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Amelia Butler-Gallie
Book Review
Gabriel García Márquez’s posthumously published novel is unconvincing
Until August has a curiously half-baked feel, as if it’s a souvenir of a great man’s legacy rather than a work in itself
By Amelia Butler-Gallie
Film
Reconsidering Paul Thomas Anderson’s
Inherent Vice
If the Thomas Pynchon novel adaptation has anything to say about the American dream, it is to mock its high-falutin’ nature
By Amelia Butler-Gallie
Books
The peculiar American attitude toward death
Taking our mortality too seriously has been an increasing problem in our country. Thank heavens for the satirists who refuse to do so
By Amelia Butler-Gallie
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