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Do the Sounds That Haunt You Have a Material Shape?

Do the Sounds That Haunt You Have a Material Shape?

On the Weird Physical History of Media and Information

By Kristen Gallerneaux | December 12, 2018

What It Was Like to Work With Julian Assange on Publishing Wikileaks

What It Was Like to Work With Julian Assange on Publishing Wikileaks

The Former Editor of The Guardian on a Tumultuous Time at the Paper

By Alan Rusbridger | November 27, 2018

Literary Twitter's Best Responses to Jonathan Franzen's Rules for Writing

Literary Twitter's Best Responses to Jonathan Franzen's Rules for Writing

"He's won. Franzen's won."

By Jessie Gaynor | November 16, 2018

City Lights' Elaine Katzenberger Has Seen It All in San Francisco

City Lights' Elaine Katzenberger Has Seen It All in San Francisco

From Boom to Bust and Boom Again...

By Cary McClelland and Elaine Katzenberger | October 26, 2018

Lev Grossman: Why We've Always Needed Fantastic Maps

Lev Grossman: Why We've Always Needed Fantastic Maps

From Narnia to Dungeons & Dragons, on the Allure of Imaginary Places

By Lev Grossman | October 22, 2018

What Mysteries and Medicine Have in Common

What Mysteries and Medicine Have in Common

Surgeon and Writer Arnold van de Laar on the Doctor as Detective

By Arnold van de Laar | October 19, 2018

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Permanence
  • No Way Home
  • Muskism: A Guide for the Perplexed
  • Small Town Girls: A Writer's Memoir
  • Last Night in Brooklyn
  • If This Be Magic: The Unlikely Art of Shakespeare in Translation

Autonomous Everything: How Algorithms Are Taking Over Our World

By Bruce Schneier | October 1, 2018

Where, Exactly, is the Overlap Between Storytelling and Technology?

By Tobias Carroll | September 24, 2018

Lit Hub's Fall 2018 Nonfiction Preview: Science & Technology

By Emily Temple | September 7, 2018

When English and Computer Code Both Feel Like Foreign Languages

When English and Computer Code Both Feel Like Foreign Languages

"I am Ill at Ease in a Room of People Speaking Quickly and Fluidly"

By David Auerbach | August 31, 2018

Are Human Genes Changing As Fast As Culture and Technology?

Are Human Genes Changing As Fast As Culture and Technology?

On the Rise of Epigenetics in the Anthropocene

By Peter Ward | August 22, 2018

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction is the Best Place on the Internet

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction is the Best Place on the Internet

Self-Referential, Argumentative, and Never Dispassionate

By MH Rowe | August 16, 2018

'What is That? It’s Nothing.' On the Unlikely Origins of Twitter

'What is That? It’s Nothing.' On the Unlikely Origins of Twitter

An Oral History, From the People Who Built It

By Adam Fisher | July 16, 2018

How Much Does Fake News Actually Sway Voters?

How Much Does Fake News Actually Sway Voters?

A Closer Look at Bots and Politics

By David Sumpter | June 27, 2018

The All-Too Human Cost of Appalachia's Fracking Boom

The All-Too Human Cost of Appalachia's Fracking Boom

America's Answer to Energy Scarcity Has Always Been to Dig Deeper

By Eliza Griswold | June 19, 2018

Technostalgia: From Analog to Digital, Memories in Technology

Technostalgia: From Analog to Digital, Memories in Technology

From Small Pox on the Oregon Trail to the 2016 Election

By Katie Williams | June 18, 2018

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    • The Best Mysteries, Thrillers, and Crime Novels of May 2026May 6, 2026 by Molly Odintz
    • What Motherhood Taught L.M. Kemp About EspionageMay 6, 2026 by L.M. Kemp
    • How Being a Mediocre Scientist Made Vincent Yu a Better NovelistMay 6, 2026 by Vincent Yu
    • Permanence
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Mackintosh has a spare and confident hand Her work is sometimes described as dreamlike certainly…"
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