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- 1From:New Statesman (Vol. 151, Issue 5697)Without Boris Johnson to do it for me I have taken it upon myself to cancel Christmas this year. Not long after this magazine reaches you I will be boarding a flight to Bali, completely alone, and not returning until the...
- 2From:Maclean's (Vol. 135, Issue 7)A lot of queer people think 2SLGBTQ+ history is limited to metropolitan areas like New York or San Francisco, Toronto or Montreal. I came of age in rural New Brunswick, where my lack of exposure to anything...
- 3From:The New York Times MagazineLet go of your desire for an explanation. It helps to seek connection elsewhere. ''You don't have the control in this situation,'' says Gili Freedman, an assistant professor of psychology at St. Mary's College in...
- 4From:Spectator (Vol. 349, Issue 10115)It's started again. Sixteen years ago, another 'Toby Young' kept appearing in my email inbox. I'd created a Google Alert telling the search engine to send me an email every time my name popped up on the internet, but...
- 5From:BookPageThe voracious interest that created an entire industry devoted to the lives of famous people, where the public treats celebrities as if they were our royalty. The courtship, engagement and wedding of Harry and Meghan....
- 6From:The Exceptional Parent (Vol. 51, Issue 12)I was curious to learn more about what connects the head tilt to the human reaction of instantaneous enhanced attraction and how it might relate to intellect. So I enlisted my trusted inner circle of folks I spend my...
- 7From:Spectator (Vol. 349, Issue 10113)An Oxford don has raised the prospect of producing a cocktail of hormone pills that would help you to fall in love. What an appalling prospect! You might suddenly find yourself consumed with an irresistible desire for...
- 8From:Publishers Weekly (Vol. 269, Issue 23)BIPOC and LGBTQ people have existed throughout history--ball gowns, suitors, and all--and historical romance publishers are finally catching up, says Adriana Herrera, who until now has only published contemporaries....
- 9From:Vogue (Vol. 212, Issue 4)Byline: Michelle Ruiz Collage by Sophie Matisse. The More the Merrier? Is consensual non-monogamy the new till-death-do-us-part? Michelle Ruiz reports on love's sharing economy. It had been 15 years since Megan...
- 10From:The American Poetry Review (Vol. 50, Issue 6)Richard Tillinghast's new book , Blue If Only I Could Tell You, is the winner of the White Pine Press Poetry Prize and will be published in 2022. The book is his thirteenth collection of poetry. His 2000 book , Six Mile...
- 11From:The American Poetry Review (Vol. 50, Issue 6)Steven Duong is an American writer from San Diego, California. The recipient of fellowships from the Poetry Coalition, the Watson Foundation, and the University of Iowa, his poems and fiction can be found in venues...
- 12From:The American Poetry Review (Vol. 50, Issue 5)Dorothea Lasky is the author of five full-length collections of poetry and one book of prose. Her newest book is Animal (Wave Books ). When you're around It's like the smallest lilacs Are in bloom forever Between us I...
- 13From:Women's Health Weekly2021 JUL 22 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- Fresh data on Violence - Interpersonal Violence are presented in a new report. According to news originating from Aix-en-Provence,...
- 14From:New Statesman (Vol. 150, Issue 5625)The man I have loved for the best part of four years is gone. He had a "gut feeling", and there's nothing I can do about it. The first night I sit on the cold bathroom floor until 3am and write. Lists of the things,...
- 15From:The New York Times Book ReviewGoliarda Sapienza yearned for an audience. An actress turned writer at the cusp of middle age, and now considered a feminist icon in her native Italy, she felt that telling one's story is what gives existence meaning....
- 16From:New Statesman (Vol. 150, Issue 5617)I had a nasty turn the other day. Not nasty as in unpleasant, but as in very surprising. I was scrolling through the website of a well-known national newspaper, and saw a byline which was that of an ex-lover of mine....
- 17From:New Statesman (Vol. 150, Issue 5617)I had a nasty turn the other day. Not nasty as in unpleasant, but as in very surprising. I was scrolling through the website of a well-known national newspaper, and saw a byline which was that of an ex-lover of mine....
- 18From:Esquire (Vol. 175, Issue 2)As one of the twentieth century 's greatest writers, Philip Roth chronicled male lust and erotic life with unflinching honesty. At he start of his career, the twenty eight year old's personal life was in shambles....
- 19From:New Statesman (Vol. 150, Issue 5601)Well, so much for 2020. I am writing these words on New Year's Day so I can say that kind of thing, but I suppose you are sick of seeing those words, or words like them. For me, the year is a novelty; whereas you, a...
- 20From:The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (Vol. 139, Issue 3-4)OTHER PRINCESSES ARE blessed at their christenings, or else they are cursed. But my fairy godmother had to be clever. On the day of my christening, she leaned over my cradle, kissed my cheek, and said, "You will be...