In her second novel, Julia Langbein expertly weaves together art history and a fantastical, feminist reclamation of public shame. It's also very funny.
Julia Langbein’s novel considers the legions of women whose lives have been forever marred by compromising early relationships.
A woman tries to make sense of her inappropriate college affair with the help of an unusual saint. NPR's Elissa Nadworny talks with Julia Langbein about her comic novel, "Dear Monica Lewinsky." ...
Few names are as synonymous with presidential scandal as Monica Lewinsky's. The one-time White House intern inadvertently wrote herself into the history books by having an affair with then-US ...
Today in books and publishing: SEAL's nudges Fifty Shades off top spot; Lewinsky shopping book; iTunes is Vagina-shy; former Goldman banker gets memoir deal. Laura Bush tells us who'll be at the Texas ...
Nearly three decades after her affair with Bill Clinton made global headlines, Monica Lewinsky delivered a surprising bedroom ...
I feel so sorry for Monica Lewinsky. This poor young woman—she was so young!—basically renders herself unemployable for her entire life by making her name synonymous with illicit blowjobs and a ...
The chorus of "poor Monica Lewinsky"—alone and miserable, a memory of something indecent and tawdry in America, a soiled Gap dress, a beret, something-something to do with the commander-in-chief, that ...