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2022-05-09 18:54:06

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Advertisement The Paris Review SubscribeSign InSign InSubscribeThe DailyThe LatestColumnsThe QuarterlyIssuesInterviewsFictionPoetryLetters & EssaysArt & PhotographyAuthorsPodcastAboutHistoryOpportunitiesMastheadPrizesSubmissionsMedia KitBookstoresEventsDonateDonate to The Paris ReviewInstitutional SupportNewslettersStoreThe Paris Review The DailyThe LatestColumnsThe QuarterlyIssuesInterviewsFictionPoetryLetters & EssaysArt & PhotographyAuthorsPodcastAboutHistoryOpportunitiesMastheadPrizesSubmissionsMedia KitBookstoresEventsDonateDonate to The Paris ReviewInstitutional SupportNewslettersStore Sign In Sign InSubscribe On the Daily Diary, 2008 By Annie-B Parson On the Daily On Liberated Women Looking for Love By The Paris Review In the Current Issue I Feel It By Paul Dalla Rosa In the Current Issue Second Sonnet By Tawanda Mulalu See More Stories In the Current Issue AdvertisementSign Up for Our NewsletterSign up for the Paris Review newsletter and keep up with news, parties, readings, and more.AdvertisementDiaries, 1970–73By Duncan HannahSeptember 1970. Eisenhower High School. I can’t get into the teen spirit of the Hopkins High pep rally. Purple Power! Youth Fever! Sieg Heil! Makes me sick.I put out a comic book with some other freaks that is sold in the hallways for a dime. The Daily Planet. My mom gets a call from a concerned parent who’d said she’d already had enough trouble with her son without this pornography inciting him to take drugs. Lady on the phone said I had to be on drugs to do the awful things to her s…From the Archive, Issue 222Art & PhotographyDonate to The Paris ReviewBy The Paris ReviewThe Paris Review promotes the most exciting writers of the day and supports inquisitive readers the world over.DonateThe Staples Jr. Singers Live from The Paris ReviewBy The Paris ReviewMay 6, 2022The band’s music was introduced to us by our friends at Luaka Bop.The DailyOn MusicDiary, 1988By Annie Ernaux“On November 16, 1989, I phoned the Soviet embassy in Paris and asked to speak to Mr. S. The switchboard operator did not reply.”In the Current Issue, Issue 239Letters & EssaysThe Art of Translation No. 7By Margaret Jull CostaPhoto © Gary Doak/Alamy Stock Photo Margaret Jull Costa is a name revered in some circles and utterly unknown in others, yet more readers have fallen under the spell of her words than realize it. The greatest translator of Portuguese literature into English, she has taken on Fernando Pessoa, José Saramago, and António Lobo Antunes, and lent her refined style to two giants of the late nineteenth century, José Maria Eça de Queirós and his Brazilian contemporary Joaquim Maria Machado de …From the Archive, Issue 233InterviewsAdvertisementDiary, 2010By Adam LevinMay 5, 2022“No one wants to hear about your parrot.”The DailyDiariesThe Basketball DiariesBy Jim CarrollIt was the warmest Oct. day out that I ever saw today, so we skipped practice (Tony and Yogi and I) and we decided to take a little ride down to the ferry and over to Staten Island. After polishing off a hero at LUCY’S we hopped on the back fender of the 2nd Ave. bus and rode down to the ferry basin. From the Archive, Issue 50Letters & EssaysEpisode 22: “Form and Formlessness”By The Paris ReviewListen to the penultimate episode of season 3, with Rachel Cusk, Aisha Sabatini Sloan, Allan Gurganus, and Deborah Landau.Listen NowThe Art of the Diary No. 1By Ned Rorem“I am a composer,” Ned Rorem once said, “who also writes, not a writer who also composes.” His music—hundreds of ravishing art songs and instrumental scores, one of which won the 1976 Pulitzer Prize—has brought him fame. But it is his diaries that have brought him celebrity. The first of them,The Paris Diary, covering his stay abroad from 1951 to 1955, was published in 1966. Its pithy, elegant entries were filled with tricks turned and names dropped (Cocteau, Poulenc, Balthus, Dali, Paul B…From the Archive, Issue 150InterviewsSubscribeSupportContact UsEventsMedia KitSubmissionsMastheadPrizesBookstoresOpportunitiesVideo ©2022 The Paris Review. All rights reservedPrivacy PolicyTerms & Conditions