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Craft and Criticism
Literary Criticism
Craft and Advice
In Conversation
On Translation
Fiction and Poetry
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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
History
A Day in the Life of an 11-Year-Old Spy in 1939 Berlin
Rebecca Donner on a Blue Knapsack as the Accessory to Espionage
By
Rebecca Donner
| August 9, 2021
What Visiting Plantations Taught Me About Historical Erasure
LaTanya McQueen on Piecing Together Her Family's Past
By
LaTanya McQueen
| August 9, 2021
On the Rise of the Icelandic Saga as Written Literature
Arthur Herman Gets at the Heart of the Sagas’ Perennial Appeal
By
Arthur Herman
| August 9, 2021
Ron Nyren on Delving into San Francisco’s Storied History
In Conversation with G.P. Gottlieb on
New Books Network
By
New Books Network
| August 7, 2021
Take a look at a young Flannery O’Connor’s satirical cartoons.
By
Walker Caplan
| August 6, 2021
Edward J. Watts on the Fall of Rome and the Dangerous Rhetoric of Decline
In Conversation with Andrew Keen on
Keen On
By
Keen On
| August 5, 2021
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Why We Have Police: Race, Class, and Labor Control
By
Philip V. McHarris
| August 4, 2021
Tesla vs. GM: On the Early Years of the Electric Car Wars
By
Tim Higgins
| August 4, 2021
On Lebanon’s Water Crisis and the Long Fallout of the Civil War
By
Charif Majdalani
| August 4, 2021
Michael Knox Beran on the Rise and Fall of WASP Culture
In Conversation with Andrew Keen on
Keen On
By
Keen On
| August 4, 2021
The Plague Year
by Lawrence Wright, Read by Eric Jason Martin
On the 2020 Pandemic—What Have We Learned?
By
Behind the Mic
| August 4, 2021
Reading is a Political Encounter: On Violence, Language, and Selective Forgetting
Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi Finds Lessons in History, From Tehran to Orange County
By
Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi
| August 3, 2021
Paradise Extended: Searching for My Great-Grandfather’s Grave in a Segregated Cemetery
This Week from the
Emergence Magazine
Podcast
By
Emergence Magazine
| August 2, 2021
On the Life and Works of Jack Kerouac, “King of the Beats”
From the
History of Literature
with Jacke Wilson
By
History of Literature
| August 2, 2021
“The book is an abortion”: In which Herman Melville eviscerates a book about yachting.
By
Jessie Gaynor
| July 30, 2021
Exploring the Moon: Revisiting Apollo 15's Lunar Landing, 50 Years Later
Andrew Chaikin on Three Days Spent in a Geologic Wonderland
By
Andrew Chaikin
| July 30, 2021
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The Best Fiction in Translation of Fall 2025
November 21, 2025
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Molly Odintz
“Whoever Wrote this Episode Should Die":
Galaxy Quest
Is Personal, and it's Personal to Me
November 21, 2025
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Olivia Rutigliano
Breaking In: A Field Guide to Heist Plot Types
November 21, 2025
by
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…"