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Anthony Domestico

@tonydomestico

Critic and associate professor of literature at Purchase College, SUNY

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19.08.2023
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Latest posts by Anthony Domestico @tonydomestico

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‘Don’t Open the Door—It’s Sanders!' Poet Dan Chiasson's 'Bernie for Burlington' functions as a triple bildungsroman of Bernie Sanders, the city of Burlington, and Chiasson himself.

For my February column @commonweal.bsky.social, I wrote on Dan Chiasson's "Bernie for Burlington"

www.commonwealmagazine.org/bernie-sande...

26.02.2026 20:52 👍 2 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
‘Don’t Open the Door—It’s Sanders!' Poet Dan Chiasson's 'Bernie for Burlington' functions as a triple bildungsroman of Bernie Sanders, the city of Burlington, and Chiasson himself.

"The battle of all-against-all giving way to democratic cooperation: this is the alternate political vision Sanders has offered for half a century."

@tonydomestico.bsky.social on Dan Chiasson's 'Bernie for Burlington':
www.commonwealmagazine.org/bernie-sande...

27.02.2026 01:59 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
‘Don’t Open the Door—It’s Sanders!' Poet Dan Chiasson's 'Bernie for Burlington' functions as a triple bildungsroman of Bernie Sanders, the city of Burlington, and Chiasson himself.

For my February column @commonweal.bsky.social, I wrote on Dan Chiasson's "Bernie for Burlington"

www.commonwealmagazine.org/bernie-sande...

26.02.2026 20:52 👍 2 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0

"He had consulted his taste in everything--his taste alone perhaps, as a sick man consciously incurable consults at last only his lawyer: that was what made him so different from every one else."

- "The Portrait of a Lady"

26.02.2026 02:12 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

"They stood there knowing each other well and each on the whole willing to accept the satisfaction of knowing as a compensation for the inconvenience—whatever it might be—of being known."

- "The Portrait of a Lady"

25.02.2026 02:50 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

I wrote about one part of my reaction to recent events: the importance and nuance of what it means to subscribe to something.

20.02.2026 13:35 👍 66 🔁 31 💬 1 📌 1
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Larry Levis: For love of immanence. — alina Ştefănescu

Because Larry Levis deserves to be celebrated.

www.alinastefanescuwriter.com/blog/2026/2/16/larry-levis

17.02.2026 18:55 👍 10 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
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Civic Art Frederick Wiseman’s ‘City Hall’ explores the performance, promotion, and presentation necessary to running a major city.

"In 'City Hall,' as with practically every Wiseman documentary, there’s a literary bent to the way moments are catalogued, whether deadening bureaucratic meetings or the inspiring successes of vital public works."

Patrick Preziosi for @commonweal.bsky.social

www.commonwealmagazine.org/civic-art

17.02.2026 18:26 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
Darryl Pinckney on Memoir, Friendship, and Elizabeth Hardwick In the first episode of our podcast Private Life, Darryl Pinckney talks with host Jarrett Earnest about his close friend and former teacher Elizabeth Hardwick.

Darryl Pinckney on Elizabeth Hardwick: their relationship, her life, the evolution of her writing, and "the suffering of bad artists." It's on episode 1 of Private Life, the new podcast from @nybooks.com, hosted by Jarrett Earnest.

12.02.2026 19:07 👍 5 🔁 3 💬 1 📌 0
Close Reading Is For Everyone
Dan Sinykin and Johanna Winant

Call for Pitches

Based on our previous Close Reading for the Twenty-First Century, we are at work on a new version that’s shorter, slimmer, and aimed at a more general audience. 

We’re looking for a new set of contributors who would write excellent, brief, model close readings of texts that high schoolers might know and care about. Think: “The Gettysburg Address,” Macbeth, and Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave,” but also song lyrics, idioms, or even a visual image. What is your best, most instructive, most exciting, most welcoming example of how a close reading builds a real argument out from a tiny, perhaps overlooked detail?

If you’re interested in pitching us, please send us your 250-word close reading of the text you propose. Your close reading should be mappable using our vocabulary of close reading: the five steps of scene setting, noticing, local claiming, regional argumentation, and global theorizing. (Our close reading of “The Red Wheelbarrow” in the early pages of our introduction is the sort of thing we’re seeking.) If we think we can use yours, we’ll ask you to expand it to a 1,200 word essay in which you explain how your close reading works step by step.

We seek close readings both of texts that are canonical and also ones that aren’t. And so we invite contributors both from the discipline of literary studies, and other disciplines across the university, and the public humanities beyond it.  

Send your pitches—please include your name and contact info—to daniel.sinykin@emory.edu and jwinant@reed.edu by March 15.

Close Reading Is For Everyone Dan Sinykin and Johanna Winant Call for Pitches Based on our previous Close Reading for the Twenty-First Century, we are at work on a new version that’s shorter, slimmer, and aimed at a more general audience. We’re looking for a new set of contributors who would write excellent, brief, model close readings of texts that high schoolers might know and care about. Think: “The Gettysburg Address,” Macbeth, and Plato’s “Allegory of the Cave,” but also song lyrics, idioms, or even a visual image. What is your best, most instructive, most exciting, most welcoming example of how a close reading builds a real argument out from a tiny, perhaps overlooked detail? If you’re interested in pitching us, please send us your 250-word close reading of the text you propose. Your close reading should be mappable using our vocabulary of close reading: the five steps of scene setting, noticing, local claiming, regional argumentation, and global theorizing. (Our close reading of “The Red Wheelbarrow” in the early pages of our introduction is the sort of thing we’re seeking.) If we think we can use yours, we’ll ask you to expand it to a 1,200 word essay in which you explain how your close reading works step by step. We seek close readings both of texts that are canonical and also ones that aren’t. And so we invite contributors both from the discipline of literary studies, and other disciplines across the university, and the public humanities beyond it. Send your pitches—please include your name and contact info—to daniel.sinykin@emory.edu and jwinant@reed.edu by March 15.

