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James Baldwin: ‘I Did Not Want to Weep for Martin, Tears Seemed Futile’

In Memory of Martin Luther King Jr, a Look Back on His Funeral

April 4, 2018  By Jason Sokol   Posted In  Biography  Features  News and Culture 
0

Meg Wolitzer Goes To the Lighthouse Again and Again

The Author of The Female Persuasion on the Books in Her Life

April 4, 2018  By Literary Hub   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  In Conversation 
0

The Chandelier

Clarice Lispector, Trans. by Benjamin Moser and Magdalena Edwards

“Before falling asleep, concentrated and magical, she would say farewell to things in a last instant of lightly illuminated consciousness. She knew that in the half-light 'her things' were better living their own essence.”

April 4, 2018  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel  Novels 
0

Lit Hub Daily: April 3, 2018

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

April 3, 2018  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

About Parenting, Faith, and Intoxication

Leslie Jamison and Jamie Quatro in Conversation

April 3, 2018  By Literary Hub   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  Features  In Conversation 
0

Lorrie Moore: It’s Better to Write Than Be a Writer

The Route to Truth and Beauty is a Toll Road

April 3, 2018  By Lorrie Moore   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

The Best Stories Break at Least One of Their Own Rules

Blair Hurley Recommends You Try Touching the Bear

April 3, 2018  By Blair Hurley   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

What is the Writer’s Responsibility To Those Unable to Tell Their Own Stories?

On Writing About Autism, Alzheimer's, and Coma Patients

April 3, 2018  By Stefan Merrill Block   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

How Does Consciousness Work?

A Look at the Complex Neural Network that Creates Our Unified Sense of Reality

April 3, 2018  By Michael S. Gazzaniga   Posted In  Features  News and Culture  Science 
0

The Life We Could Have Had Running a Parisian Bookstore

Maybe We Should Have Bought the Red Wheelbarrow?

April 3, 2018  By Liam Callanan   Posted In  Bookstores and Libraries  Features  News and Culture 
0

Russia is Winning the Information War

The Invasion of Ukraine was a Practice Run for the 2016 American Election

April 3, 2018  By Timothy Snyder   Posted In  Features 
0

“The Epidemic”

Dino Buzzati, Trans. by Judith Landry

“The whole great office had been organized for the war, and functioned at a slacker pace nowadays; but the staff of the department was still complete. The men who worked there were the best in the country at the particular work concerned. They were known jokingly within the Ministry as the 'twenty-four geniuses.' ”

April 3, 2018  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  Short Stories  Short Story 
2

Lit Hub Daily: April 2, 2018

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

April 2, 2018  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

Whirlaway: The Great American Loony Bin, Horseplaying, & Record-Collecting Novel

Poe Ballantine

“As an illustration of what I was up against at Napa State Hospital, what they used to call an asylum for the criminally insane, my fellow inmate Arn Boothby, an angry three-hundred-pound paranoid schizophrenic who regularly “cheeked” his meds, tried to kill another inmate one day in the client convenience store by grabbing his throat and throwing him through a glass display case.”

April 2, 2018  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Daily Fiction  Excerpts  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel  Novels 
0

On the Anxiety of the Chronically Early

"I started wearing a watch as soon as I could tell time."

April 2, 2018  By Rachel Z. Arndt   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Longform 
0

47 of Your Favorite Writers on Their Favorite Poems

The Best Way to Celebrate National Soyfoods Month (Wait)

April 2, 2018  By Emily Temple   Posted In  Features  Fiction and Poetry  Poem 
0

France’s Beloved Short Story Dispensers Are Coming to America

Press a Button, Read a Very Short Story

April 2, 2018  By Matt Grant   Posted In  Book News  Bookstores and Libraries  Features  Fiction and Poetry  News and Culture  Short Story 
0

10 New Poetry Collections to Read During National Poetry Month

From Dorothea Lasky to Jason Stefanik

April 2, 2018  By Cassidy Foust   Posted In  Features  Fiction and Poetry  Poem 
0

How John J. Lennon Became a Prison Journalist—From the Inside

“There’s Plenty of Story Around Me, and Within Me"

April 2, 2018  By Daniel A. Gross   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features  Longform 
0

How the Make-Believe World of Peter Pan Inspired My Writing

On the Intermingling of Fact and Fantasy in J.M. Barrie's Neverland

April 2, 2018  By Jenny Boully   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism  Features 
0

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