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I Love You But I’ve Chosen Darkness
Claire Vaye Watkins
October 19, 2021
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On the Holocaust’s Impact on Survivors’ Early Childhood and Memory
From This Year's Cundill History Prize Shortlisted Title
Survivors: Children’s Lives After the Holocaust
by Rebecca Clifford
October 19, 2021
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“To Bob or Not to Bob?” Revolution and the “Modern Girl” of 20th-Century Asia
From This Year's Cundill History Prize Shortlisted Title
Underground Asia: Global Revolutionaries and the Assault on Empire
by Tim Harper
October 19, 2021
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Check out the original 1851 reviews of
Moby-Dick
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October 18, 2021
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A woman won a million-euro writing prize . . . then turned out to be three men.
October 18, 2021
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Walker Caplan
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How Ntozake Shange wrote her first poem in 7 years—after experiencing two strokes.
October 18, 2021
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Here are the five Gabriel García Márquez outfits I’d buy (if I had the money, and was smaller).
October 18, 2021
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Beloved Irish poet Brendan Kennelly has died at 85.
October 18, 2021
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Michael Caine is (maybe) retiring from acting . . . to be a writer!
October 18, 2021
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Lit Hub Daily: October 18, 2021
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How “Truth” Became a Controversial Subject in Classrooms
Molly Castner on How to Teach Facts in 2021
October 18, 2021
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Who Are the 9.9 Percent? A Closer Look at the Math of American Inequality
Matthew Stewart Considers Home Ownership, the Merit Myth, and the Cruelty of the American Dream
October 18, 2021
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Matthew Stewart
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Writing from Home: Lessons from a Novelist-Slash-Small-Town Newspaper Columnist
Nickolas Butler on Writing as an Act of Service and the Power of Local News
October 18, 2021
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Nickolas Butler
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Amitav Ghosh on the Lies of History and How the Natural World Fights Back
Ben Ehrenreich in Conversation with the Author of
The Nutmeg’s Curse
October 18, 2021
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“The Anti-James Bond.” Read This Early Review of
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy
How John le Carré's Masterpiece Was First Received
October 18, 2021
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Mary Beard on What We Can Learn from Images of Roman Autocrats
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October 18, 2021
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How Do You Write About People Who Don’t Want To Be Written About?
Ethan Lou on Unauthorized Biographies and Uncomfortable Writing
October 18, 2021
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On Teaching at the End of the World
Rashaan Alexis Meneses Confronts a Season of Pandemic and Fire
October 18, 2021
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“Its eyes were as large as a dinner plate…” Encounters with Dragons in Early America
When Local Newspapers Reported on Harrowing Encounters with Large Winged Reptiles
October 18, 2021
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Scott G. Bruce
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On the Historical Stigmatization and Persistent Vilification of Epilepsy in Literature
Louise Fein Considers How the Misunderstood Neurological Disorder Has Been Unfairly Portrayed in Popular Fiction
October 18, 2021
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May 16, 2025
The meaning of a poet’s grave
Revisiting Erika Kennedy’s prescient hip-hop satire,
Bling
Schools were never equipped, it turns out, to deal with AI
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