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Craft and Criticism
Literary Criticism
Craft and Advice
In Conversation
On Translation
Fiction and Poetry
Short Story
From the Novel
Poem
News and Culture
History
Science
Politics
Biography
Memoir
Food
Technology
Bookstores and Libraries
Film and TV
Travel
Music
Art and Photography
The Hub
Style
Design
Sports
Lit Hub Radio
The Lit Hub Podcast
Awakeners
Fiction/Non/Fiction
The Critic and Her Publics
Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast
Memoir Nation
Beyond the Page
First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing
Thresholds
The Cosmic Library
Culture Schlock
Reading Lists
The Best of the Decade
Book Marks
Best Reviewed Books
CrimeReads
True Crime
The Daily Thrill
Log In
Literary Criticism
William Gay Was Never Too Busy for Life's Smaller Moments
Sonny Brewer Remembers His Friend, a Master of the Southern Gothic
By
Sonny Brewer
| September 4, 2020
On the Children's Book So Bad, So Inauthentic... It Was Good?
This Week on
The NewberyTart
Podcast
By
NewberyTart
| September 4, 2020
"Will I Come to a Miserable End?" Jenny Erpenbeck on Thomas Mann
"He succeeds in inverting the order of farce and tragedy."
By
Jenny Erpenbeck
| September 3, 2020
A University Press Looks Back on a Century of Publishing
.University of Washington Press Chooses Some of Its
Favorites Over the Years
By
Literary Hub
| September 3, 2020
The 45 Best Bad Amazon Reviews of
In Cold Blood
"The novel is ultimately a LIE."
By
Emily Temple
| September 2, 2020
Reading Women
Recommends Anthologies, AKA Literary Buffets
Reading Women
Introduces This Month's Theme
By
Reading Women
| September 2, 2020
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
When a 13th-Century Essay Hits Close to Home
By
Literary Disco
| September 1, 2020
The Humble Confidence of Seamus Heaney
By
R. F. Foster
| August 31, 2020
On the Experimental Realism of an Eccentric Russian Anglophile
By
Caryl Emerson
| August 31, 2020
The Ecstasy of Reading (and Rereading)
Anna Karenina
This Week on
The History of Literature
Podcast with Jacke Wilson
By
History of Literature
| August 31, 2020
She Said She Would Write the Essay Herself: Reading Virginia Woolf in Middle Age
Heather O'Neill Discovers Many Ways to See the Self in
Mrs Dalloway
By
Heather O'Neill
| August 28, 2020
Learning to Appreciate the Small Things From a 1,000-Year-Old Japanese Writer
Eric Weiner on Reading Sei Shōnagon
By
Eric Weiner
| August 28, 2020
Carlos Fonseca on Harnessing the Literary Power of Tedium
The Author of Natural History in Conversation with Juan Toledo
By
Juan Toledo
| August 28, 2020
The New Seduction of an Old Literary Crime Classic
Eugen Bacon Pays Homage to Peter Temple's
Truth
By
Eugen Bacon
| August 27, 2020
On the Anti-Western Genre Set in America's Surreal Borderlands
Mike Soto Defines the Narco Acid Western
By
Mike Soto
| August 26, 2020
Joy Harjo on the Diverse, Groundbreaking World of Indigenous Poetry
A New Anthology Celebrates Familial and Poetry Ancestors
By
Joy Harjo
| August 26, 2020
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Page 270 of 344
10 New Books Coming Out This Week
November 3, 2025
by
CrimeReads
Arthur Conan Doyle, Jack the Ripper and the Fact and Fiction of Criminal Profiling
November 3, 2025
by
Rachel Corbett
Crime and the City: Falkland Islands
November 3, 2025
by
Paul French
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Not much happens In fact there is much in the text that is not made…"