Lit Hub Daily: April 16, 2026
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: In 1894, Anton Chekhov’s story, “The Student,” is published in Russkie Vedomosti.
- It’s day four of our Best Literary Adaptations bracket, and your vote can help keep your favorite films in the running to win! | Lit Hub
- Jennifer Keishin Armstrong explains how Parks and Recreation visualized a better America. | Lit Hub TV
- Polly Barton considers Ryūnosuke Akutagawa’s Hell of Solitude: “The question then is, what does matter? What do we have when we do not have a story?” | Lit Hub Criticism
- “An ideal celebrity memoir with the added bonus of being written by someone who can actually write.” 5 book reviews you need to read this week | Book Marks
- Here are this week’s Independent Press Top 40 Bestsellers for fiction and nonfiction. | Lit Hub Bookstores
- “Jeyamohan stages his fundamental inquiry into the nature of existence and the meaning of values that runs through all his novels.” Suchitra Ramachandran on translating The Abyss. | Lit Hub On Translation
- In honor of National Poetry Month, today we think you should read Alejandra Pizarnik’s “[All night I hear the noise of water sobbing.]” | Lit Hub Poetry
- “Pandaram had risen before dawn. He had bathed at home, streaked himself with sacred ash, drunk his karuppatti kaapi and was now taking his snuff.” Read from Jeyamohan’s novel The Abyss, translated by Suchitra Ramachandran. | Lit Hub Fiction
- Caroline Bicks shares a terrifying detail about The Shining she gleaned from a year in Stephen King’s archives. | Slate
- “AI writing tools’ tendency to suck up to their human users has a spillover effect, making the overall tenor of online writing more saccharine.” Kate Knibbs explores a strange side-effect of AI slop. | Wired
- Amelia Soth considers the golden age of the American soapbox. | JSTOR Daily
- Virginia McGee Richards, author of The Inner Passage, on the dark history of a South Carolina waterway. | The MIT Press Reader
- The similarities (and differences) between two new books that revisit the Bernie Goetz shooting. | The Baffler
- What happens when one of America’s most ubiquitous tabloids gets political. | The New Yorker
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