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Lit Hub Daily: April 9, 2021
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
April 9, 2021
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Lit Hub Daily
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Lit Hub Daily
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On Great Literary Loves and the Joyous, Complicated Brilliance of Walt Whitman
“The first experience of literary love tends, like the first experience of erotic love, to come in youth.”
April 9, 2021
By
Mark Edmundson
Posted In
Craft and Criticism
Features
Literary Criticism
Memoir
News and Culture
0
How to Raise Your Children on the History of Protest
From Nate Powell’s Graphic Novel,
Save It For Later
April 9, 2021
By
Nate Powell
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Art and Photography
Design
Features
News and Culture
Politics
0
Searching for Three Generations of Secrets at a French Chateau
Stephanie Dray on the Historical Mysteries of the
Chateau de Chavaniac
April 9, 2021
By
Stephanie Dray
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Craft and Advice
Craft and Criticism
Features
History
Memoir
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0
“Portrait of Two Young Ladies in White and Green Robes (Unidentified Artist, circa Sixteenth Century)”
Jane Pek
April 9, 2021
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Lit Hub Excerpts
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The Donald Barthelme Story Nobody Talks About But Everyone Should Read
Emily Temple on the Masterful Use of Authorial Intrusion in “Rebecca”
April 9, 2021
By
Emily Temple
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Craft and Criticism
Features
Literary Criticism
0
On Dealing with Literary Rejection: The Importance of Letting Go and Moving On
Jessica Bacal Considers How Writers and Artists Deal
with Hearing “No”
April 9, 2021
By
Jessica Bacal
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Craft and Advice
Craft and Criticism
Features
Health
News and Culture
0
How Dorothea Nutzhorn Chased the Promise of Possibility and Became Dorothea Lange
Jasmin Darznik on the Beginnings of a Legendary Photographer
April 9, 2021
By
Jasmin Darznik
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Art and Photography
Biography
Features
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0
On the Necessary (and Inevitable) Rise of the Nature Memoir: A Reading List
Raynor Winn Recommends the Books That Reignited Her
Connection to the Wild
April 9, 2021
By
Raynor Winn
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Climate Change
Features
Nature
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Why Targeted Ads Are a Disaster for Democracy
Carissa Véliz on Big Data and the Consequences of the
Erosion of Our Privacy
April 9, 2021
By
Carissa Véliz
Posted In
Features
News and Culture
Politics
Technology
0
A Secret, Symbolic History of Pomegranates
Kate Lebo: “Cracking one open feels like lifting
the lid on a jewelry box.”
April 9, 2021
By
Kate Lebo
Posted In
Craft and Criticism
Features
Food
Literary Criticism
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Fred Guttenberg on Gun Reform and the Hope of
Young People
In Conversation with Mitchell Kaplan on
The Literary Life
Podcast
April 9, 2021
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The Literary Life
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The Literary Life with Mitchell Kaplan
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Subverting the Script of the Adoption Industrial Complex
Tiana Nobile on Resisting the Erasure of Adoptees’ Stories
April 9, 2021
By
Tiana Nobile
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Features
Memoir
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Politics
0
Noa Tishby on Trying to Uncomplicate Israel
In Conversation with Andrew Keen on the
Keen On
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April 9, 2021
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Keen On
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Where Are All the Superheroes with Day Jobs?
Mike Chen in Conversation with Gabrielle Mathieu on the
New Books Network
April 9, 2021
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New Books Network
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The Woman Who Stole Vermeer
by Anthony M. Amore, Read by Karen Cass
A Fantastic True Story
April 9, 2021
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Behind the Mic
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Are you a Tolkien fan? Contribute to this oral history collection.
April 8, 2021
By
Walker Caplan
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Biography
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Here are the literary Guggenheim Fellows of 2021.
April 8, 2021
By
Walker Caplan
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Book News
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The Hub
0
Traci Lester has been named as the Center for Fiction’s new Executive Director.
April 8, 2021
By
Walker Caplan
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Bookstores and Libraries
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The Hub
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What to read next based on your favorite… way to make eggs.
April 8, 2021
By
Katie Yee
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August 8, 2025
The far-right’s animosity towards historians
Considering recent books about the concept of “care.”
Inside the US government’s pre-Trump 2.0 report on AI safety
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