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Here are the bookies’ odds for the 2021 Booker Prize.
November 2, 2021
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Emily Temple
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The Guggenheim is launching a new, year-long poet-in-residence position in 2022.
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Lit Hub Daily: November 2, 2021
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
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A Case for Football as the Most Literary of American Sports
Baseball Has Reigned Long Enough, Says Corey Sobel
November 2, 2021
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Tom McCarthy on the Supreme Beauty of Edouard Glissant’s
The Poetics of Relation
The Author of
The Making of Incarnation
Considers the Power of Rootlessness
November 2, 2021
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On Jay Gatsby, the Most Famous North Dakotan
Sarah Vogel Traces the Humble Midwest Origins of an Iconic Character
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The Literary Adventures of Polly Adler, the Algonquin Round Table’s Favorite Madam
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How Vincent van Gogh’s Favorite Works of French Literature Influenced His Art and Identity
Steven Naifeh on the Painter's Lifelong Relationship to Books
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Rebecca Solnit: Why It Matters That George Orwell Was a Gardener
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All About Basket: A Letter from Gertrude Stein About Her Beloved Dog
“In short he is a happy fool, and a great comfort, and some day you will meet.”
November 2, 2021
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“This Is What Poetry’s For.” On Returning to the Work of Louise Glück
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Shabby, Domestic Comedy? Grown Up Holden Caulfield? Read This Early Review of John Updike’s
Rabbit, Run
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November 2, 2021
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What Does “Change” Mean in 2021?
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20 new books to cozy up to this week.
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The Astrology Book Club: What to Read This Month, Based on Your Sign
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A Survivor’s Guide to the Long, Slow, Infuriating Process of Revision
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November 2, 2021
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November’s Best Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books
Featuring Magic and Queerness, a SFF Icon’s Take on Climate Collapse, a Pioneering Work of Silkpunk, and More
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Stan Cox on Fixing Politics in Order to Fix the Planet
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Elizabeth Strout on Inhabiting Her Characters and Writing Directly
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November 2, 2021
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Joanna Chiu on the Human Cost of China’s Growth
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