BOOKS AND ARTS JANUARY 10, 2010
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Today is a momentous day in the history of The New Republic, and in the American literary world. We are proud to announce the appearance of The Book: An Online Review.
The literary pages of The New Republic have long been known as a home to high criticism and impassioned debate. It is our goal to extend these values to this new site, with new content--that is, new reviews, new criticism, and new arguments about fiction, history, art, politics, poetry, music, and all the other fields that matter to our culture--appearing almost daily.
In our first “issue” of The Book, you will find:
You will also find, in delightful new departments, Virginia Woolf, Vladimir Nabokov, and Lionel Trilling. (Really.) You will also find our recommendations for what you should read elsewhere in the republic of letters. And you will find more. (For a full introduction to The Book and its many features, please read “Welcome to The Book” by Isaac Chotiner, its executive editor.)
To head directly for The Book: An Online Review, go to http://www.tnr.com/book.
We have big plans. The Book is by serious people and for serious people. We intend to make it the essential destination for thoughtful, provocative, and learned criticism on the web--a great experiment in adapting the new technology to the old purposes, which in our view have lost none of their urgency and excitement.
So welcome to The Book, and not a moment too soon.
4 comments
This is a great addtion to the your website. I hope you will also make room for literary discussions on books initiated by your readers, as the New York Times used to do. This in itself should attract new subscribers to your magazine.
- jacksondyer
January 11, 2010 at 11:18am
btw: I tried posting on Wieseltier's interesting review of Roth's The Humbling but didn't find a response box. I hope you will introduce one soon.
- jacksondyer
January 11, 2010 at 11:21am
As a longtime TNR subscriber, I'm glad to see this. Now here's a question: over the years, it seems that the arts coverage in TNR has focused more and more on books. I love the book reviews, but it seems to me that there's less coverage of theatre, dance, music, visual art and architecture than there used to be. How about an online review of visual and performing arts?
- baxterjones
January 11, 2010 at 3:51pm
Wow. I am not sure what to think. It sounds great, but I don't know if I have the time for what this takes. Hope it turns out as well as I think it will. The reviews are typically things I save for later and find a month or two while looking for something to kill a slow Saturday afternoon. They usually send me off on a week long adventure. Not sure how I'll keep up on the web. The back of the book steps forward.
- CRS9TNR
January 11, 2010 at 11:08pm