TODAY: In 1960, Lady Chatterley’s Lover sells 200,000 copies in a single day following its publication in the U.K. after being banned in 1928.
Lit Hub Daily: November 10, 2025
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
- “Automation is wonderful as a technique; the problem is who controls the technology.” Noam Chomsky, José Mujica, and Saúl Alvídrez discuss the potential and pitfalls of automation. | Lit Hub Technology
- Why did Sarah Hall stamp her new novel with a Human-Written maker’s mark? On AI and “creative larceny.” | Lit Hub Craft
- These titles in translation from university presses includes works originally written in Uzbek, French, Arabic and more! | Lit Hub On Translation
- Muhammad Shehada chronicles the history of the decades-long siege on the people of Gaza. | Lit Hub Politics
- Leslie Cohen on writing a romance novel with former NHL player Sean Avery: “I knew the feeling of victory—upbeat, alive with chatter. And the dull disappointment of loss—silence.” | Lit Hub Craft
- Hannah Matthews considers the biases and blind spots behind American Girl’s most iconic products. | Lit Hub Memoir
- Gráinne O’Hare examines the power of female friendships forged among roommates. | Lit Hub Craft
- “This week they’ll drill through her walls / to look for the crack.” Read “Closed Season,” a poem by Monika Herceg from the collection Closed Season. | Lit Hub Poetry
- “Somewhere within the murky snowfall and frost, evening is falling, and the April darkness squeezes between snowflakes that pile up on the man and the two horses.” Read from Jón Kalman Stefánsson’s novel The Sorrow of Angels, translated by Philip Roughton. | Lit Hub Fiction
- Joanna Rakoff on the terrifying reality of SNAP cuts: “Anyone, in the blink of any eye, can slip into financial ruin.” | WBUR
- “Let me initiate you into some of the mysteries that have come to plague me.” Jae Towle Viera considers the unexpected effects of reading to their child. | Defector
- Salman Rushdie recommends the books he reads when writing his own. | The New Yorker
- “When I was first told she had dementia, I was happy to learn she was not evil but merely sick.” Sujatha Gidla on caring for her mother. | Granta
- Sarah Bochicchio reads postcards from Virginia Woolf. | The Paris Review
- “If I had the slides and books printed, I could study temporarily until power and the internet came back.” How Palestinian students adapted to studying in a genocide. | The Intercept
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