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Sometimes It's Easier to Talk About Books Than Say 'I Love You'

Sometimes It's Easier to Talk About Books Than Say 'I Love You'

Diane Shipley on Staying in Her Father's Good Books

By Diane Shipley | August 10, 2018

From Wage Labor to Writer

From Wage Labor to Writer

"April in Minnesota is when utilities are shut off for non-payment..."

By Joshua Mattson | August 9, 2018

Fiction Reminds Us That We're All In This Together

Fiction Reminds Us That We're All In This Together

Michel Stone on the Hard Work of Finding a Common Humanity

By Michel Stone | August 9, 2018

5 Reasons a Writer Should Move to... Tucson

5 Reasons a Writer Should Move to... Tucson

From Desert Monsoons to Some of the Best Food in the Country

By Eshani Surya | August 8, 2018

In Defense of Keeping Books Spine-In

In Defense of Keeping Books Spine-In

R.O. Kwon on the Beauty Of 'Walls of Paged-Through, Dog-Eared Beige.'

By R.O. Kwon | August 7, 2018

The Story Collector, or, How Not to Write a Novel

The Story Collector, or, How Not to Write a Novel

Aysegül Savas on the Fiction Writer as Ethnographer

By Aysegül Savas | August 7, 2018

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • The Shampoo Effect
  • The Midnight Special: The Secret Prison History of American Music
  • Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep
  • On the Origin of Sex: The Weird and Wonderful Science of Reproduction
  • Devotions
  • Thundering Waters: The Toxic Legacy of Niagara Falls

How Writing a Short Story Collection is Like Starting a Zoo

By Valerie Trueblood | August 6, 2018

"Write a Sentence as Clean as a Bone" And Other Advice from James Baldwin

By Emily Temple | August 2, 2018

When Writing is Your Job, Researching Trauma Can Be a Workplace Hazard

By Jennifer Down | August 2, 2018

Sigrid Rausing: Write When You Can, and Don't Worry About an Audience

Sigrid Rausing: Write When You Can, and Don't Worry About an Audience

The Author of Mayhem on Anne Carson, Jane Austen,
and Estonian Farm Collectives

By Literary Hub | July 30, 2018

There is Such a Thing as Talent: Elizabeth Hardwick on Writing

There is Such a Thing as Talent: Elizabeth Hardwick on Writing

The Brilliant Novelist and Essayist Tells it Like it Is

By Emily Temple | July 27, 2018

13 Literary Writers Who Have Adapted Other People's Books for the Screen

13 Literary Writers Who Have Adapted Other People's Books for the Screen

Or: When Aldous Huxley Wrote Pride and Prejudice

By Emily Temple | July 26, 2018

Grammar Purity is One Big Ponzi Scheme

Grammar Purity is One Big Ponzi Scheme

Who Really Decides How Language Works?

By June Casagrande | July 26, 2018

How I Wrote My Memoir, One Notecard at a Time

How I Wrote My Memoir, One Notecard at a Time

Or: How to Fit Your Trauma in a Recipe Box

By Melissa Stephenson | July 26, 2018

From Apartment to Bryant Park: A Poetry Salon Grows Up

From Apartment to Bryant Park: A Poetry Salon Grows Up

Poet JP Howard Creates Community for Women Writers

By Joshunda Sanders | July 25, 2018

Edy Poppy Talks Sex, Love, and Boredom with Siri Hustvedt

Edy Poppy Talks Sex, Love, and Boredom with Siri Hustvedt

The Author of Anatomy. Monotony. Approaches the Edge of Autofiction

By Literary Hub | July 25, 2018

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Page 297 of 344
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    • Suspenseful and Escapist: 5 Thrillers to Read at the Beach This SummerJuly 8, 2026 by Daniel Kenitz
    • How To Stay Creative While Living In the SuburbsJuly 8, 2026 by Laura Sims
    • The Shampoo Effect
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Flips the usual romance novel progression of initial friction-laced attraction that melts into undeniable love…"
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