by Tricia Khleif
Schuster makes a point of exploring a quieter, more devastating and more universal experience. “Failure,” the author said in an interview with Levitt, “is more interesting, dramatically, than success . . .” Continue reading
by Tricia Khleif
Schuster makes a point of exploring a quieter, more devastating and more universal experience. “Failure,” the author said in an interview with Levitt, “is more interesting, dramatically, than success . . .” Continue reading
by Juhi Singhal
Whether you are lamenting the burden of—or perhaps grateful for—The Day Job, know that you are in good company. Continue reading
by Vicraj Gill
It’s hard to think of a time when Vladimir Nabokov and Gustave Flaubert were obscure names. But neither Flaubert’s The Temptation of Anthony nor Nabokov’s The Tragedy of Mister Morn made any waves when they were first written Continue reading