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A USC study finds that (some people think) AI is as funny as the average person.
July 8, 2024
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So long, #SmutWeek. Time to celebrate pious fiction with #NunDay.
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Lit Hub Daily: July 8, 2024
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Mateo Askaripour on the Perks of Genre Agnosticism
"There’s nothing like throwing the map out the window."
July 8, 2024
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Olivia Laing on the Care and Keeping of Gardens In an Era of Climate Emergency
How Green Spaces Form a Key Part of Our Shared Existence
July 8, 2024
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What Truman Capote’s
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Rachael Hanel on Teaching a True Crime Classic to Incarcerated Women
July 8, 2024
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Expanding Words, Worlds, and Permissions to Be: Five Powerful Trans Books
KB Brookins Recommends Leslie Feinberg, Akwaeke Emezi, C. Riley Snorton, and More
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Finding the Glow Within: What Biology and Fiction Writing Have In Common
Janie Kim on the Pursuit of Open-Ended Questions in Science and Literature
July 8, 2024
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Breaking English Open: On Privileging Sound Over Sense
Moriel Rothman-Zecher Makes the Case Against Italicizing Non-English Words
July 8, 2024
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Christian Gullette on Architecture in Verse, Grief’s Layers, and Poems as Liminal Spaces
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Jayne Anne Phillips on Awards and Rewards
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Salman Rushdie’s attacker has rejected a plea deal.
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Word Are Deeds: Rebecca Solnit the Power of Speech to Shape the Future
“Your opponents would love you to believe that it’s hopeless, that you have no power.”
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Gaza Diaries: “We Left Our Souls at Home.”
From Heba Al-Agha’s Account of the last Eight Months of Israel’s War on Gaza (trans. Julia Choucair Vizoso)
July 3, 2024
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Remembering Samuel Roth, the Bookseller Who Defied America’s Obscenity Laws
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July 3, 2024
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New York, New York: On Getting By As an Artist In the City That Never Sleeps
Marin Kosut Considers the Romanticized Myths That Underpin Countless Artistic Dreams
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