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The Book in Ten Quotes: The Story of My Teeth

Tell, Don't Show: Absurdist Edition 2

September 29, 2015  By Oscar Van Gelderen   Posted In  Fiction and Poetry  From the Novel 
0

Castro: A Graphic Novel

Reinhard Kleist

"On the heels of America's renewed relations with Cuba, this vivid graphic novel reveals the life and times of Fidel Castro, one of the 20th century's most intriguing, charismatic, and divisive figures. The book is narrated by a German journalist named Karl Mertens, who is plunged into the searing heat of pre-revolutionary Cuba in the mid-1950s. He first meets with Castro while the latter is hiding in the mountains, then follows him through the dramatic revolution and his ascent to the presidency."

September 29, 2015  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Art and Photography  Design  News and Culture 
1

The Time I Got Really Stoned and Interviewed Jesse Eisenberg

Sunday Night, You're Totally Baked, and a Movie Star Calls

September 29, 2015  By Jonathan Russell Clark   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  In Conversation 
21

The Staff Shelf: Albertine

What are booksellers reading?

September 29, 2015  By Interview with a Bookstore   Posted In  Bookstores and Libraries  News and Culture  Reading Lists 
0

LitHub Daily: September 28, 2015

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

September 28, 2015  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

Interview with a Bookstore: Albertine

A little Paris in New York

September 28, 2015  By Interview with a Bookstore   Posted In  Bookstores and Libraries  Craft and Criticism  In Conversation  News and Culture  Reading Lists 
0

Exploring Patrick Modiano’s Paris

Of Memoryscapes and Lost Time

September 28, 2015  By Debarati Sanyal   Posted In  Craft and Criticism  History  Literary Criticism  News and Culture 
0

Why Teaching (Writing) Matters: A Full Confession

In Praise (and Defense) of the MFA

September 28, 2015  By Jayne Anne Phillips   Posted In  Craft and Advice  Craft and Criticism 
7

How The French Think

Sudhir Hazareesingh

“For the three hundredth anniversary of the death of René Descartes, the French journalist Pierre Dumayet traveled in 1950 to La Haye, where the philosopher had been born in 1596. This village in the Indre-et-Loire had been renamed La Haye–Descartes in his honor in the early nineteenth century, and Dumayet was keen to find out what the locals thought of their most illustrious son, whose seminal work had laid the foundations of rationalist thought.”

September 28, 2015  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  History  News and Culture 
1

Best of the Week: September 21 – 25, 2015

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

September 26, 2015  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

On Finally Being Seen as a Black Woman Writer

To Ban Toni Morrison, To Go Blind

September 25, 2015  By Rachel Eliza Griffiths   Posted In  News and Culture  Politics 
2

LitHub Daily: September 25, 2015

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

September 25, 2015  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

The Invention of Nature

Andrea Wulf

“At sixty-one, Jefferson was still standing ‘straight as a gun barrel’ – a tall thin and almost gangly man with the ruddy complexion of a farmer and an ‘iron constitution’. He was the President of the young nation, but also the owner of Monticello, a large plantation in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Virginia, a little more than one hundred miles south-west of Washington.”

September 25, 2015  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Biography  News and Culture 
1

On the Truth and Lies of Friday Night Football

Buzz Bissinger’s Friday Night Lights Turns 25

September 25, 2015  By Michael Croley   Posted In  News and Culture  Sports 
0

Catholic Lit: A Reading List for Pope Francis

Sinners, Saints, Atheists, and Priests

September 25, 2015  By Nick Ripatrazone   Posted In  Reading Lists 
4

The Mud Family Climbs a Mountain

Upwardly Mobile in the Andes

September 25, 2015  By Maria Lopez   Posted In  Memoir  News and Culture  Travel 
0

Death at 30,000 Feet

Ivan Vladislavić on Life, Farce, and the Ignoble Demise of Sherwood Anderson

September 24, 2015  By Ivan Vladislavić   Posted In  News and Culture  Travel 
3

“The Fledgling”

Ann Beattie

“She was hurrying out of the house, late for an appointment, purse slung over one shoulder, canvas shopping bag in her hand. A squawk came from the oak tree.”

September 24, 2015  By Lit Hub Excerpts   Posted In  Fiction and Poetry  Short Story 
0

LitHub Daily: September 24, 2015

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

September 24, 2015  By Lit Hub Daily   Posted In  Features 
0

What to Read When Trapped in Your Home By a New Baby

A Reading List for the Brand New Parent

September 24, 2015  By Rachel Cass   Posted In  Reading Lists 
2

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