Rachel Vorona Cote is the author of Too Much: How Victorian Constraints Still Bind Women Today, which was published in February 2020 by Grand Central Publishing. She also publishes frequently in such outlets as Longreads, The New Republic, Literary Hub, Pitchfork, Rolling Stone, and Catapult. She was previously a contributing writer at Jezebel. She lives in Takoma Park, MD, with her husband and her extremely dramatic cat. You can find her on Twitter at @RVoronaCote.
He’s a cute mensch, I gathered, a cuddly fellow with a well- groomed beard, sad eyes, and, most importantly, a comforting voice that sounded like he was about to either cry or laugh.
Having first seen [Hook] at the impressionable age of three, it molded me into the chronically nostalgic, child-like, death-fearing person that I am today.
In Wes Anderson’s latest film, The Grand Budapest Hotel, train travel proves to be a difficult feat for the character Zero (Tony Revolori). Despite Zero’s train travel plight, Anderson himself enjoys a…
The Woody Allen debacle has many fans conflicted, but apparently not Oscar voters. Michael Musto at The Daily Beast interviewed an Oscar voter who, while not voting for Allen, was…