TODAY: In 1962, Sylvia Plath writes one of her best-known poems, “Daddy,” partly inspired by her own relationship with her father Otto, who was an expert on bees and who died when Sylvia was just eight years old.

Also on Lit Hub:

Elias Altman remembers Lewis Lapham • Deborah Levy on Marguerite Duras’s The LoverJamie Quatro recommends 10 books for readers who vibe with Satan • On translating the ancient language of The Vetala Tales • The 10 best books for understanding America’s class system • Jane Ciabattari talks to Luis Jaramillo • Mike Fu, Kate Greathead, and more authors take the Lit Hub questionnaireThe incendiary power of literature in an era of censorship • The dark Nazi history of the Volkswagen Beetle • The stories (literary and otherwise) we pass down to our children • Ben Edge recommends books that showcase European folklore • Glamorous! How freeports enabled international art theft • How family stories can inform historical fiction • The relationship between memoir and the science of memoryThe stories of women, immigrants, and poor Americans from the Great Depression • How American Jews carved out a place for themselves in show business • Aran Shetterly remembers anti-racist activists and the lead-up to the 1979 Greensboro Massacre • Maris Kreizman tackles the Great American Western5 book reviews (you need to read this week) • Why writers don’t always make great speakers • Samantha Greene Woodruff recommends books about the stock market • Mark Haber on the beauty of digressionThe best reviewed books of the week • What fiction writers can learn from dance • The disappearance of indigenous orphan Tommy Atkins • Cherry Lou Sy asks, who defines what Asian American literature is? 

Lit Hub Daily

Lit Hub Daily

The best of the literary Internet, every day, brought to you by Literary Hub.