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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
BUY A HAT
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
Virginia and Leonard Woolf Remember Their War Dead
On One of Hogarth Press' Earliest Printings
By
Joanna Scutts
| November 12, 2018
What Folk Music Misses About Actual Folks
Brian Laidlaw on the Pastoral Fantasy in Music and Poetry
By
Brian Laidlaw
| November 9, 2018
Simone de Beauvoir: "How Many Bland and Dull Escapist Novels There Are!"
The Author of The Second Sex... Calling It Like She Sees It
By
Simone de Beauvoir
| November 9, 2018
The Moment Sylvia Plath Found Her Genius
Craig Morgan Teicher on the Rise of a Great Poet
By
Craig Morgan Teicher
| November 8, 2018
How Much Editing Was Done to Emily Dickinson's Poems After She Died?
The Poet's Earliest Advocates Might Have Been Guilty of Overreach
By
Julie Dobrow
| November 8, 2018
The Queering of Boundaries in Cristina Rivera Garza's Fiction
"I Will Always Be on the Side of Imprudent Novels"
By
Veronica Esposito
| November 8, 2018
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The Polish Army Officer Who Conjured Proust in a Soviet Prison Camp
By
Eric Karpeles
| November 7, 2018
Haiku: The Evolution of a Strict Poetic Game
By
Hiroaki Sato
| November 5, 2018
Literary Magazines Are Born to Die
By
Nick Ripatrazone
| November 2, 2018
The Avid Reader: Sandra Cisneros on Elena Poniatowska
Having a Coffee with One of Mexico's Great Novelists
By
Sandra Cisneros
| November 1, 2018
The Zombies of Karl Marx: Horror in Capitalism's Wake
Brains, one might say, “to each according to his need.”
By
Tyler Malone
| October 31, 2018
How Much Did James Joyce Base "The Dead" on His Own Family?
Colm Tóibín on the Greatest Short Story Ever Written
By
Colm Tóibín
| October 30, 2018
Literary Hoax is the Most Underappreciated Genre
From James Macpherson to Lee Israel to JT LeRoy, It's All Good
By
J.W. McCormack
| October 30, 2018
The Radical Moralist: On Lionel Trilling's Literary Criticism
Writing in the Cusp of the Victorian and Modern
By
Adam Kirsch
| October 30, 2018
Why Contemporary Art (and Literature) Needs More Sarcastic Critics
César Aira Thinks We Could Use a Bit More "Whatever" in Art
By
César Aira
| October 29, 2018
In Gratitude for the Fierce Women of the World
Laird Hunt on the Women at the Center of His Novels
By
Laird Hunt
| October 29, 2018
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November 21, 2025
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Olivia Rutigliano
Breaking In: A Field Guide to Heist Plot Types
November 21, 2025
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Norman Birnbach and Tilia Klebenov Jacobs
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"The stories in her hypnotic collection em The Pelican Child em are painterly and provocative…"