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Memoir
On War, Fatherhood, and the Half-Life of Cormac McCarthy’s Literary Fission
Will Cathcart Travels the Road From Kherson to a Delivery Room in Tbilisi
By
Will Cathcart
| January 5, 2023
How Mussolini's Legacy Lives on in Both the Public and Private Spheres
Andrea Bajani on Fascism and Family in Modern Italy
By
Andrea Bajani
| January 5, 2023
On Translation and the (Temporary) Inheritance of Trauma
Yardenne Greenspan Considers What It Means to Truly Inhabit an Author’s Work
By
Yardenne Greenspan
| January 4, 2023
Searching For Home with Samuel Beckett
"It’s possible that carrying around cracks in the first foundation... helps a person accept a cosmos flawed at its core."
By
Ken Babstock
| January 4, 2023
On Authenticity, Research, and Writing From the Diaspora
V.V. Ganeshananthan on Writing About Sri Lanka
By
V.V. Ganeshananthan
| January 4, 2023
Chris Belcher on Blurring the Lines Between Sex Work and Academia
In Conversation with Mitzi Rapkin on the
First Draft Podcast
By
First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing
| January 4, 2023
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
How Zora Neale Hurston’s Study of Hoodoo Helped Me Grieve
By
Tracey Rose Peyton
| January 3, 2023
“My Ithaca Burned Down, Too.” A Letter from a Teenage Joycean and Ukrainian Refugee
By
José Vergara
| January 3, 2023
The Forty Year Kiss: Nickolas Butler on Why People-Watching Is Writing
By
Nickolas Butler
| December 23, 2022
Jonathan Lear on Learning from Linguistic Example on the Playground
“It is not that there are no answers; it is rather that the answers never close the book on the questions.”
By
Jonathan Lear
| December 23, 2022
“I Didn’t Ask to Be Here.” Or: How Do We Find Value in This Life?
Nick Riggle on Ocean Vuong and the Mysterious Beauty of Being Alive
By
Nick Riggle
| December 16, 2022
The 10 Most Popular Lit Hub Stories of 2022
On Wednesdays We Read Lit Hub
By
Emily Temple
| December 15, 2022
How Community Organizers and Business Leaders Came Together to Improve Bedford-Stuyvesant
Franklin A. Thomas on the Complex Alliance Between Activists and the Political Establishment in 1960s New York City
By
Franklin A. Thomas
| December 15, 2022
Moriel Rothman-Zecher on the Magic of Writing at Sunrise
“It is my job, simply, to open my eyes, and place my fingers on the keyboard and then, let go.”
By
Moriel Rothman-Zecher
| December 14, 2022
Anatomy of a Kidnapping: An Inside Look at the First Few Days in Terrorist Captivity
Shahbaz Taseer Recounts the Beginning of a Four-And-A-Half Year Long Nightmare
By
Shahbaz Taseer
| December 13, 2022
Between Shame, Desire, and Destiny: On the Genius of Annie Ernaux
Ken Chen Considers the Work of This Year’s Nobel Laureate
By
Ken Chen
| December 12, 2022
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Page 64 of 203
Technofascism in Thrillers: A Reading List
March 11, 2026
by
Ani Katz
The Greatest Dangerous Female Characters in Literature
March 11, 2026
by
Lisa Unger
Lenore Nash on Writing International, Character-Driven Detective Stories
March 11, 2026
by
Lenore Nash
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Slim but powerful Solnit writes with moral clarity and philosophical vigor in a voice that…"