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Craft and Criticism
Literary Criticism
Craft and Advice
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On Translation
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From the Novel
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Science
Politics
Biography
Memoir
Food
Technology
Bookstores and Libraries
Film and TV
Travel
Music
Art and Photography
The Hub
Style
Design
Sports
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
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The Best of the Decade
Book Marks
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True Crime
The Daily Thrill
Log In
Nature
Nobel Prize Laureate Katalin Karikó on Her Hungarian Childhood
“I understand now that this local ‘soap cooker lady’ was the first biochemist I ever met.”
By
Katalin Karikó
| October 12, 2023
The World's Most Beautiful Bird Lives in Yellowstone National Park
Behold the Peregrine Falcon
By
Douglas W. Smith, Lauren E. Walker, Katharine E. Duffy and David Haines
| October 12, 2023
A Short Story from Masatsugu Ono and
Emergence Magazine
This Week from the
Emergence Magazine
Podcast
By
Emergence Magazine
| October 10, 2023
Natalie Rose Richardson on Birdwatching and Attention
This Week from the
Emergence Magazine
Podcast
By
Emergence Magazine
| October 2, 2023
Nathan Hill on the Biggest Surprise of His Literary Career
This Week on
The Literary Life
with Mitchell Kaplan
By
The Literary Life
| September 29, 2023
Evolutionary Links: What Great Apes Tell Us About Being Human
From Alison Bashford's Cundill Prize-Shortlisted
The Huxleys: An Intimate History of Evolution
By
Alison Bashford
| September 28, 2023
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
Stephanie Krzywonos on Re-imagining Antarctica
By
Emergence Magazine
| September 25, 2023
How America's Natural Beauty Called Generations of Women to Action
By
Tiya Miles
| September 21, 2023
Familiar Yet Strange: Why Turtles Are Worth Saving
By
Sy Montgomery
| September 20, 2023
James Reich on Existential Fiction and the Imprint of Nature
"In fiction, as in reality, we dismiss nature at our peril."
By
James Reich
| September 13, 2023
How Jonathan Raban's
Passage to Juneau
Decolonizes Nature Writing
Robert MacFarlane on Indigenous Pantheons, the Western Notion of the Sublime, and Raban's Disruptive Language
By
Robert Macfarlane
| September 11, 2023
Learning to Write About Pets When You Aren't An Animal Person
LaToya Watkins on Loss, the Natural World as a Mirror, and the Reassuring Blessing of Nonhuman Companionship
By
LaToya Watkins
| September 11, 2023
Navied Mahdavian on Confronting Environmental Degredation in the American West
From His Graphic Memoir,
This Country
By
Navied Mahdavian
| September 11, 2023
Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee on Stepping into the Liminal
This Week from the
Emergence Magazine
Podcast
By
Emergence Magazine
| September 11, 2023
Chelsea Steinauer-Scudder on How Words Shape Our World
This Week from the
Emergence Magazine
Podcast
By
Emergence Magazine
| September 5, 2023
Melanie Challenger on Listening to Other Species
This Week from the
Emergence Magazine
Podcast
By
Emergence Magazine
| August 28, 2023
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Page 12 of 51
I’m 13 Years Late to
The Amazing Spider-Man
and I Have Thoughts
November 7, 2025
by
Olivia Rutigliano
The Best Psychological Thrillers of November 2025
November 7, 2025
by
Molly Odintz
From Spies and Matrons to
Miami Vice
: A Short History of Women in Law Enforcement
November 7, 2025
by
Alie Dumas Heidt
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Not much happens In fact there is much in the text that is not made…"