Durga Chew-Bose

'When You're Writing, Everything is in Retrospect': An Interview with Durga Chew-Bose

The author of Too Much and Not the Mood on restlessness, heritable belongings and interior life. 

Things That Ordinary People Wouldn't Do: To Die For at 20

Gus Van Sant's 1995 adaptation of Joyce Maynard's novel revolved around self-control under observation. Two decades later, it feels both prescient and all the more relevant.

Notable Mugs: Marisa Tomei

"The way she inches towards enormity without overreaching, the crisp appeal of her comic timing, and her sparring temper that dodges any Sandra Bullock-type sweetheart likeness."

Family Secrets

Reading The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri, Durga Chew-Bose felt a long-abiding familiarity with the novel’s premise—one she recognized from her father’s stories—and with the author, a first-generation Bengali writer who was raised on the East Coast. Here she discovered how it is to read when the emotional stake is not strictly your own.

Lonely Palette: The Economy of Colour in Spike Jonze’s Her

Though clean by design, Her’s visual vocabulary never feels overly tailored. Its colours and imagery are deliberate, but rather than lapse into bludgeoning metaphor, they prop up a world based on comfort—both the appreciation of and the longing for.

Weirdo Disney: The Harmony Korine Career Arc

A look at the films of Harmony Korine, from the dirty brown bathwater of Gummo to the pulsing, neon Florida of his new film, Spring Breakers.