- All the better to hear you with.
- Creative non-fiction writing prompts.
- Survival. >>Sprigs. >>Nothing to See.
- The doozie quotuient. >>The Swimmers.
- Kafka's characters have no choice.
- Hone Tuwhare recordings. >>Small holes in the silence.
- Cooking with Calvino.
- Reading aloud allowed.
- A story in one picture.
- Sarraute gets her due. >>Thomas on Tropisms.
- An Assyrian library.
- 36 metaphors for translation.
- Suppressing information.
- The Blue Ticket playlist. >>Your Blue Ticket.
- Enter the Garden of Earthly Delights.
- The judges on the winner of the 2020 International Booker Prize. >>More about the book and its author. >>Read the book!
- Can a city be feminist? >>Feminist City.
- Leprosy of the soul. >>Boredom (live).
- Beyond hygge. >>Wild Swims.
- The present haunted by the past. >>Thomas reviews Minor Detail.
- To each book its own cake. >>To you your own ducks.
- Demystifying the writer's fear of failure.
- "Have you been translated by men?" >>Books by Harwicz.
- Why does anyone write?
- Patricia Lockwood: insane after Coronavirus?
- Hurrah for librarians!
- A century of Shakespeare & Co.
- The beautiful cosmos of Ivor Cutler.
- Frog and Toad tentatively go outside after months in self-quarantine.
- The words we choose — on translating the books on the International Booker short list. >>Find out about the books. >>Countdown!
- "The emotional relation we have with reality is part of the truth." >>Melchor. >>Herrera.
- At the bookshop (1860s—1960s).
- Self searches for self.
- Has self-awareness gone too far?
- Anything but rest and relaxation. >>Death in Her Hands.
- Sentence structures.
- Get ready for the Māori Language Moment.
- Opening Louise Bourgeois's suitcase. >>Have you read this?
- Social distancing in movie posters.
- 13 Ways of looking at flash fiction.
- Frank Bidart's apartment is full of books. >>Half Light.
- Long overdue.
>>
- Zadie Smith on writing in the pandemic. >>Intimations.
- Nathalie Sarraute: Between Genders and Genres. >>Thomas on Tropisms.
- A poem by Tony Beyer.
- "If something is usually done in novels but I can’t actively justify doing it, then I don’t do it." >>Exciting Times.
- Olga Tokarczuk absorbs stories. >>All squeezed out.
- Self-exposure.
- Inside the New York Public Library's last secret apartments.
- How animated!
- Alternatives to being a "writer's writer".
- All life long, the same questions, the same answers.
- Jacqueline Rose on The Plague. >>Popular Plague.
- Marlon and Jake read dead people.
- What to pack for Siberia. >>Don't lose your piano in Siberia.
- Tove Jansson falls in love.
- Writing about not writing.
- Language as a virus. >>Thomas reviews Die, My Love.
- English has its own music.
- "The greatest menace to the writer is the reader."
- Verismilitude — Melinda Harvey's Cuskian 'review' of Cusks. >>Read Thomas's Cuskian 'reviews' of these books.
- A broken mirror. >>Books by Ananda Devi.
- "I do wonder to what extent writing about motherhood is actually writing about being mothered." >>Your blue ticket. >>And some burnt sugar.
- What to do this Wednesday at 6 PM.
- A little fellow with a big head. >>Thomas reviews The Book of Disquiet.
- The bookcase that converts into a coffin (useful).
- The 2020 Edinburgh International Book Festival will be held on your sofa (and it's free).
- Confessions of a jaded bookseller.
- Billy bloody Apple. >>The Mirror Steamed Over.
- The Dance Prone playlist. >>Find out more about Dance Prone.
- Starling #10.
- On drawing babies. >>On making babies.
- "I try to write a sentence as unbudging and fully itself as some object sitting on a shelf in my office.">>The Dominant Animal.
- The sentence is a lonely place.
- The Silver Age of Russian poetry.
- Grace Paley!
- Silence to Silence.
- Blanchot at home. >>Thomas reviews The Writing of the Disaster.
- How many words are there in the English language?
- Who owns Kafka?
Issue #24
Issue #23
Issue #22