Literature

  • Why are so many Bay Area theaters staging ‘Dracula’ in 2026?

    Why are so many Bay Area theaters staging ‘Dracula’ in 2026?

    If you need a symbol for fascism, economic precarity or rapid technological advancement, try “Dracula.” Renee Fox, an associate professor of literature at UC Santa Cruz and a co-director of the school’s Center for Monster Studies, sees a throughline in the eras when vampire stories peak.

  • Luminous new historical fiction

    Luminous new historical fiction

    The New York Times’ book columnist Alida Becker called Emeritus Professor of Literature Karen Tei Yamashita’s new book ‘luminous’ and listed it among the month’s best new book releases.

  • The Book That Plunges You Into Messy American History

    The Book That Plunges You Into Messy American History

    The Atlantic Monthly ran a detailed feature story about Professor Emeritus of Literature Karen Tei Yamashita’s new book and how she “challenges readers to join her in deciphering a shameful moment from the nation’s past.”

  • Karen Tei Yamashita began with Japanese American History. Then She Made Things Up.

    Karen Tei Yamashita began with Japanese American History. Then She Made Things Up.

    In her sprawling new novel, Professor Emeritus of Literature Karen Tei Yamashita sprinkles fanciful details (a trombone narrator!) into the bracing story of World War II internment.

  • 7 Books That Use Family Archives to Break Generational Silence

    7 Books That Use Family Archives to Break Generational Silence

    Tamiko Nimura of Electric Literature named Emeritus Literature Professor Karen Tei Yamashita’s book Letters To Memory in its list of acclaimed books that tell untold stories by delving deeply into family archives. “It’s difficult to describe this inventive journey through family history, wartime incarceration and resettlement, but it’s poetic, funny, and deeply intelligent,” writes Nimura.

  • The 18 Best Books of 2026 (So Far) – Esquire

    The 18 Best Books of 2026 (So Far) – Esquire

    In an Esquire books roundup, reviewer Adam Morgan said that Emeritus Literature Professor Karen Tei Yamashita deserves to be a literary household name and that he “devoured” her ambitious fifth novel, Questions 27 & 28, titled after the “so-called loyalty questionnaire” that 120,000 Japanese Americans were forced to take during their internment in concentration camps.

  • Talking Talmud On Tik Tok

    Talking Talmud On Tik Tok

    Nathaniel Deutsch, professor of Jewish studies, was quoted in a story about Shalom Landau, a 48-year-old Hasidic rabbi in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn who has become an unlikely star on Instagram and Tik Tok.

  • The Novelist Reimagining the Japanese American Internment

    The Novelist Reimagining the Japanese American Internment

    The New Yorker staff writer Hua Hsu wrote an in-depth laudatory review of Emeritus Professor of Literature and Creative Writing Karen Tei Yamashita’s new book Questions 27 & 28, which “opens an inquiry into how the story of the past gets made.”

  • ‘Monster Studies’ is a real thing – and it could help you through holiday anxiety

    ‘Monster Studies’ is a real thing – and it could help you through holiday anxiety

    Renée Fox, Associate Professor of Literature and Co-Director of the Dickens Project, and Michael Chemers, Professor of Dramatic Literature in the Department of Theater Arts, were interviewed for a feature story about The Center For Monster Studies at UC Santa Cruz.

  • The Surveilled Classroom

    The Surveilled Classroom

    Professor of Literature Jody Greene was quoted in a story about professors and students who are worried that what they say in class could end up on the internet.

  • Book review: Fatefully, Faithfully Feminist

    Book review: Fatefully, Faithfully Feminist

    Associate Professor of Literature Zac Zimmer reviewed the book Fatefully, Faithfully Feminist: A Critical History of Women, Patriarchy, and Mexican National Discourse, for Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos Journal.

  • Challenging the Myth of Firstness: John Rieder explores Zac Zimmer’s “First Contact: Speculative Visions of the Conquest of the Americas.”

    Challenging the Myth of Firstness: John Rieder explores Zac Zimmer’s “First Contact: Speculative Visions of the Conquest of the Americas.”

    Associate Professor of Literature Professor Zac Zimmer’s new book “First Contact: Challenging The Myth Of Firstness” received a detailed and laudatory review in The Los Angeles Review Of Books.

Last modified: May 20, 2026