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- Earl Swift on what a series of killings in rural Georgia reveals about the continuing regime of racial terror in the post-Civil War American South. | Lit Hub History
- “There are two kinds of novels about American life in the digital age: panoramas and selfies.” 5 book reviews you need to read this week. | Book Marks
- “And so the beleaguered St. Lawrence beluga had a new enemy: the American showman.” On P.T. Barnum and animal welfare in 19th century America. | Lit Hub History
- Maris Kreizman explains why giant book preview lists might not be as helpful as readers think. | Lit Hub Criticism
- What is a wonder of the world, anyway? Bettany Hughes on the human need to map out monumental greatness. | Lit Hub History
- “She called me up and said the boy pushed his sister. You don’t hit girls. Certainly not my little girl. So I get in my station wagon and drive from Edgewood to Garfield to spank my son.” Read from Elwin Cotman’s story collection, Weird Black Girls. | Lit Hub Fiction
- Remembering Trina Robbins, cartoonist and legend of the underground comix movement. | The Comics Journal
- “And still, no one knew for sure what had become of Beit Nattif and the men left behind there.” Mohammad Tarbush on the displacement of his family after the Nakba. | Asymptote
- Renowned poetry critic Helen Vendler dies at 90. | The New York Times
- The debate continues: does The Tortured Poets Department constitute poetry? | Dazed
- Ryan Britt and J. Michael Straczynski on the legacy of one of speculative fiction’s most unforgettable (and controversial) voices: Harlan Ellison. | Inverse
- Vivian Gornick remembers the scene (and chocolate pudding) at New York lit world haunt Café Loup. | Grub Street
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