In Jean Rhys's novels, women exhibit a particular kind of English suffering, a perfect illustration of the female condition in the interwar years.
History
The Latest
On the shared origins of two seemingly incongruent disciplines and the language we use to explain our place in the universe.
For decades, the two maintained a warm correspondence that traces a remarkable friendship between two of the twentieth century's most formidable women.
My neighbourhood doesn't look like a place where, a century ago, hundreds of people were incinerated, and that's exactly the point.
Sequestered in a museum basement amongst pungent human skulls by Bill Clinton's Secret Service detail, you can't help but consider the history decaying around you.
Butches, Femmes, and Mobsters: Inside the world of America's early drag superstars.
With a champagne budget of (an adjusted for inflation) $200,000, the 1864 Charlottetown Conference that preceded Canadian Confederation refused to let sobriety stand in the way of a solid union.
The American novelist and war correspondent talks about his gripping new book, Lawrence in Arabia, and situates the much mythologized British leader of the Arab Revolt in the broader context of World War I, and the dark, often duplicitous maneuvers on its Eastern Front.