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Falling in Love with Malcolm X—and His Mastery of Metaphor

"The metaphor reveals a world behind the world of things."

April 10, 2019  By Mateo Askaripour   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  History  Literary Criticism  Politics 
0

Interview with a Bookstore:
Romania’s At Two Owls

When Best Friends Open a Bookstore

April 10, 2019  By Literary Hub   Posted In  Bookstores and Libraries  Features  News and Culture 
0

When a Reader Figures Out What Your Book is Actually About

Marcia Butler on Coming to Terms with Her Lifelong Dream Coming True

April 10, 2019  By Marcia Butler   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

A Day in the Life of One of New York’s Best Hairstylists

Kate Bolick on What It Takes to Make the Cut

April 10, 2019  By Kate Bolick   Posted In  Features  News and Culture 
0

Anissa Gray on Challenging
the Stereotypes of ‘Rich White Girl’ Problems

On Reading Women with Kendra Winchester and Autumn Privett

April 10, 2019  By Reading Women   Posted In  Features  Lit Hub Radio  Reading Women 
0

Annie Proulx on Freewheeling
Nature Writer Ellen Meloy

"Some of the essays seem to have been written last week, so fresh are the topics."

April 10, 2019  By Annie Proulx   Posted In  Climate Change  Craft and Criticism  Literary Criticism  News and Culture  Science 
0

Optic Nerve

María Gainza, translated by Thomas Bunstead

"I first encountered Dreux on an afternoon in autumn; the deer, precisely five years later. In Dreux’s case, I left the house one day under blue skies only to be caught in a sudden downpour. The narrow, winding streets of Belgrano were soon in full spate. Women clustered together on the sidewalks trying to establish the best places to cross; an old lady assailed the side of a bus with her umbrella when the driver refused to open the doors; and before long the shop owners, watching the deluge through their window displays, brought out the metal barriers they had armed themselves with after the previous flood."

April 10, 2019  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel  Novels 
0

Lit Hub Daily: April 9, 2019

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

April 9, 2019  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

Viet Thanh Nguyen: How Not to Bore Your Audience at a Reading

Channel Obama. Perform. Drink if You Must.

April 9, 2019  By Viet Thanh Nguyen   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism 
0

Finding a Spiritual Home in the Weirdness of My Polish Heritage

Michelle Tea on Satisfying the Need for Witchy Devotions

April 9, 2019  By Michelle Tea   Posted In  Features  News and Culture  Religion 
0

Even My Imaginary Male Muses
Don’t Measure Up

Jen Mediano Can't Help But Be a Little Disappointed

April 9, 2019  By Jen Mediano   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

In the Aftermath of Civil War, a Writing Workshop Aims for Peace

Sarah Hoenicke on Finding Paths to Healing in Sri Lanka

April 9, 2019  By Sarah Hoenicke   Posted In  History  News and Culture  Politics 
0

‘Self-Portrait as Unsent Lines,
Unsent Letter’
A Poem by Rebecca Hazelton

From the Collection Gloss

April 9, 2019  By Rebecca Hazelton   Posted In  Features  Fiction and Poetry  Poem 
0

Russell Brand on Rehab, Recovery, and Choosing the Right Mentor

"It is okay to talk about your feelings, more than okay, mandatory."

April 9, 2019  By Russell Brand   Posted In  Features  Film and TV  Memoir  News and Culture 
0

Jennifer DuBois, Angie Kim, and More Take the Lit Hub Questionnaire

5 Writers, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers

April 9, 2019  By Teddy Wayne   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

Too Often, Society Equates a Woman’s Mistakes with Her Character

Clare Fisher on Teaching and Writing About Incarcerated Women

April 9, 2019  By Clare Fisher   Posted In  Features  News and Culture  Politics 
0

A Brief History of the Women
Who Disappeared

Dorothy Bendel on a World Built From Violence

April 9, 2019  By Dorothy Bendel   Posted In  Features  Memoir  News and Culture 
0

Svetlana Alexievich in Praise
of Maxim Osipov

On the Russian Doctor Who Treats His Characters Like His Patients

April 9, 2019  By Svetlana Alexievich   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  Literary Criticism  On Translation 
0

Phantoms

Christian Kiefer

"Ray Takahashi returned in August. By then we had put the whole thing behind us, or tried to, whatever concern or even guilt we might have felt replaced by that mixture of jubilation and despair brought on by the war’s end, for our boys were coming home and the war had changed them. Some held only absence where an arm or leg had once been; some were broken by experiences we could not see and never would."

April 9, 2019  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel  Novels 
0

Lit Hub Daily: April 8, 2019

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

April 8, 2019  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

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