Lit Hub Daily: June 17, 2021
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
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“The term ‘Internet Literature’ seems perfectly designed to divide us, but we’re getting it all wrong.” Shya Scanlon on our love-hate relationship with that new, wobbly genre. | Lit Hub Criticism
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Laura Raicovich considers Nan Goldin’s protest against the Sacklers, the myth of neutrality in our cultural spaces, and what accountability means for museums. | Lit Hub Politics
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Lament, or coach? Elyssa Friedland on what to do when your student’s a better writer than you are. | Lit Hub Teaching
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“My mother made curtains because there were windows right in front of her, windows that needed dressing. I looked around my home, around my kitchen, and I wrote into that space.” Krys Malcolm Belc on gender, parenthood, and loving through providing. | Lit Hub Memoir
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Veronica Esposito reflects on lessons in intergenerational feminism from Michelle Orange’s Pure Flame. | Lit Hub Criticism
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“Suddenly, I realized what lay at the heart of my struggle: I was aiming to please an audience whose native language and cultural experience were fundamentally different from mine.” Dariel Suarez on writing fiction as a non-native English speaker. | Lit Hub
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Beat the heat with these 21 crime movies set during sweltering city summers. From Olivia Rutligliano. | CrimeReads
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David Klion on George Packer, Haley Mlotek on Joan Didion, Kerri Greenidge on Clint Smith, and more of the Reviews You Need to Read This Week. | Book Marks
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WATCH: Kaitlyn Greenidge, Brandon Hobson, Elissa Washuta, and Dani Putney perform at the Franklin Park Reading Series. | Lit Hub Virtual Book Channel
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Hannah Kauders on translating Iván Monalisa Ojeda’s Las Biuty Queens. | Words Without Borders
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“I wonder: what, now, in the Anthropocene, is the point of reading?” Daegan Miller reads The Porch and considers the possibilities of nature writing. | Guernica
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Please… my field of Dante studies… she’s very sick. Or: the problems with—and solution to—the current state of Dante studies. | Public Books
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Louise Kennedy and Sarah Moss discuss national identity, disappointing holidays, and art deco china. | Granta
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“The valorization of people like [George] Floyd, Gianna [Floyd], and now Darnella with her Pulitzer prize as martyrs instead of victims of state violence acts only to individualize these tragedies.” Hanna Phifer on what it means to give a Pulitzer Prize to Darnella Frazier. | Refinery29
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Here’s how Los Angeles’ indie bookstores have been surviving the pandemic. | Los Angeles Times
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“Our job in the LGBTQ press is to make sure members of our community know what is going on.” Tammye Nash talks about working for LGBTQ media. | PEN America
Also on Lit Hub: Matthew Norman’s most embarrassing literary encounters (so far) • A poem by Ariana Brown • Read from Iván Monalisa Ojeda’s newly translated collection, Las Biuty Queen (trans. Hannah Kauders)
Lit Hub Daily
The best of the literary Internet, every day, brought to you by Literary Hub.



















