Literary Hub
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
Craft and Criticism
Fiction and Poetry
News and Culture
Lit Hub Radio
Reading Lists
Book Marks
CrimeReads
Log In
History
When Plastic Grew on Trees
Is It Ivory? Is it a Nut? It's Tagua.
By
Edward Posnett
| August 8, 2019
The Novel F. Scott Fitzgerald
Never Wrote
A Romantic Drama Against the Backdrop of History
By
Anne Margaret Daniel
| August 7, 2019
InterLibrary Loan Will
Change Your Life
Nick Ripatrazone Offers a Brief History (and Celebration) of
the Apex of Human Civilization
By
Nick Ripatrazone
| August 7, 2019
The Painter's Wife vs. The Poet's Husband: Portrait of a Marriage
Shawna Lemay on the Indistinct Line Between Background and Foreground
By
Shawna Lemay
| August 6, 2019
What I Teach: Seven Titles From a High School Class on Trauma Literature
Kate McQuade on Yaa Gyasi, Art Spiegelman, Tim O'Brien, and More
By
Kate McQuade
| August 6, 2019
How the Long Persecution
of the Rhineland Jews Shaped Karl Marx
A Revolutionary Spirit Born of the Crusades and Napoleonic Wars
By
Shlomo Avineri
| August 6, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Failed Utopias: Can You Buy an Immaculate World With Dirty Money?
By
Caite Dolan-Leach
| August 6, 2019
What Contraception Meant to a Century of Women Writers
By
Julie Phillips
| August 5, 2019
Walter Benjamin: How WWI Changed the Meaning of 'Barbaric'
By
Walter Benjamin
| August 2, 2019
The Life of Afong Moy, the First Chinese Woman in America
Contending with the Orientalist Fears and Fantasies of a Young Nation
By
Nancy E. Davis
| August 2, 2019
On Svetlana Alexievich: What Can a Book Do in the Face of War?
Rachel Seiffert Considers
Last Witnesses
By
Rachel Seiffert
| August 1, 2019
127 years after his death, letters of love and angst still come to Rimbaud's grave.
By
Aaron Robertson
| July 31, 2019
Never Again What? On the Hard Questions Primo Levi's Still Asking
The Necessity of Revisiting His Classic
If This Is a Man
By
Giacomo Lichtner
| July 31, 2019
Finding Photos of My Grandfather in a Japanese Internment Camp
Brandon Shimoda on Seeking Ancestral Connections Through Remnants on the Wall at Fort Missoula
By
Brandon Shimoda
| July 30, 2019
A Brief and Awful History
of the Lobotomy
Groundbreaking Discoveries... But at What Cost?
By
Andrew Scull
| July 30, 2019
On Hitler's Last Desperate Plan to Destroy Paris
"Paris must not fall into enemy hands except as a field of ruins."
By
Jean Edward Smith
| July 30, 2019
« First
‹ Previous
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
Next ›
Last »
Page 196 of 222
Cannibal, the Listicle
February 17, 2026
by
Molly Odintz
The Pull of Gritty, Authentic Crime Fiction in the Era of AI Slop
February 17, 2026
by
Will Dean
Fergus Craig on Cozies, Humor, and Placing Serial Killers in Unexpected Settings
February 17, 2026
by
Fergus Craig
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"a succession of nine quietly horrifying stories from a dystopian pastorally radiant England The novella…"