- Where to start with one of the world’s great writers? Here are 25 Alice Munro stories you can read right now online. | Lit Hub
- Much has changed since the turn of the millennium, but as Nadifa Mohamad looks back at life at Oxford’s last all-women college, much has stayed the same. | Lit Hub
- From Thelma and Louise to the Long Island Lolita, Allison Yarrow looks at that archetypal character of the 1990s, “the Woman in Jeopardy.” | Lit Hub
- Lucy Tan on falling in love with the language she’d spoken as a child. | Lit Hub
- For no particular reason other than we felt like it, take a look back at the first reviews of every Thomas Pynchon novel. | Book Marks
- From jazz-age psychopaths to modern-day pirates, the best true crime books to read this July. | CrimeReads
- Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient has won the Golden Booker, a public poll to determine the best Man Booker Prize winner of the last 50 years. | The Guardian
- “If it had Satan on the cover, it sold.” Grady Hendrix on the lost (and increasingly out-of-print) world of horror paperbacks. | NPR
- “Now that this other Samantha Hunt, writer, is with me, I don’t know where to keep her or what to make of her.” Samantha Hunt on sharing a name with the author of Extreme BDSM for Sexual Freaks. | BuzzFeed Reader
- On the slowly changing landscape of romance novels, and the writers of color—like Helen Hoang, Jasmine Guillory, and Mia Sosa—who have broken through. | The New York Times
- “I really think that a lot of the people who live on the coasts don’t think that emotionally sophisticated Midwesterners exist.” An interview with Curtis Sittenfeld. | Electric Literature
- One of the most hideously complex group of women in literature: Why Sharp Objects is the ultimate Gillian Flynn novel. | Vulture
- “You asked me for my secret. I told you about the son who didn’t live with me.” An excerpt from Terese Marie Mailhot’s memoir Heart Berries. | Granta
Article continues after advertisement