Lit Hub Daily: June 8, 2026
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: In 1876, George Sand dies.
- Xiao Hai remembers balancing brutal night shifts on the production floor with writing poetry. | Lit Hub Memoir
- “We can be demure and brat, sense and sensibility, sometimes in quick succession or all at once in a single day.” The timeless appeal of Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility. | Lit Hub Craft
- Carla Baricz surveys Rachel Carson’s poetic environmental vision. | Lit Hub Biography
- On scrap theory, the “Black feminist methodology of communing with scraps” as historical preservation. | Lit Hub Craft
- How Katherine Mansfield crafted children’s worlds in her fiction (even if there was no child present). | Lit Hub Criticism
- “The action on the field is sublime, and yet it’s the least interesting thing about the sport.” Leander Schaerlaeckens recommends 5 books to better understand the World Cup. | Lit Hub Reading Lists
- This week in literary history, Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of Lolita premieres in New York. | Lit Hub Film
- Randall Sullivan chronicles the day FDR and Anton Cermak witnessed baseball history. | Lit Hub History
- “My boyfriend’s family is supposed to visit and we have to prepare and try to match their lavish dinners and four-course crystal-and-china extravaganzas.” Read “Go Get ‘Em,” a story from Sofi Stambo’s collection, People Who Live Alone Talk Too Much. | Lit Hub Fiction
- “The chief beneficiary of the paper’s broad-mindedness is advancing that narrow-minded man’s agenda while destroying the country’s most venerated television news operation.” Michael Tomasky on the monster the New York Times created. | The New Republic
- In an essay newly translated by Pankaj Mishra, Thomas Mann reflects on America’s “terrifying moral decline” (from 1949, still relevant!). | Equator
- How Lord Alfred Douglas went from sitting at the center of Oscar Wilde’s libel suit to converting to Catholicism. | JSTOR Daily
- We’d love it if AI left serif fonts alone. | Wired
- Christina Hennemann considers Irish poetry on reproductive freedom. | The Conversation
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