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Craft and Advice
On the Particular Joys of Etymology and Polyglot Prose
Geoffrey D. Morrison on Learning and Teaching Languages As a Fiction Writer
By
Geoffrey D. Morrison
| May 12, 2026
Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers
Featuring Anna Konkle, Hafeez Lakhani, Harriet Clark and More
By
Teddy Wayne
| May 12, 2026
Hannah Thurman on Writing a Family Drama Set in a Mental Hospital
Jane Ciabattari Talks to the Author of
Mercy Hill
By
Jane Ciabattari
| May 12, 2026
What Close Reading Can Reveal About an Author’s Intentions
Suzanne Berne Considers the Story As a Relationship Between Writers and Readers
By
Suzanne Berne
| May 11, 2026
Mysterious, Isolated and Seductive: The Map of Literary Islands That Inspired My Novel
Christiana Spens: “Even when you have left an island, it lingers on in your imagination as a half-real and half-made-up place.”
By
Christiana Spens
| May 11, 2026
Tom Junod on Finding the Right Trick
A Lesson from a Long Career of Magazine Writing
By
Tom Junod
| May 8, 2026
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Why Writing Stories For Children is So Much Harder Than Writing Stories For Adults
By
Claire Swinarski
| May 8, 2026
Am I the Literary Asshole For Thinking Most Writers Are Trash, Actually?
By
Kristen Arnett
| May 7, 2026
Fellow Travelers: On Reimagining Chaucer in Post-Soviet Ukraine
By
Irene Zabytko
| May 7, 2026
In Writing About Cults (and Religion) Telling is Better than Showing
Harrison Hill in Conversation with Benjamin Hale
By
Literary Hub
| May 7, 2026
Where I End, the Writing Begins: What Undergoing Surgery Taught Me About Transcendence
Diane Les Becquets: “And I watched those moments unfold before me, as if in real time, and I felt everything.”
By
Diane Les Becquets
| May 7, 2026
How I Found Myself—and My Next Setting—at the Beach
Angela Brown on Returning to a Beloved Vacation Spot in Her Most Recent Novel
By
Angela Brown
| May 7, 2026
What Objects Can—and Should—Reveal About Their Owners
Rachel F. Seidman on the Importance of Material Culture in Constructing Oral Histories
By
Rachel F. Seidman
| May 6, 2026
On Making Time to Read
War and Peace
and Other Great Literary Works
Laura Vanderkam Offers Some Suggestions to Help Meet Your Reading Goals
By
Laura Vanderkam
| May 5, 2026
Charles Dickens... and Other Bad Men Who are Good Writers
Francine Prose Explores the Disconnect of Loving Works Written By Monstrous Authors
By
Francine Prose
| May 5, 2026
Elizabeth Strout on Creating a Quietly Strong Protagonist
Jane Ciabattari Talks to the Author of
The Things We Never Say
By
Jane Ciabattari
| May 5, 2026
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5 Literary Suspense Novels Set in Italy
May 21, 2026
by
Natalie Lemle
The Best International Fiction of May 2026
May 21, 2026
by
Molly Odintz
Howard A. Rodman on Melville, Empire, and the Audacity of Resurrecting Literary Giants
May 21, 2026
by
Hassan Tarek
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Isaac Fitzgerald writes with a folksy wit that might come off as an affectation were…"