- “The height of American cool is grace and redemption, refined into art. A lightning strike of that transformation happened in the Bronx.” Ian Frazier on the early history of New York City’s northernmost borough. | Lit Hub History
- Jonathan Lethem, Ann Patchett, and more writers share how they manage to put words on a page: “I felt like I was stepping into the novel every day, and when I finished work I stepped out of it.” | Lit Hub Craft
- “It isn’t about writing in a way that only humanizes Black people to white people and non-Black people…it’s also about telling stories where Black people…can be witnessed by each other.” Itoro Bassey on the gift of being understood. | Lit Hub Memoir
- Gary J. Bass examines how the Tokyo Trials created modern Asia, from his Cundill Prize-shortlisted Judgment at Tokyo. | Lit Hub History
- Rachel Kushner’s Creation Lake, Garth Greenwell’s Small Rain, and Harald Jähner’s Vertigo: The Rise and Fall of Weimar Germany are among the best reviewed books of the week. | Book Marks
-
What’s in an ode? Lory Bedikian on how the poetic form helped her grieve and grow. | Lit Hub Craft
Article continues after advertisement - Sara Fitzgerald on unrequited love and a recently declassified correspondence between T.S. Eliot and Emily Hale. | Lit Hub Biography
- Cynthia Zarin talks to her daughter, Rose Seccareccia, about their shared family pastimes of art and literature. | Lit Hub In Conversation
- “Things here are going from bad to worse. Last week my aunt Jacinta passed away, and then on Saturday, after we got her buried and the sadness was beginning to settle, it started to rain like never before.” Read from Juan Rulfo’s story collection The Burning Plain, translated by Douglas Weatherford. | Lit Hub Fiction
- The Black List is expanding its focus to include fiction. | Publishers Weekly
- “What if Kafka’s dog were an unlikely hero of theory for untheoretical times? What would it mean to philosophize with Kafka’s dog? To research like a dog?” Philosophy, but make it Kafkaesque. | The Paris Review
- Alexis Pauline Gumbs on why Audre Lorde is so much more than how she is often remembered. | The Nation
- Joanna Kenty considers the pedagogy of campus protest encampments. | Public Books
- “The quest for easily dispensable wisdom has a way of leading the unwary writer astray.” Laura Miller on Matt Haig and the limits of the therapy novel. | Slate
- The Giller Prize has dropped Scotiabank from its name while announcing its longlist (but it hasn’t dropped the sponsorship). | Toronto Star
Support Lit Hub.
- Close
to the Lithub Daily
Thank you for subscribing! Popular Posts
- Six Writers on Getting Words on the PageSeptember 6, 2024 by Literary Hub7
- Little Free Library has a new map to help places hit hardest by book bans.September 5, 2024 by James Folta
- NaNoWriMo defends writing with AI and pisses off the whole internet.September 3, 2024 by James Folta
- Space Eurovision and the Countess of Monte Cristo: September’s Best Sci-Fi and Fantasy BooksSeptember 3, 2024 by Natalie Zutter
- Six Writers on Getting Words on the PageSeptember 6, 2024 by Literary Hub
-
- The Best Reviewed Books of the WeekSeptember 13, 2024
- 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This WeekSeptember 12, 2024 by Book Marks
- The Best Reviewed Books of the WeekSeptember 6, 2024 by Book Marks
- 5 Reviews You Need to Read This WeekSeptember 5, 2024 by Book Marks
- The Best Reviewed Books of the MonthAugust 30, 2024 by Book Marks
-
- Six Sci-Fi Thrillers About AISeptember 13, 2024 by Lois Melbourne
- The Most Anticipated Crime, Horror, and Mystery Novels of Fall 2024September 13, 2024 by Molly Odintz
- There is Something Female About Being Dead: On Gender and HorrorSeptember 12, 2024 by Logan-Ashley Kisner