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Is It Worth 1,000 Words? Mark Sarvas on Writing Art in Fiction

Is It Worth 1,000 Words? Mark Sarvas on Writing Art in Fiction

A Brief Survey of Paintings in Literature

By Mark Sarvas | March 14, 2018

Living Inside the Brain of a 250-Year-Old Man

Living Inside the Brain of a 250-Year-Old Man

Brian Castner on Following the Trail of Alexander Mackenzie

By Brian Castner | March 14, 2018

How Many Must Die? Teachers Reflect on Gun Violence and Student Protest

How Many Must Die? Teachers Reflect on Gun Violence and Student Protest

Thoughts from the Classroom One Month After Parkland

By Literary Hub | March 14, 2018

Battling American Obfuscation as a Young Black Reporter in Vietnam

Battling American Obfuscation as a Young Black Reporter in Vietnam

Dr. Mary Frances Berry Recalls Her Experience on the Ground

By Mary Frances Berry | March 14, 2018

'Ida is Not Universal Hope' by Simone Kearney

'Ida is Not Universal Hope' by Simone Kearney

From Her New Collection, My Ida

By Simone Kearney | March 14, 2018

What Good is a Pain Scale if Nobody Believes You?

What Good is a Pain Scale if Nobody Believes You?

Abby Norman on All-Consuming Pain and the Birth of Dolorimetry

By Abby Norman | March 14, 2018

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Ghost-Eye
  • Trash!: A Garbageman's Story
  • As If
  • Good Company
  • Radical Duke: How One Aristocrat-And the American Revolution-Transformed Britain
  • Monster of a Land: On the Road in Search of Modern America

Lit Hub Daily: March 13, 2018

By Lit Hub Daily | March 13, 2018

Daniel Mallory Ortberg: "Experiencing the Joy of Transitioning Feels Really Powerful"

By Nicole Chung | March 13, 2018

10 Brilliant Retellings of Classical Myths by Female Writers

By Sarah Henstra | March 13, 2018

Writing Rules That Were Made to Be Broken: Kill Your Darlings

Writing Rules That Were Made to Be Broken: Kill Your Darlings

Laura Van Den Berg for Grub Street's "Rules to Be Broken" Series

By Laura van den Berg | March 13, 2018

Esmé Weijun Wang Finds Her Way Back to a Beloved Childhood Dish

Esmé Weijun Wang Finds Her Way Back to a Beloved Childhood Dish

How Illness Took Me Away from the Foods of My Youth

By Esmé Weijun Wang | March 13, 2018

Photographing a New Era of American Leisure During the Vietnam War

Photographing a New Era of American Leisure During the Vietnam War

Exploring the Disconnect Between a Country at War and Its Citizens

By Joel Meyerowitz | March 13, 2018

5 Writers, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers

5 Writers, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers

Teddy Wayne Talks Inspiration, Craft, and Dream Jobs

By Teddy Wayne | March 13, 2018

Lit Hub Daily: March 12, 2018

Lit Hub Daily: March 12, 2018

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

By Lit Hub Daily | March 12, 2018

10 Authors Whose Best Work Was Published Posthumously

10 Authors Whose Best Work Was Published Posthumously

A Tragedy for Literary Egos Everywhere

By Emily Temple | March 12, 2018

Did Thoreau Actually Live on Walden Pond?

Did Thoreau Actually Live on Walden Pond?

"A Lake is the Landscape’s Most Beautiful and Expressive Feature"

By Robert Thorson | March 12, 2018

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    • Ghost-Eye
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Strikingly em Ghost-Eye em has none of the eerie mood of a Gothic novel or…"
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