Highsmith in NYC
Joan Schenkar retraces Patricia Highsmith’s footsteps — actual and fictional — through Greenwich Village.
Joan Schenkar retraces Patricia Highsmith’s footsteps — actual and fictional — through Greenwich Village.
The talented Victor LaValle, whose Big Machine I want to write about at length, discusses his favorite books of the year.
My only complaint about MFK Fisher’s delightfully bossy How to Cook a Wolf, a hard-times cooking manual first published in 1942, is that it has given me something new to worry about doing wrong: boiling water. “It can be said,” Fisher admits, “with few people to argue the point, that water boils when it has been heated to two hundred . . .
Grigori Perelman, reclusive mathematician, turned down the Fields Medal — the “mathematics Nobel” — and then abandoned the field altogether.
Get your freak on, Louisa May: The author of Little Women was edgier than we’ve been led to believe.