Literary Hub
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
The Book That Changed My Life: Giving Voice to the Divine, Inexplicable Ocean

The Book That Changed My Life: Giving Voice to the Divine, Inexplicable Ocean

Jock Serong on the Writing of the Reclusive James Hamilton Paterson

By Jock Serong | September 24, 2020

Snapshots Before the War: Saying Goodbye in 1944

Snapshots Before the War: Saying Goodbye in 1944

Paul Hendrickson on the Day His Father Shipped Off to Japan

By Paul Hendrickson | September 23, 2020

Wayétu Moore on Using Storytelling to Find the Good Amid the Grim

Wayétu Moore on Using Storytelling to Find the Good Amid the Grim

From the Thresholds Podcast, Hosted by Jordan Kisner

By Thresholds | September 23, 2020

The Fault Lines of Midwestern<br> Racism Run Deep

The Fault Lines of Midwestern
Racism Run Deep

Amaud Jamaul Johnson's Letter to Wisconsin

By Amaud Jamaul Johnson | September 22, 2020

Life, Love, and Beowulf in the Deep South's Most Literary Small Town

Life, Love, and Beowulf in the Deep South's Most Literary Small Town

Lawrence Wells on the Day He Met His True Love in Oxford, Mississippi

By Lawrence Wells | September 22, 2020

Writing a History of a Pandemic During a Pandemic

Writing a History of a Pandemic During a Pandemic

Jon Sternfeld On Collective Memory and History as Instruction

By Jon Sternfeld | September 22, 2020

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Departure(s)
  • The Flower Bearers
  • Eating Ashes
  • Every One Still Here: Stories
  • Once There Was a Town: The Memory Books of a Lost Jewish World
  • The Typewriter and the Guillotine: An American Journalist, a German Serial Killer, and Paris on the Eve of WWII

Indifference and Cruelty: What Made Nazi Germany Possible

By Géraldine Schwarz | September 21, 2020

Susan Burton on Saying the Thing She Was Most
Scared to Say

By Bookable | September 21, 2020

Character-Building: On Past Traumas and a Future for the Stage

By Dan O'Brien | September 18, 2020

On Land Ethics and One of the Last Heaths in Northern Europe

On Land Ethics and One of the Last Heaths in Northern Europe

Why Robert Michael Pyle Is Haunted by a Field of Heather

By Robert Michael Pyle | September 18, 2020

Erica Barnett on the Books That Helped Her in Recovery

Erica Barnett on the Books That Helped Her in Recovery

Lessons on Addiction from Five Writers

By Erica Barnett | September 17, 2020

Morgan Jerkins: Who Gets Displaced for the Sake of Tourism?

Morgan Jerkins: Who Gets Displaced for the Sake of Tourism?

In Conversation with Maris Kreizman on The Maris Review Podcast

By The Maris Review | September 17, 2020

The Joy of Editing—and Knowing—Randall Kenan

The Joy of Editing—and Knowing—Randall Kenan

Alane Mason Remembers a Brilliant Enigma

By Alane Salierno Mason | September 16, 2020

Finding Strange Magic and Unlikely Love During the Vietnam War

Finding Strange Magic and Unlikely Love During the Vietnam War

Lan Cao on the Beginning of Her American Life

By Lan Cao | September 16, 2020

In a Family of Readers, Packing Up My Late Father's Library Was Hardest of All

In a Family of Readers, Packing Up My Late Father's Library Was Hardest of All

Seth Greenland on Remembering, Retaining, and Failing to
Exorcise Sentiment

By Seth Greenland | September 16, 2020

Ross Gay: Have I Even Told You Yet About the Courts I’ve Loved?

Ross Gay: Have I Even Told You Yet About the Courts I’ve Loved?

On the Unlikely Tenderness and Care of a Good Pick-Up Basketball Game

By Ross Gay | September 15, 2020

« First‹ Previous109110111112113114115116117Next ›Last »
Page 113 of 160
    • New Series to Watch this WeekendJanuary 23, 2026 by Olivia Rutigliano
    • 10 Speculative Mysteries and Thrillers to Check Out in 2026January 23, 2026 by Molly Odintz
    • How Psychological Thrillers Critique the American DreamJanuary 23, 2026 by Lauren Schott
    • Departure(s)
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "This briny English writer author of em Flaubert s Parrot em and a winner of…"
  • Literary Hub

    Created by Grove Atlantic and Electric Literature


    Masthead

    About

    Sign Up For Our Newsletters

    How to Pitch Lit Hub

    Advertisers: Contact Us

    Privacy Policy

    Support Lit Hub - Become A Member