- Jessi Cruickshank, “This is What Happens When the #Mendes Army Attacks” (Flare)
- Chris Koentges, “The Lonely End of the Rink” (Slate)
- Ben Yagoda, “Does Novel Now Mean Any Book?” (Slate)
Tag Archives: Essays
Some things I read this month
- Nicole Dennis-Benn, “Innocence Is a Privilege: Black Children Are Not Allowed to Be Innocent in America” (Electric Literature)
- Jeffrey Meyers, “Iris Murdoch, The Art of Fiction No. 117” (The Paris Review)
- Lynn Stuart Parramore, “The Social Death Penalty: Why Being Ostracized Hurts Even More Than Bullying” (Alternet)
- Jordan G. Teicher, “Rarely Seen Color Images of America Emerging From the Great Depression” (Slate)
- Jess Zimmerman, “Hunger Makes Me” (Hazlitt)
Some things I read this month
- Alexis Coe, “Thank You for Not Being Totally Worthless” (Lenny)
- Michael Lista, “Poetry Slam” (The Walrus)
Some things I read this month
- “Susan Cain and Molly Ringwald Discuss Introversion on Set and at Home” (Heleo)
- Helena Fitzgerald, “The Fierce Triumph of Loneliness” (Catapult)
Some things I read this month
- Kerry Gold, “A Modernist gem falls victim to Vancouver’s housing market” (The Globe and Mail)
- Sarah Knapton, “Staff should start work at 10am to avoid ‘torture’ of sleep deprivation” (The Telegraph)
- Merrill Perlman, “‘Chortle,’ and other words invented by Lewis Carroll” (Columbia Journalism Review)
Some things I read this month
- Kerry Gold, “The Highest Bidder” (The Walrus)
- Jeffrey Meyers, “Iris Murdoch, The Art of Fiction No. 117” (The Paris Review)
- Maria Popova, “How to Save Your Soul: Willa Cather on Productivity vs. Creativity, Selling Out, and the Life-Changing Advice That Made Her a Writer” (Brainpickings)
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Rena Silverman, “Photographing Ikea, Some Assembly Required” (The New York Times)
Some things I read this month
- Bear Bellinger, “I’m a black actor. Here’s how inequality works when you’re not famous.” (Vox)
- Alexandra Eyle, “W. D. Snodgrass, The Art of Poetry No. 68” (The Paris Review)
- Shannon Keating, “The Year We Imagined The End Of The Closet” (Buzzfeed)
- Soraya Roberts, “Winona, Forever” (Hazlitt)
Some things I read this month
- Peter Cooper, ““It’s no longer just a ‘little-boy thing,’”: There’s a huge increase in ADHD diagnosis in young women”” (Salon)
- Alex Espinoza, “Beautiful Lies” (Los Angeles Review of Books)
- Melissa A. Fabello, “5 Ways to Bring Feminism to Your Education” (Everyday Feminism)
- Meagan Francis, “The Art of Natural Self-Promotion” (Quiet Revolution)
- Danny Funt, “Alana Massey’s journey to being taken seriously” (Columbia Journalism Review)
- Megan Garber, “In Defense of Instagramming Your Food” (The Atlantic)
- Michael Godsey, “Why Introverted Teachers are Burning Out” (The Atlantic)
- Andrew Pilsch, “When the Coffee Machine Is Just a Human” (The Atlantic)
- Molly Reiniger, “The Re-Read: A Wrinkle in Time” (Feed Your Need to Read)
- Anna Reisman, “The Last Rotation” (Slate)
- Virginia Sole-Smith, “Escape From the Internet!” (New York)
Some things I read this month
- Jodi Ettenberg, “Travel and the Present Tense” (Daily 800)
- Annie Hartnett, “We’re more than confirmation numbers: What I learned selling books to strangers” (Salon)
- Alexandra Kimball, “Unpregnant: The silent, secret grief of miscarriage” (The Globe and Mail)
- Jacob Lambert, “Thirty Minutes at a Used-Book Sale” (The Millions)
Some things I read this month
- Stephen Burt, “Jem and Gender Theory” (The New Yorker)
- Elaine Filadelfo, “Leveling both sides of the playing field” (Medium)
- Melissa Jeltson, “The Remarkable Journey From Identical Twins To Brother And Sister” (The Huffington Post)
- Anne Helen Petersen, “The Keys to Enya’s Kingdom” (Buzzfeed)
- Nick Ripatrazone, “Why Writers Run” (The Atlantic)
- Amber Scorah, “A Baby Dies at Day Care, and a Mother Asks Why She Had to Leave Him So Soon” (The New York Times)