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Navigating the Coming-of-Illness Narrative

Navigating the Coming-of-Illness Narrative

“We need these stories, because they reveal a potent truth: no one is immune to illness and death.”

By Lorraine Boissoneault | May 18, 2026

Alice and Me: How My Struggle With Cancer Mirrored My Protagonist’s

Alice and Me: How My Struggle With Cancer Mirrored My Protagonist’s

Caitlin Shetterly on Grappling With the Uncanny Parallels Between Real Life and Fiction

By Caitlin Shetterly | May 18, 2026

Lucy Ives Offers a Few Creative Prompts to Knock You Off Kilter

Lucy Ives Offers a Few Creative Prompts to Knock You Off Kilter

On Writing Without Measurement

By Lucy Ives | May 15, 2026

Chet’la Sebree on How Chronic Illness Forever Altered Her Literary Life

Chet’la Sebree on How Chronic Illness Forever Altered Her Literary Life

“In remodeling my writing practice, I also remodeled who I was, who I could be, as a writer.”

By Chet’la Sebree | May 15, 2026

To Tell A Story: On Blending Family History and Lived Experience in Nonfiction

To Tell A Story: On Blending Family History and Lived Experience in Nonfiction

Tamiko Nimura Recounts the Process of Crafting Her Memoir, From Idea to Execution

By Tamiko Nimura | May 14, 2026

The Annotated Nightstand: What Stine An is Reading Now, and Next

The Annotated Nightstand: What Stine An is Reading Now, and Next

Featuring Lee Jenny, Cynthia Cruz, Henry Goldkamp, and More

By Diana Arterian | May 14, 2026

Best Reviewed
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  • Glyph
  • Dog Days
  • All Them Dogs
  • A Perfect Hand
  • Keeper of My Kin: Memoir of an Immigrant Daughter
  • Talking Classics: The Shock of the Old

Lucy Sante Recommends Five Books About Her Most Important Tool as a Writer: Memory

By Lucy Sante | May 13, 2026

When Biography Goes Delulu: Writing the Life of Superstar Astrologer Linda Goodman

By Courtney Ann LaFaive | May 13, 2026

On the Particular Joys of Etymology and Polyglot Prose

By Geoffrey D. Morrison | May 12, 2026

Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers

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

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

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

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

Tom Junod on Finding the Right Trick

A Lesson from a Long Career of Magazine Writing

By Tom Junod | May 8, 2026

Why Writing Stories For Children is So Much Harder Than Writing Stories For Adults

Why Writing Stories For Children is So Much Harder Than Writing Stories For Adults

Claire Swinarski on the Fulfilling Job of Creating Stories for Kids

By Claire Swinarski | May 8, 2026

Am I the Literary Asshole For Thinking Most Writers Are Trash, Actually?

Am I the Literary Asshole For Thinking Most Writers Are Trash, Actually?

Kristen Arnett Answers Your Awkward Questions About Bad Bookish Behavior

By Kristen Arnett | May 7, 2026

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    • Pop Novelist: Rereading Michael Crichton’s 'Sphere'May 27, 2026 by Ian Mackenzie
    • An Aria to the Mad ScientistMay 27, 2026 by Nick Cutter
    • Eli Raphael on Identity, Outsiders, and Creating Accountability in ThrillersMay 27, 2026 by Eli Raphael
    • Glyph
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "In her feisty graceful em Glyph em Ali Smith mulls writing and language among other…"
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