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Elizabeth McCracken: Toward a Unified Theory of the Doughnut

In Which the Author of Bowlaway Wonders if One Can Eat a Hole

February 5, 2019  By Elizabeth McCracken   Posted In  Food  Humor  News and Culture 
0

10 Works of Literary Fantasy You Should Read

Even If You're a Genre Snob (But Also, If You're a Genre Snob, Stop)

February 5, 2019  By Emily Temple   Posted In  Features  Reading Lists 
0

“You Can’t Discuss Palestinian Food Without Talking About the Occupation.”

Yasmin Khan on the Joys of Palestinian Cuisine

February 5, 2019  By Yasmin Khan   Posted In  Features  Food  News and Culture  Politics 
0

‘Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner’A Poem by Morgan Parker

From Her Collection Magical Negro

February 5, 2019  By Morgan Parker   Posted In  Features  Fiction and Poetry  Poem 
0

Ten Thoughts on Having Your Novel Translated into Your Native Tongue

The Challenges of Working in a Language You Only Use to Speak to Your Mother

February 5, 2019  By Johannes Lichtman   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  On Translation 
0

In Praise of the Difficult: On Marianne Moore, Defiant Poet of Complexity

Gabrielle Bellot: "I’m accustomed to difficulty."

February 5, 2019  By Gabrielle Bellot   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Literary Criticism 
0

How Did So Many Writers Get Access to Opiates?

Mapping Addiction, From Cocteau to Burroughs

February 5, 2019  By Lucy Inglis   Posted In  Features  History  News and Culture 
0

Literary Disco: Let the Games Begin!

Julia, Rider, and Tod Start the New Month with Some Classic Book Games

February 5, 2019  By Literary Disco   Posted In  Features  Lit Hub Radio  Literary Disco 
0

Notes from a Black Woman’s Diary

Kathleen Collins

"She came in while I was recording and asked to listen to every Nina Simone album in the house. I was just about to introduce the next side: “How ’bout a little Herbie Hancock now, with George Coleman on tenor sax, Ron Carter on bass, Tony Williams on drums, and, of course, Herbie on piano . . . that’s right: ‘Maiden Voyage’ . . .”"

February 5, 2019  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel  Novels 
0

Karen Thompson Walker Talks Ishiguro, Saramago, and Hypochondria

In Conversation with Christopher Hermelin and Drew Broussard
on So Many Damn Books

February 5, 2019  By So Many Damn Books   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  In Conversation  Lit Hub Radio  So Many Damn Books 
0

31 Books in 30 Days: Marion Winik on Lawrence Wright

Counting Down the 2018 NBCC Prize Nominees

February 5, 2019  By Literary Hub   Posted In  Book News  Features  News and Culture 
0

Lit Hub Daily: February 4, 2019

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

February 4, 2019  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

Marlon James: One Day I Will Write About My Mother

"My mother, who spent most of her life building work and family, never built a room of her own."

February 4, 2019  By Marlon James   Posted In  Freeman's  News and Culture 
0

Katharine Smyth: Forgetting Virginia Woolf

To Understand My Own Work I Had to Move Away From Hers

February 4, 2019  By Katharine Smyth   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

On the Destabilizing Brilliance of Robert Coover’s “The Babysitter”

Or, How to Accept the Pain of Not Knowing

February 4, 2019  By Emily Temple   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

Beirut, Modernism’s Vanished Utopia

Poets, Politics, and Freedom Before Lebanon's Civil War

February 4, 2019  By Robyn Creswell   Posted In  Features  News and Culture  Politics 
0

In the Face of Cancer, My One-Sided Deal With God

Julie Yip-Williams on Illness, Faith and Family

February 4, 2019  By Julie Yip-Williams   Posted In  Features  Health  News and Culture  Religion  Science 
0

Director Peter Hedges on Taking the Page to the Screen

In Conversation with Will Schwalbe on But That's Another Story

February 4, 2019  By But That's Another Story   Posted In  But That's Another Story  Features  Film and TV  Lit Hub Radio  News and Culture 
0

The Man Who Couldn’t Die

Olga Slavnikova, Translated by Marian Schwartz

"It had been Marina’s idea. Keep Alexei Afanasievich from finding out about the changes in the outside world. Keep him in the same sunny yet frozen time when the unexpected stroke had cut him down. “Mama, his heart!” Marina had pleaded, having grasped instantly that, no matter how burdensome this recumbent body might be, it consumed far less than it contributed."

February 4, 2019  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel  Novels 
0

31 Books in 30 Days: Victoria Chang on Diane Seuss

Counting Down the 2018 NBCC Prize Nominees

February 4, 2019  By Literary Hub   Posted In  Book News  Features  News and Culture 
0

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