There are haunted dolls in this links round-up. Happy Friday; you deserve it.
“Perhaps you had better stay in the womb, I think, just to be safe.” Alexandra Petri on The News.
Bret Stephens continues to be a dingbat.
Jay Fernandez identifies a few common mistakes that book reviewers make. (Some of this is nonsense! But it’s still interesting.)
The final book in Hilary Mantel’s Thomas Cromwell trilogy is coming out in 2020! AT LAST I can read Bring Up the Bodies!
Here’s Mikki Kendall talking about how not all harassment is sexual (though it is also sexual!)
On not knowing where you fit as a biracial person.
Caveat emptor: These dolls are haunted (yet collectible).
Amanda Stern wrote a book about a childhood of anxiety, and found that she had to understand parents before she could help other kids like her.
Jim DeRogatis’s new book about R. Kelly isn’t just about the failings of the criminal justice system and pop culture consumers, says Tressie McMillan Cottom; it’s about the downfall of committed, longform journalism and what that means for predators like Kelly. And here’s Hannah Giorgis on the same topic and the many many people who failed Kelly’s victims. And also Treva Lindsey on the culture’s failures around R. Kelly.
“People are mortal, but IP lives forever.” On the mega-franchises that have become our only widely shared cultural touchstones.
Jenny Zhang considers the idea of “authenticity” in ethnic cuisine and what we’re really looking for. I also highly recommend the Sara Kay article that’s linked inside of this one.
Vulture endeavors to define a beach read.
Lindsay King-Miller writes about the appeal of murder lesbians (no, not JUST Killing Eve) (but yeah, Killing Eve).
Every NIMBY’s speech at a public hearing.
Happy weekend! What have you been reading?