Paul Berman: Remembering Eliot Fremont-Smith

By NBCC

Eliot Fremont-Smith, book critic and co-founder of the National Book Critics Circle (pictured here in 1972, two years before the NBCC was founded), book critic for the New York Times

Led There By A Book Review

By NBCC

I think the only reason I've been reading Anne Enright these past fews years is the fact that I stopped to read a review James Wood wrote of her book, “What

The Edmund Wilson Metaphor of the Day

By NBCC

REGULAR READERS of our blog have probably noticed that the name Edmund Wilson has come up several times in the previous installments of the Critical Library series — in which critics recommend

In Retrospect: In Class with Jackson Bate

By NBCC

This week the NBCC has been focusing our In Retrospect serieson W. Jackson Bate's “Samuel Johnson,” which won our award for general nonfiction in 1977. The following remembrance of Bate as a teacher

In Retrospect: W. Jackson Bate’s life of Johnson

By NBCC

The following essay by Jerome Weeks kicks off the latest week of In Retrospect, which will revisit W. Jackson Bate's “Samuel Johnson,”which won the NBCC's award for general nonfiction in 1977. IT'S A

Critical Outtakes: George Saunders on Travel

By NBCC

Q: You strike a folksy, Midwestern tone in “The Braindead Megaphone,” but clearly you have also traveled to Pakistan and other countries. Can you talk about those trips, under what guise they

In Retrospect: Around the World With C.K. Williams

By NBCC

Twenty years ago last month,NBCC winner Edward Hirsch reviewed Williams' “Flesh and Blood” in the New York Times,along side Donald Justice's“The Sunset Maker,” which was also finalist for poetry in 1987.

In Retrospect: Three Poems by CK Williams

By NBCC

  Thanks to the folks over at “The New Yorker,” three of the poems from CK Williams' 1987 NBCC-winning volume, “Flesh and Blood,” are available online at the magazine's website here. It's fabulous work. You can