- A CALL TO ACTION: After thirty-five years, The Gettysburg Review, Gettysburg College’s quarterly literary magazine, is ceasing publication. We encourage everyone to continue to read and SUBSCRIBE to literary magazines and journals, where you can find great pieces like this essay on time in life and in fiction (The Gettysburg Review), an essay on passing in America (New England Review), Héctor Tobar on California smog (ZYZZYVA), a piece on personal and environmental grief (Conjunctions), a story by Morgan Tatly (TriQuarterly), a conversation between Margaret Atwood and Rebecca Solnit (Orion), fiction from Christine Schutt (NOON), and this essay on whale dildos (The Common). SUPPORT LIT MAGS, SUPPORT LITERARY CULTURE!
- Meet the Writers on the Baillie Gifford Prize Longlist, including David Grann, Siddhartha Mukherjee, Tiya Miles, John Vaillant and more. | Lit Hub
- “I had created something—something that I’d honestly thought of as maybe a little brilliant but also maybe a little crazy.” Pauls Toutonghi on finding purpose in creativity. | Lit Hub Craft
- “I asked myself why me? Why? Why? A cosmic loneliness was my shadow… It is one of the blessings of this world that few people see visions and dream dreams.” Understanding Zora Neale Hurston’s exquisite loneliness. | Lit Hub
- “She has become my Mary.” Anne Eekhout on fictionalizing Mary Shelley. | Lit Hub Craft
- Mina Honey on writing about sex in memoir. | Lit Hub Memoir
- The shortlists for the Goldsmiths prize for innovative fiction and the Wodehouse prize for comic fiction have been revealed. | Guardian
- A conversation with Hélène Cixous on writing as a woman, the meaning of Jewishness, and the impossibility of understanding. | Jewish Currents
- “It was fate that I translated this book.” Interviews with all the finalists – writers and translators – for the National Book Award in Translation. | Words Without Borders
- “On A Clear Day,” a new poem by Victoria Chang. | The Atlantic
- Chef Evan Hanczor and conductor Will Curry on their favorite branches of New York City libraries | WSJ