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The Dragonfly Sea

Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor

"To cross the vast ocean to their south, water-chasing dragonflies with forebears in Northern India had hitched a ride on a sedate “in-between seasons” morning wind, one of the monsoon’s introits, the matlai. One day in 1992, four generations later, under dark-purplish-blue clouds, these fleeting beings settled on the mangrove-fringed southwest coast of a little girl’s island. The matlai conspired with a shimmering full moon to charge the island, its fishermen, prophets, traders, seamen, seawomen, healers, shipbuilders, dreamers, tailors, madmen, teachers, mothers, and fathers with a fretfulness that mirrored the slow-churning turquoise sea."

March 13, 2019  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel  Novels 
0

Lit Hub Daily: March 12, 2019

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

March 12, 2019  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
1

When the Eeriness of Trauma Can Only Be Understood Through Fiction

How Kelly Link Helped Me See Things a Little More Clearly

March 12, 2019  By Kate Hope Day   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  Health  Literary Criticism  Memoir  News and Culture 
0

A Close Reading of Jack Kerouac’s Advice to Writers

"Belief & Technique for Modern Prose" as Read By Your Resident Kerouac Skeptic

March 12, 2019  By Emily Temple   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism 
0

Why is the Wilderness Experience Like a Dream?

Bruce Berger on Wildness and the Buried Self

March 12, 2019  By Bruce Berger   Posted In  Features  Nature  News and Culture 
0

What Do We Really Know About Animals’ Emotions?

Frans de Waal on What We May Share With Other Species

March 12, 2019  By Frans de Waal   Posted In  Nature  News and Culture 
0

Storytelling Tips from the Writer of Blade Runner

Hampton Fancher: "If you're not in love with words why are you writing?"

March 12, 2019  By Hampton Fancher   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

The Time I Met New York’s Patron Saint of Typewriters

Stanley Adelman, Savior to Philip Roth, David Mamet and More

March 12, 2019  By Thaisa Frank   Posted In  Features  History  News and Culture 
0

Waiting for the Day That Characters Don’t Default to White

Deena ElGenaidi Grapples with the Politics of Representation

March 12, 2019  By Deena ElGenaidi   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  News and Culture  Politics 
0

Kathryn Davis, T Kira Madden, and More Take the Lit Hub Questionnaire

5 Writers, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers

March 12, 2019  By Teddy Wayne   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  In Conversation 
1

How Do You Talk to Your Patients About Death?

Doctor Sunita Puri Recalls Her First Days in Palliative Care

March 12, 2019  By Sunita Puri   Posted In  Features  Health  News and Culture 
0

31 Books in 30 Days: Katherine A. Powers on Tara Westover

Counting Down the 2018 NBCC Prize Nominees

March 12, 2019  By Literary Hub   Posted In  Book News  Features  News and Culture 
0

“The Return”

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o

"The road was long. Whenever he took a step forward, little clouds of dust rose, whirled angrily behind him, and then slowly settled again. But a thin train of dust was left in the air, moving like smoke. He walked on, however, unmindful of the dust and ground under his feet. Yet with every step he seemed more and more conscious of the hardness and apparent animosity of the road. Not that he looked down; on the contrary, he looked straight ahead as if he would, any time now, see a familiar object that would hail him as a friend and tell him that he was near home. But the road stretched on."

March 12, 2019  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  Short Stories  Short Story 
2

Lit Hub Daily: March 11, 2019

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

March 11, 2019  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

The Oldest American Picture Book Still in Print is Obviously About Cats

Ahem: Millions of Cats

March 11, 2019  By Emily Temple   Posted In  Art and Photography  Design  Features  News and Culture 
0

A Letter to My Daughter Upon Learning the Results of an Ancestry Test

David Chariandy: "We Must Remain Close to the Women Who Dance"

March 11, 2019  By David Chariandy   Posted In  Features  Memoir  News and Culture 
0

How ‘Creativity’ Became a Capitalist Buzzword

What do Shakespeare and WeWork Have in Common?

March 11, 2019  By John Patrick Leary   Posted In  Features  News and Culture  Politics 
0

I Blame My First Marriage on Jane Austen

On Fandom, Folly, and the Psychology of Empathy

March 11, 2019  By Wendy Jones   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  Literary Criticism 
0

Saunders, McCracken, and More: Advice from Masters of the Short Story

Former Winners of the Story Prize Offer Some Thoughts on Writing

March 11, 2019  By Literary Hub   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Fiction and Poetry  Short Story 
0

Traveling Scene to Scene in the Streets of Vienna, Before Sunrise

Stephen Kelman Journeys Back to the Cinematic Nineties

March 11, 2019  By Stephen Kelman   Posted In  Film and TV  News and Culture  Travel 
0

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