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Birth: Three Mothers, Nine Months, and Pregnancy in America
“Prompt,” a Poem by Rebecca Foust

“Prompt,” a Poem by Rebecca Foust

Only">From the Collection Only

By Rebecca Foust | April 14, 2023

Rebecca Makkai on the Most Underutilized Tool in Fiction: Setting

Rebecca Makkai on the Most Underutilized Tool in Fiction: Setting

“Your setting is so alive, it’s almost a character!”

By Rebecca Makkai | February 24, 2023

Fleishman Is in Trouble and the Sex and the City Problem">On <emFleishman Is in Trouble and the Sex and the City Problem">

Fleishman Is in Trouble and the Sex and the City Problem">On Fleishman Is in Trouble and the Sex and the City Problem

Rebecca Ackermann Considers the Fundamental Conservatism of Taffy Brodesser-Akner’s Novel and Adaptation

By Rebecca Ackermann | February 22, 2023

Funny, Fearless, and Unafraid to Fail: Finding Creative Inspiration in Comedy Podcasts

Funny, Fearless, and Unafraid to Fail: Finding Creative Inspiration in Comedy Podcasts

Rebecca Ackermann on Learning to Write to a Soundtrack of Riffing Comedians

By Rebecca Ackermann | November 10, 2022

“The character of something.” A Poem by Rebecca Wolff

“The character of something.” A Poem by Rebecca Wolff

Slight Return">From the Collection Slight Return

By Rebecca Wolff | October 20, 2022

“Get Big Fast.” How Amazon Accelerated the Commodification of Literature

“Get Big Fast.” How Amazon Accelerated the Commodification of Literature

Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow on Monopolies in Modern Publishing

By Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow | October 3, 2022

From Nabokov to Erdrich: Reading Complex Portraits of Criminality

From Nabokov to Erdrich: Reading Complex Portraits of Criminality

Rebecca Bernard on Learning from Criminal Stories

By Rebecca Bernard | August 29, 2022

The Lies That Make Up a Marriage

The Lies That Make Up a Marriage

Rebecca Woolf on the Beginning of the End

By Rebecca Woolf | August 19, 2022

All of This: A Memoir of Death and Desire
Dark Earth
The Challenges of Writing Fiction About the “Darkest Corner of the Dark Ages”

The Challenges of Writing Fiction About the “Darkest Corner of the Dark Ages”

Rebecca Stott On Writing A Novel Set In The Abandoned Ruins Of Sixth-Century Londinium

By Rebecca Stott | July 20, 2022

Total: Stories
Writing Climate Fiction Showed Me That a Different Life is Possible

Writing Climate Fiction Showed Me That a Different Life is Possible

Rebecca Scherm on Looking a Terrifying Future in the Face

By Rebecca Scherm | April 19, 2022

Best American Male: An Essay About Masculinity. An Essay About Power.

Best American Male: An Essay About Masculinity. An Essay About Power.

Rebecca Hazelton on Contemporary Templates For Public Confession

By Rebecca Hazelton | March 10, 2022

Home/Land: A Memoir of Departure and Return
On the Holocaust’s Impact on Survivors’ Early Childhood and Memory

On the Holocaust’s Impact on Survivors’ Early Childhood and Memory

Survivors: Children’s Lives After the Holocaust by Rebecca Clifford">From This Year's Cundill History Prize Shortlisted Title Survivors: Children’s Lives After the Holocaust by Rebecca Clifford

By Rebecca Clifford | October 19, 2021

Middlemarch">The Gulf Between Aspiration and Accomplishment: Rebecca Mead on Saint Theresa and <emMiddlemarch">

Middlemarch">The Gulf Between Aspiration and Accomplishment: Rebecca Mead on Saint Theresa and Middlemarch

“Middlemarch—both the novel and the fictional town for which it is named—is limited by the constraints of ordinary life.”

By Rebecca Mead | September 15, 2021

Lauren Groff and Rebecca Makkai Talk Literary Ethics, the Loneliness of Bodies, and Writerly Friendship

Lauren Groff and Rebecca Makkai Talk Literary Ethics, the Loneliness of Bodies, and Writerly Friendship

“Writing is spooky. You’re colonizing another’s brain for as long as it takes for them to read your work.”

By Rebecca Makkai | September 8, 2021

A Day in the Life of an 11-Year-Old Spy in 1939 Berlin

A Day in the Life of an 11-Year-Old Spy in 1939 Berlin

Rebecca Donner on a Blue Knapsack as the Accessory to Espionage

By Rebecca Donner | August 9, 2021

How the Legacy of Slavery Warps the World for Black Women

How the Legacy of Slavery Warps the World for Black Women

Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts">From Rebecca Hall’s Graphic Memoir Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts

By Rebecca Hall and Hugo Martínez | June 18, 2021