CALL FOR PITCHES

@dan-sinnamon.bsky.social and I are at work on a new version of Close Reading for the Twenty-First Century aimed at a more general audience.

We’re looking for new contributions: your model close readings of texts, canonical and not, from literary studies and not.

Details below!

09.02.2026 13:56 👍 239 🔁 142 💬 13 📌 16

Incredible section, first-rate editor, a real loss to the literary world.

04.02.2026 15:31 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

there isn’t a better Books desk in the country than the one at the Washington Post. I’m not really sure there’s anything else to say

04.02.2026 14:26 👍 179 🔁 40 💬 1 📌 12

Shutting down (the stellar) books coverage at WaPo is a real telling move when your owner is literally Jeff Bezos

04.02.2026 14:36 👍 446 🔁 95 💬 11 📌 9

I'll say more before too long, but for now: Thanks to anyone who has ever read and supported the Post's books coverage.

04.02.2026 15:24 👍 975 🔁 85 💬 113 📌 20
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Durst Distinguished Lectures Durst Distinguished Lectures in the School of Humanities at Purchase College State University of New York

Another exciting lineup for the Durst Distinguished Lecture Series this spring at Purchase College: Kiran Desai, Yiyun Li, and Emil Ferris.

Free, open to the public, and not too far from the city!

www.purchase.edu/academics/sc...

03.02.2026 20:35 👍 5 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
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Twice Blest For Christopher Ricks, the critic is in the business of catching at felicities: those seeming accidents of language that end up being revelatory.

My January column on Christopher Ricks for @commonweal.bsky.social

www.commonwealmagazine.org/twice-blest-...

29.01.2026 15:19 👍 2 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
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Review: Anthony Domestico on James Schuyler Finding a still place in a disordered life

“What is a / poem, anyway.”
New on Book Post: Anthony Domestico on the breathtaking clarity and intimacy of James Shuyler’s poetry, arising from a troubled and complex life.
books.substack.com/p/review-ant...

@tonydomestico.bsky.social @fsgbooks.bsky.social

29.01.2026 19:25 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
Twice Blest For Christopher Ricks, the critic is in the business of catching at felicities: those seeming accidents of language that end up being revelatory.

My January column on Christopher Ricks for @commonweal.bsky.social

www.commonwealmagazine.org/twice-blest-...

29.01.2026 15:19 👍 2 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0

"How sweet it felt to be out, to see the river, and his breath on the air."

- Claire Keegan, "Small Things Like These"

26.01.2026 19:35 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Review: Anthony Domestico on James Schuyler Finding a still place in a disordered life

My piece on James Schuyler for @bookpostusa.bsky.social

books.substack.com/p/review-ant...

22.01.2026 12:40 👍 3 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0

That's super generous. I might take you up on it. (We start the semester with a bunch of great reviews, including yours on Stella Maris.)

20.01.2026 23:49 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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New Reviewing the Contemporary Novel reading list, featuring @tricialockwood.bsky.social, @justintaylor.bsky.social, @appletwigli.bsky.social, and others.

20.01.2026 19:33 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0

Coming from NYRB to the US in spring 2027.

08.01.2026 17:28 👍 17 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 0
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Debut novel ‘Lost Lambs’ has a keen eye for the grotesque, and an ear for euphemism - The Boston Globe “Lost Lambs,” Madeline Cash’s riotously assured debut novel, opens inside Our Lady of Suffering as gnats swarm through services, multiplying faster than Father Andrew can clap them dead.

Critic Rhoda Feng likes the quick wit and writerly daring of Madeline Cash's debut novel, LOST LAMBS. Her smart review is in the print edition of Sunday's @bostonglobe.com but it's also online now. www.bostonglobe.com/2026/01/06/a...

08.01.2026 17:47 👍 5 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0

"It was Sunday morning and all the bells were rocking the bright sky about, boxing its ears with their glorious hands."

- Pamela Hansford Johnson, "The Unspeakable Skipton"

04.01.2026 11:37 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

"He drained his coffee, steaming as it was, at a gulp."

- Pamela Hansford Johnson, "The Unspeakable Skipton"

02.01.2026 13:12 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Moses Herzog was 47. Frank Bascombe was 38. Rabbit Angstrom was 26. In Ben Markovits’ very good book, Tom Lanyard is 55. What happens when the male-midlife-crisis novel gets old?

26.12.2025 15:06 👍 4 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
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James Merrill. “No dread. No bitterness. The end beginning. Today’s / Dusk room aglow / For the last time / With candlelight. / Faces love lit, / Gifts underfoot. / Still to be so poised, so / Receptive. Still to recall, to praise.”

24.12.2025 19:08 👍 17 🔁 2 💬 3 📌 0
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The Year in Books Our critic recommends his favorite books released in 2025, including works by Joy Williams, Helen Garner, and John Haskell.

Lovely year-end notice from @tonydomestico.bsky.social in @commonweal.bsky.social of CLOSE READING FOR THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY. "Sinykin and Winant convincingly argue that close reading isn’t just an intellectual but also a social and ethical practice" www.commonwealmagazine.org/books-domest...

17.12.2025 21:37 👍 19 🔁 7 💬 1 📌 0
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The Year in Books Our critic recommends his favorite books released in 2025, including works by Joy Williams, Helen Garner, and John Haskell.

Some of my favorite books of 2025, including criticism by A. S. Hamrah and the diaries of Helen Garner, for @commonweal.bsky.social

www.commonwealmagazine.org/books-domest...

18.12.2025 00:16 👍 11 🔁 6 💬 0 📌 0