February 1, 2026 Bookmarks Eggs Delicately Balanced By Sophie Haigney and Olivia Kan-Sperling Each month, we comb through dozens of soon-to-be-published books, for ideas and good writing for the Review’s site. Often we’re struck by particular paragraphs or sentences from the galleys that stack up on our desks and spill over onto our shelves. We sometimes share them with each other on Slack, and we thought, for a change, that we might share them with you. Here are some we found this month. —Sophie Haigney, web editor, and Olivia Kan-Sperling, associate editor From Ann Rower’s Lee & Elaine (Semiotext(e)), first published by Serpent’s Tail in 2002: For months after she’d put her signature bubblegum vaginas on his mailbox. From Daniel Poppick’s The Copywriter (Scribner): “I’m done,” Ruth says over a quarter of a plate of roasted cauliflower, delivering the words like a lithe boxer elegantly working a punching bag. One of our cats, the bullseye tabby, jumps on the table and in a single motion I mindlessly pick him up and throw him on the couch, where he emits a soft meep upon impact. Lucy reaches for Ruth’s plate. “Oh, I meant I’m done with poetry,” says Ruth. “But you can take the plate. Thank you, it was delicious.” Read More
January 29, 2026 Arts & Culture On Broadway: Four Musicals and Me By Kevin Champoux All photographs courtesy of the author. One Easter Sunday, I attended a screening of the film Jesus Christ Superstar put on by my friend at the Brooklyn, New York, office of the well-respected literary magazine where she worked. There were about eight people there. All appeared to be treating the event as a substitute for church service: something they felt obliged to do. A French and comparative literature Ph.D. student made a point to tell me that he did not “get” musicals and was not expecting much from the film. He told me this, I think, because he knew I occasionally write theater reviews, attend Broadway musicals, and generally engage with the medium in a way that most people who pursue advanced degrees in French—and socialize at the offices of well-respected literary magazines on warm Sundays in April—do not. In the exchange that followed, I was able to ascertain that the real scourge for him was not movie musicals, which at least fit into a larger framework of film history, but the Broadway shows that are their frequent source material. It was a problem, he said, of overblown emotion. It was not relatable. I did not mount the exhaustive defense that he maybe thought I would. But I did ask him if he enjoyed going to the opera. “Of course,” he said. My own interest in the genre should not be overstated. Most Broadway musicals I have seen courtesy of comped tickets or evenings out with my parents. All those I’ve attended of my own volition have been written in some capacity by Stephen Sondheim, who is about as intellectually prudent a favorite as one can have while still being wearily unoriginal. Still, within my milieu, it doesn’t take much to be considered a “musicals person.” I wasn’t sure I was. But I found it odd that in a world where art and fashion and literature commingled with ease, musicals remained an object of scorn. Read More
January 27, 2026 On Film The Answer Is Love: On Reds By Laurie Stone Still from the movie Reds. Screenshot from official trailer. What are we ever really fighting for? The answer is love. Love in the movies, and on the streets, and in our heads—instead of the dead people we are seeing right now. Existence is a contagion of love. That’s why you have to fast-forward through a bunch of scenes in Reds, where men are giving speeches to other men in English and Russian with those faces of certainty—not hope, but certainty—that they are right and have it all figured out. You know those men. You’ve been to those meetings with the guy in the front—it could be a faculty meeting—the guy jabbing his finger, not like Mick Jagger in a dance routine, more like Moses holding a tablet. Those guys who love the sound of their voice more than they love love. Everyone has been to one of those meetings, or hundreds of them, wondering how they were still breathing with all the air sucked out of the room. A fair number of these scenes interrupt Reds, which runs for more than three hours and has an intermission, like Lawrence of Arabia and 2001: A Space Odyssey, both excellent movies, as is Reds, if you gently fast-forward past the speeches and get back to John Reed and Louise Bryant, a love story. Read More
