What the National Endowment for the Humanities has meant for Library of America
Megan Abbott, Jonathan Lethem, and other writers pay tribute to Philip Roth
Every generation, My Fair Lady invites us back to the ball
Library of America’s Max Rudin: Philip Roth, native son
Fifty years on, Fiddler on the Roof isn’t just a Jewish thing
Library of America mourns the death of Philip Roth, 1933–2018
Nick Offerman: Wendell Berry’s works are a multi-plattered feast
Remembering Tom Wolfe, New Journalism pioneer and champion of literary realism, 1930–2018
Flashback: When Elmore Leonard, a “rising young writer of Western novels,” debuted (sort of) in The New Yorker
Radio special hosted by Meryl Streep honors women who forever changed American poetry
Mark Twain and Emma Lazarus: Two visions of the Statue of Liberty
Recommended books (and music) by U.S. military veterans trace a century of conflict
Documentary GI Jews lends new texture to the American World War II saga
Museum exhibition: For Tennessee Williams, the play was the thing (that kept him going)
The Battle of Huế, fifty years later: the first draft of history as “a vital public service”
Richard White on Frank Norris, The Octopus, and the Southern Pacific Railroad