- Arguing online with no one: on bad faith backlash and the Internet of takes. | Literary Hub
- Those who can do, sometimes teach: 25 great writing manuals from 25 great writers. | Literary Hub
- How to survive a wrongful conviction: the books that got me through 18 years on death row. | Literary Hub
- “After that first surgery, my depression lifted significantly. It was a connection I hadn’t made before, how my dysphoria was affecting my mental health.” Akwaeke Emezi on finding a truer self through life-changing surgery. | The Cut
- “All right, I thought to myself, you will write about how altogether wanting first love is.” For her first turn as a Guardian Weekend columnist, Elena Ferrante revisits an adolescent romance. | The Guardian
- How to live like Haruki Murakami, Hunter S. Thompson, and other iconic writers (or nearly die trying). | VICE
- “She found a way to turn the insult of being poor and a woman inside out.” On the legacy of Roseanne, from Joy Press’s Stealing the Show: How Women are Revolutionizing Television. | Vulture
- Cooking fairytale feasts from a collection even more “deliciously weird” than that of the Brothers Grimm: Giambattista Basile’s The Tale of Tales. | The Paris Review
- Alysia Abbott wonders if children of queer families can be more than just allies. | Literary Hub
- Mary McCarthy on Vladimir Nabokov’s Pale Fire, “a creation of perfect beauty, symmetry… and moral truth.” | Book Marks
- “At a moment when black writers were finally awakening to the beauty of black culture, Schuyler had moved on to the part where we deconstruct race.” Danzy Senna on the contradictory life and work of George Schuyler. | New York Review of Books
- The book editor whose pseudonymous novel became a runaway bestseller—at his own publishing house. | The New York Times
Also on Literary Hub: Parenthood and God: Anjali Kumar discovers a need for the divine · Defiance and grace at the opera: America and its neverending Gold Rush · Read “The Cat” by Janice Obuchowski