January 26, 2026 Home Improvements Mold and Melancholia By Madeline Cash Charles West Cope, Hope Deferred, and Hopes and Fears That Kindle Hope, via Wikimedia Commons. Public domain. In London, trash is called rubbish and taking it out is a science. There is a bag for trash, a bag for compost, and a bag for recycling, a bag that is bestowed by one’s neighbo(u)rhood council and will not be picked up if not in the proper counsel bag every other week on Wednesday between 6 P.M. and 7 P.M., which are called 18:00 and 19:00. All rubbish goes in a bin with a secure child lock that isn’t for children but for foxes. I moved to the UK with my boyfriend, who’d enrolled in graduate school in London. My work is flexible and I thought I’d tag along. I thought, It won’t be so different. They speak English, after all. Apartments are called flats and applying for a flat isn’t dissimilar, I’d imagine, from applying to the CIA, which is called MI6. If one is approved for a flat, one must order Wi-Fi from a company called EE, which will not send someone to set up your Wi-Fi if it is a bank holiday, of which there are many, or if it is raining. It is always raining. For many flats, the heating is connected to the internet, so one cannot get heat unless one gets Wi-Fi and one cannot get Wi-Fi if it is raining or a bank holiday. Beneath several blankets, my boyfriend said, “It’s like we’re living in a different era,” an era before internet and heating, a time when time moved slower. It took a month before a nonraining nonholiday came along, and with it a man from EE. The man from EE wanted a cup of tea and a biscuit. Cookies are called biscuits because there is a tariff on cookies but not on biscuits, so this is a verbal loophole for the British cookie companies to avoid higher taxes. Read More
January 23, 2026 Letters Love Letters from Lord Byron’s Boyfriend By Arden Hegele LETTER 5: October 31, 1811, Nicolas Giraud to Byron. All letters courtesy of The National Library of Scotland. Lord Byron’s bisexuality is well known—but Byron’s archive still has the power to surprise us with new evidence about this part of his private life. Here are the first full English translations of eight letters written to Byron by his boyfriend Nicolas Giraud, with whom Byron had a not-so-secret relationship in Athens in 1810 through 1811. Giraud’s letters have not been published in full before, partly because they are difficult to decipher—they are written in misspelled and ungrammatical Italian, English, and an antiquated Greek script—and partly because they trouble Byron’s legend as a great lover of women. As a teenager and young adult, Byron had several “unequal friendships,” as his associates dismissively called them, with other male youths. Written in the messy aftermath of the only such “friendship” that was unquestionably a sexual relationship, Giraud’s letters disclose the serious, romantic valences of Byron’s same-sex intimacies. They also reveal Byron’s private struggles during his years of fame. While performing the role of the straight heartthrob in public, Byron was concealing his more complex history—no matter the sacrifice to his feelings. Read More
January 22, 2026 First Person Cheating with John Cheever By Jessica Laser Photograph by Nancy Crampton. Over a morning cappuccino in a small but lively European café that spilled onto the central square of a town near the sea, I first read “The Country Husband,” my introduction to John Cheever, on a website I later discovered was inaccessible in the U.S. The website, all in Arabic except for the stories, was an arsenal of midcentury American fiction, a canon I had resisted knowing anything about. I was, at the time, in a phase of my development as a poet that I would call fiction-averse. I thought poetry was what you discovered, like a rare ore, when you unbuckled the artifice that contained language in narrative. Naturally, then, I tried to write poems that rejected anything that might pass for fiction: smooth, grammatical sentences, captivating or manipulative plotlines, and, most egregious, the implicit desire to wrangle language into utter invisibility while the reader watches a movie in her head. “The Country Husband” was, at least by reputation, so exactly what I’d been avoiding that I’m not quite sure why I chose to punish myself by reading it. The story concerns a man, Francis Weed, who lives in Cheever’s invented Westchester town, Shady Hill, with his wife and children. Weed falls in love with the babysitter, the most cliché thing a married suburban father can do. She doesn’t love him back, and he doesn’t change his life for her, and that’s the story. He must learn to live past this rupture in his heart. When I read the story, I was convalescing from an affair with a married person. I did love him back, and he didn’t change his life for me, and since you can’t heal at home from a heartbreak nobody knows about, I had gone abroad. Nothing in my life seemed to be working, and I must have searched up Cheever as part of my attempt to try the opposite of everything I had been doing. I had to admit that in the mirror “The Country Husband” held up to me, I appeared a little less broken than I felt. Writing from Francis Weed’s point of view, Cheever had, at a time when I really needed it, validated my experience of how powerful and real and obliterating extramarital love can be—even and especially for the married party. This, by the way, was years before the ubiquity of open marriages made moot the need for affairs, the way de Tocqueville has described the democratic election’s quelling the need for violent revolution. But the impulse to escape, resist, defy; the flirting with destruction, complete overhaul, change—this doesn’t go away just because one container for it has gone licit. Read More