The Most Infamous Narcissist in Literary History Gets a Smartphone
A new stage production of The Picture of Dorian Gray conveys the cost of posturing online.

A new stage production of The Picture of Dorian Gray conveys the cost of posturing online.
Why novelists love to imagine great historical figures as detectives
Yáng Shuāng-zǐ’s Taiwan Travelogue shows how colonization shapes a country’s culinary landscape.
A provocative 1970s novel reads like a contemporary cry for freedom from the expectations of others.
In this novel, Prague is impish, tyrannical—and alive.
Dorothy Sayers’s most famous character is a detective who solves crimes with elegance—but he finds the deeper enigmas of human beings always out of reach.
A good group biography details with curiosity the ways, trivial and tremendous, that humans influence one another.
Karolina Pavlova’s A Double Life examines internalized oppression—and insists on the independence of the unconscious mind.