Epstein, Marías, and the Function of Fiction
I understand that by reading late in the night, I am transformed into what I am reading.
I understand that by reading late in the night, I am transformed into what I am reading.
In A Defense of Monarcy, six authors present the ancient Christian values symbolized in the British crown.
Why isn’t the public ever trusted with the details of a criminal unless he’s a working-class, white man?
Nuclear is the ugly sister. It’s the Cinderella, I should say. It’s not cool to do research there, not regarded as a major source of energy, something to be celebrated.
Jane Austen helps us to see that evil is a very ordinary thing.
I understand that by reading late in the night, I am transformed into what I am reading.
In A Defense of Monarcy, six authors present the ancient Christian values symbolized in the British crown.
Why isn’t the public ever trusted with the details of a criminal unless he’s a working-class, white man?
Nuclear is the ugly sister. It’s the Cinderella, I should say. It’s not cool to do research there, not regarded as a major source of energy, something to be celebrated.
Jane Austen helps us to see that evil is a very ordinary thing.
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