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Crimson staff writer

Denise J. Xu

Latest Content

On Campus

The Art of Stuffed Animals

Artists, scientists, and hunters all use different techniques and find different meanings in the baffling and unique practice of taxidermy.

Books

Top Five Children's Books Series

The time for nostalgia has come.

Books

Frazier Maps a Bleak Landscape in ‘Travels in Siberia’

When asked why he had ventured into the territory (five times in 16 years), Frazier replied, “Well, I think, I wanted to step out of time… You’re going somewhere, and you’re no longer just in the company of your own contemporaries. You’re in the company of everybody that’s ever traveled here.”

Books

Art Without Depth in Cunningham’s Latest Novel

“By Nightfall” intends a penetrating examination of middle-aged life and its crumbling foundations, but it lacks focus and convulses with histrionics, rendering the book simply teenage angst for grown-ups.

Music

Ted Leo and the Pharmacists

As flawless a blend as Leo’s falsetto, a tight drum line, and a melodic guitar solo can be, there’s no particular charm in stating the obvious.

Books

Love Prevails in 'Surrendered'

Fundamentally a contemporary war novel, "The Surrendered" derives its plot from a scrutiny of the most basic of human experiences—love and conflict.

Books

Moya Struggles to Charm in 'Snakes'

Superficially a fantastical page-turner, the novel is at its core an uncompromising interrogation of authority, a gruesome satire whose pivot turns on exposing the consequences that result from a manipulated identity.

Visual Arts

A.R.T.'s 'Gatz' Takes Classic Tale to Stage in Novel Adaptation

Borrowing established stories and adapting them for the stage is hardly unusual in today’s theater culture, where original writing is hard to find.

Features

Editor's Picks 2009

Arts execs take a break from ranking Radiohead vs. Spoon to rank... whatever they feel like.

Features

Turning Over an Old Page

Looking to the past, a recent publication by HU Press tells new story of America's literary history to no one in particular

SPOTLIGHT: LARISSA D. KOCH ’08-’09

The Harvard Crimson: How did ‘Timbre and Flux’ come about? Larissa D. Koch: I graduated last March and I had

The Web and Flow of Art

Who needs tabloids when there’s Twitter? Posting a shocking 1,382 percent increase in visitors year-over-year since February 2008, Twitter is

What I Really Learned From Reality Television

5. “Beauty and the Geek” Being a student at Harvard automatically entitles me to a makeover, inept social skills, and

‘Senselessness’ Is Full of Sense (and Power)

In America, the idea of modern genocide is a surreal collage—distorted and unreal, comprised primarily of memoirs about the Holocaust

Wein Blends Classic, Modern

Perhaps Albert Wein was simply obsessed with life. “Albert Wein: American Modernist,” the retrospective of his work currently on display

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