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Here’s the shortlist for the 2022 T. S. Eliot Prize.
October 13, 2022
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Corinne Segal
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A film scholar uncovered the oldest footage from a Black film company at the Library of Congress.
October 13, 2022
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Corinne Segal
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Most of lit journal
Hobart
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October 13, 2022
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Jonny Diamond
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Rom-com fans, rejoice: Curtis Sittenfeld’s new book,
Romantic Comedy
, is coming in spring.
October 13, 2022
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Jessie Gaynor
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Lit Hub Daily: October 13, 2022
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
October 13, 2022
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Ling Ma: Why Every Story Comes From an Entry Point of Wish Fulfillment
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The Naturalist’s Gaze: What Charles Darwin Saw in Tahiti
Diana Preston on the Intersection of Science, Religion, and Imperial Power in the South Pacific
October 13, 2022
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A.M. Homes on Being—For Better or Worse—“a Very American Writer”
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The Unfolding
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Poetry and Social Class: Robert Pinsky on His Many Readings of Robert Lowell
“A book I didn’t like, and for years ignored, had opened new possibilities for people I admired.”
October 13, 2022
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Robert Pinsky
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Anxiety and Irresponsibility: What Is to Be Done About Literary Moralism?
A. Natasha Joukovsky on the Rampant Conflation of Fiction and History
October 13, 2022
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A. Natasha Joukovsky
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5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
Goop, Leonard Cohen, Predators, Dinosaurs, and More
October 13, 2022
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The Waning Years of Edward Hopper
Richard Lacayo on How Aging Impacts an Artist’s Output and Oeuvre
October 13, 2022
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Richard Lacayo
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The Other World, and This One: On Transcendence and Immanence in the Work of Victoria Chang and Yusef Komunyakaa
Philip Metres Considers the Borders Between the Earthly and the Divine
October 13, 2022
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Philip Metres
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Dawnie Walton in Praise of
Say Anything
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How Dostoevsky’s Classic Has Shaped Russia’s War in Ukraine, with
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Tetyana Ogarkova and Volodymyr Yermolenko
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How Hate-Fueled Misinformation and Propaganda Grew in Nazi Germany
“It is inconceivable that for an indefinite period the 65 million people in Germany will endure it.”
October 13, 2022
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What Made Samuel Adams Both the Most Essential and the Least Understood Founding Father
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There’s a Long History of Snobs Loving Classical Music—and Classical Musicians Loathing Them
Arianna Warsaw-Fan Rauch on Mozart, Money, and the Transcendent Power of Musical Connection
October 13, 2022
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“In This Country, We Murder; Then We Honor.” Peter Orner on a Death in the Town His Family Loved
The Small Details Before and After a Tragedy
October 13, 2022
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Peter Orner
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How Joe Biden, in His Embrace of Progressive Economics, Could Be the Next FDR or LBJ
Michael Tomasky in Conversation with Andrew Keen on
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The far-right tech world’s obsession with (mis)reading
The Lord of the Rings
Karl Ove Knausgaard on finding mystery in the digital age
Authors are leaving ChatGPT prompts in their novels
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