TODAY: In 1906, Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle is published.
- Andrea Barrett on why writing fresh historical fiction means more than cosplaying the past. | Lit Hub Craft
- Bookstore owner Brad Johnson reflects on the total destruction, by fire, of East Bay Booksellers (and its rebirth!). | Lit Hub Bookstores
- Michael Hiltzik on how California made Ronald Reagan: “When Reagan launched his political career in the 1960s, the conservative movement was searching for a way to become relevant again.” | Lit Hub History
- “The cowboy apocalypse is at once a religious expression, a form of fan devotion, and an ideological platform with the potential for violent expression.” Video games, violence and the enduring allure of the vigilante hero. | Lit Hub Religion
- Charlotte Taylor Fryar recommends 10 Washington D.C books that aren’t about politicians by Edward P. Jones, Dinaw Mengestu, Morowa Yejidé, and more. | Lit Hub Reading Lists
- “My heart was defecting—as if it were not really mine—and the defector threatened to tear me apart.” On daily life with a defective yet vital organ. | Lit Hub Memoir
- Jane Tara on the world before and after learning that she was going blind in her 40s. | Lit Hub Craft
- “They live in a large house near the grounds of the choir school, where his father is headmaster.” Read from Michael Amherst’s debut novel The Boyhood of Cain. | Lit Hub Fiction
- Missouri Williams considers Djuna Barnes’s often overlooked stories: “…Barnes’s short stories are strange, mechanical offerings that exhibit characters and events that feel as determined as clockwork.” | The Nation
- Audrey Wollen revisits Janet Frame’s novel, The Edge of the Alphabet. | The New Yorker
- Nico Millman talks to members of the Pinko Collective about the revised and updated edition of their book, After Accountability: A Critical Genealogy of a Concept. | Full Stop
- Charley Locke recommends memorizing poems as a morning ritual. | The New York Times Magazine
- Curtis Sittenfeld recommends some books she loves. | Elle
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