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Lit Hub Weekly: November 8 – 12, 2021
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
November 13, 2021
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Dostoevsky totally did NaNoWriMo.
November 12, 2021
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Goth-rock queen PJ Harvey is publishing a book-length narrative poem that took six years to write.
November 12, 2021
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9 books perfectly summed up with lyrics from Taylor Swift’s
Red
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November 12, 2021
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Reddit thinks Thomas Pynchon might be secretly ghost-tweeting for Paul Thomas Anderson.
November 12, 2021
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Lit Hub Daily: November 12, 2021
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
November 12, 2021
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Kyle Lucia Wu on What Novelists Can Learn From Poets
"New scenes unspooled easily once I’d stopped thinking about them."
November 12, 2021
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The Dawn of Everything
Is Not a Book About the Origins of Inequality
Or, Why Rousseau and Hobbes Can Suck It
November 12, 2021
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What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week
Featuring new titles by Louise Erdrich, Lily King, Ken Follett, David Graeber, and more
November 12, 2021
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The White Women at the Dark Heart of Trumpism
Seyward Darby on the Quiet Army of the Far Right
November 12, 2021
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James Ivory on the Long, Rocky Road to His Collaboration with Vanessa Redgrave
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November 12, 2021
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Amitav Ghosh on the Climate Crisis’ Origin Story
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November 12, 2021
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The Forgotten History of the Brutal, Internecine Battles of the American Revolution
H.W. Brands on America’s First Civil War
November 12, 2021
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On the Cultural History of the Miami Book Fair
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Lenny Abrahamson on Adapting Sally Rooney’s
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November 12, 2021
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Bob Eckstein Illustrates New and Renovated Bookstores and Libraries from Around the Country
A Visual Celebration of New Literary Life Amid a Pandemic
November 12, 2021
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How Does Britain Maintain Relevance in a Changing World?
Tim Marshall on the Political Future of Post-Brexit England
November 12, 2021
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How
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Henry Gee Compares Us to Our Ancestors
November 12, 2021
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How Has Literature Changed Over the Past Ten Years?
Literary Disco
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November 12, 2021
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Jessica Stilling on Writing Her Version of David Copperfield
In Conversation with G.P. Gottlieb on the
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November 12, 2021
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The latest anemic “state of the novel” discourse
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