• Craft and Criticism
  • Fiction and Poetry
  • News and Culture
  • Lit Hub Radio
  • Reading Lists
  • Book Marks
  • CrimeReads
  • About
  • Log In
Literary Hub
  • Craft and Criticism
    • Literary Criticism
    • Craft and Advice
    • In Conversation
    • On Translation
  • Fiction and Poetry
    • Short Story
    • From the Novel
    • Poem
  • News and Culture
    • History
    • Science
    • Politics
    • Biography
    • Memoir
    • Food
    • Technology
    • Bookstores and Libraries
    • Film and TV
    • Travel
    • Music
    • Art and Photography
    • The Hub
    • Style
    • Design
    • Sports
    • Freeman’s
    • The Virtual Book Channel
  • Lit Hub Radio
    • The Lit Hub Podcast
    • The Critic and Her Publics
    • Awakeners
    • Fiction/Non/Fiction
    • I’m a Writer But
    • Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast
    • Memoir Nation
    • First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing
    • Behind the Mic
    • Lit Century
    • Tor Presents: Voyage Into Genre
    • Beyond the Page
    • The Cosmic Library
    • Emergence Magazine
    • Talk Easy
  • Reading Lists
    • The Best of the Decade
  • Book Marks
    • Best Reviewed Books
  • CrimeReads
    • True Crime
    • The Daily Thrill
  • Log In

The Internet Archive lost their latest appeal. Here’s what that means for you.

September 6, 2024  By Brittany Allen   Posted In  Book News  Events  News and Culture  Politics  Technology  The Hub 
11

Lit Hub Daily: September 6, 2024

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

September 6, 2024  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Lit Hub Daily 
17

What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

Featuring Rachel Kushner, Garth Greenwell, Weimar Germany, and More

September 6, 2024  By Book Marks   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  Literary Criticism  Reading Lists 
12

Six Writers on Getting Words on the Page

In Which There’s No Wrong Way to Write a Book

September 6, 2024  By Literary Hub   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Literary Criticism 
7

What T.S. Eliot’s Letters to Emily Hale Reveal About the Poet’s Romantic Past

Sara Fitzgerald on Unrequited Love and a Recently Declassified Epistolary Correspondence

September 6, 2024  By Sara Fitzgerald   Posted In  Biography  Craft and Criticism  Features  Literary Criticism  News and Culture 
11

Writing Between Worlds: Navigating My African and American Identities on the Page

Itoro Bassey on the Gift of Being Understood

September 6, 2024  By Itoro Bassey   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Memoir  News and Culture 
6

Poetry and Painting: Visualizing Verse on the Page and the Canvas

Cynthia Zarin and Rose Seccareccia Explore Their Shared Family Pastimes of Art and Literature

September 6, 2024  By Cynthia Zarin   Posted In  Art and Photography  Craft and Criticism  Features  In Conversation  News and Culture 
11

An Ode to the Ode: Lory Bedikian on How the Form Helped Her Grieve and Grow

The Author of “Jagadakeer: Apology to the Body” Explores the Many Meanings and Possibilities of a Poetic Category

September 6, 2024  By Lory Bedikian   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Literary Criticism 
8

Suffering, Grace and Redemption: How The Bronx Came to Be

Ian Frazier on the Early History of New York City's Northernmost Borough

September 6, 2024  By Ian Frazier   Posted In  Features  History  News and Culture 
10

Reckoning and Refoundation: How the Tokyo Trials Created Modern Asia

From Gary J. Bass's Cundill Prize-Shortlisted “Judgment at Tokyo”

September 6, 2024  By Gary J. Bass   Posted In  Features  History  News and Culture 
6

“Because We’re So Poor”

Juan Rulfo (trans. Douglas Weatherford)

September 6, 2024  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel  Novels 
3

Little Free Library has a new map to help places hit hardest by book bans.

September 5, 2024  By James Folta   Posted In  Book News  News and Culture  Politics  Technology  The Hub  Travel 
11

Lit Hub Daily: September 5, 2024

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

September 5, 2024  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Lit Hub Daily 
60

American Nightmare: Alice Driver on the Immigrants Who Risked Their Lives at a Meatpacking Plant During Covid

The Author of “Life and Death of the American Worker” in Conversation with Sarah Viren

September 5, 2024  By Sarah Viren   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Food  Health  History  In Conversation  Literary Criticism  Politics 
4

How the Weimar Republic’s Hyperinflation Transformed Gender Relations in Germany

Harald Jähner on the Economic, Social and Moral Landscape of Weimar Berlin

September 5, 2024  By Harald Jähner   Posted In  History  News and Culture 
6

5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week

“The men in her fiction are black holes who threaten to extinguish the light of any woman or child unlucky enough to get near them.”

September 5, 2024  By Book Marks   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  Literary Criticism  Reading Lists 
5

Humanity’s Strangest Language: On the Joys of Translating Math

Ben Orlin Considers New Ways to Think About—and Have Fun With—Numbers, Variables and Equations

September 5, 2024  By Ben Orlin   Posted In  Features  Humor  News and Culture  Science 
6

Toward a More Generous Pedagogy

Michele Herman on Bringing the Golden Rule to Her Classroom

September 5, 2024  By Michele Herman   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Memoir  News and Culture 
4

Korean Revolutionary Kim San on Moral Courage in the Face of Imperialist Violence

“To rise above oppression is the glory of man; to submit is his shame.”

September 5, 2024  By Kim San   Posted In  Features  History  Memoir  News and Culture 
5

Letting Places Grow Like Characters: Transforming Your Hometown into a Fictional World

Shannon Bowring on Setting a Book’s Sequel in the Same, Yet Evolving, Literary Universe

September 5, 2024  By Shannon Bowring   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Literary Criticism 
6

« First‹ Previous117118119120121122123124125Next ›Last »
Page 121 of 1841
  • Lithub Daily

    June 16 – 20, 2025

    Semicolon
    • The semicolon is in decline
    • Keith Woodhouse considers the future of climate fiction
    • Aaron Rosenberg revisits The Inheritors
  • Support Lit Hub.

  • Lit hub Radio

    Podcasts, Audiobooks + More
    Now Playing:
    All Stations
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

  • RSS

    • RSS - Posts
  • Literary Hub

    Created by Grove Atlantic and Electric Literature


    Masthead


    About


    Sign Up For Our Newsletters


    How to Pitch Lit Hub

    Advertisers: Contact Us


    Privacy Policy


    Support Lit Hub - Become A Member



  • © LitHub
    Back to top