503 Episodes

  1. Amia Srinivasan: The Right to Sex

    Published: 9/17/2021
  2. Maggie Nelson: "On Freedom: Four Songs of Care and Constraint"

    Published: 9/10/2021
  3. Kaveh Akbar's "Pilgrim Bell"

    Published: 9/3/2021
  4. Rachel Greenwald Smith On Compromise

    Published: 8/27/2021
  5. Matthew Specktor’s “Always Crashing in the Same Car: On Art, Crisis, and Los Angeles, California”

    Published: 8/20/2021
  6. Nawaaz Ahmed's Radiant Fugitives

    Published: 8/13/2021
  7. Hogir Hirori, Director of Sabaya

    Published: 8/6/2021
  8. Katie Kitamura's "Intimacies"

    Published: 7/30/2021
  9. Rivka Galchen: Everybody Knows Your Mother is a Witch

    Published: 7/23/2021
  10. Claire Fuller's Unsettled Ground

    Published: 7/16/2021
  11. Zakiya Dalila Harris: The Other Black Girl

    Published: 7/9/2021
  12. Davarian L. Baldwin: In The Shadow of the Ivory Tower: How Universities Are Plundering Our Cities

    Published: 7/2/2021
  13. Kristen Arnett: With Teeth

    Published: 6/25/2021
  14. Kate Zambreno: To Write As If Already Dead; & Susan Bernofsky: Clairvoyant of the Small

    Published: 6/18/2021
  15. Joan Silber: Secrets of Happiness

    Published: 6/11/2021
  16. Carol Anderson's The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America

    Published: 6/4/2021
  17. Matthew Heineman: The Boy from Medellin

    Published: 5/28/2021
  18. Sarah Schulman: Let the Record Show ACT UP NYC, 1987-93

    Published: 5/21/2021
  19. Jacqueline Rose: On Violence and On Violence Against Women

    Published: 5/14/2021
  20. Larissa Pham's Pop Song: Adventures in Art and Intimacy

    Published: 5/7/2021

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The Los Angeles Review of Books is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting and disseminating rigorous, incisive, and engaging writing on every aspect of literature, culture, and the arts. The Los Angeles Review of Books magazine was created in part as a response to the disappearance of the traditional newspaper book review supplement, and, with it, the art of lively, intelligent long-form writing on recent publications in every genre, ranging from fiction to politics. The Los Angeles Review of Books seeks to revive and reinvent the book review for the internet age, and remains committed to covering and representing today’s diverse literary and cultural landscape.