Craft and Criticism
Fiction and Poetry
News and Culture
Lit Hub Radio
Reading Lists
Book Marks
CrimeReads
About
Log In
Literary Hub
Craft and Criticism
Literary Criticism
Craft and Advice
In Conversation
On Translation
Fiction and Poetry
Short Story
From the Novel
Poem
News and Culture
History
Science
Politics
Biography
Memoir
Food
Technology
Bookstores and Libraries
Film and TV
Travel
Music
Art and Photography
The Hub
Style
Design
Sports
Freeman’s
The Virtual Book Channel
Lit Hub Radio
The Lit Hub Podcast
The Critic and Her Publics
Awakeners
Fiction/Non/Fiction
I’m a Writer But
Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast
Write-minded
First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing
Behind the Mic
Lit Century
Tor Presents: Voyage Into Genre
Beyond the Page
The Cosmic Library
Emergence Magazine
Talk Easy
Reading Lists
The Best of the Decade
Book Marks
Best Reviewed Books
CrimeReads
True Crime
The Daily Thrill
Log In
‘Do You Know Alex Oreille’: New Fiction from Katie Kitamura
From the Anthology
A World Out of Reach: Dispatches from Life Under Lockdown
December 15, 2020
By
Katie Kitamura
Posted In
Daily Fiction
Features
Short Stories
0
How Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Came to Compose His First Symphony
Jan Swafford on the Influence of Leopold Mozart on
His Precocious Son
December 15, 2020
By
Jan Swafford
Posted In
Biography
Features
History
Music
News and Culture
Religion
0
The Inertia of Whiteness in the World of Postwar Publishing
"Big Manhattan book publishers publish hundreds of authors each year, but in their eyes, only a very few really matter."
December 15, 2020
By
Richard Jean So
Posted In
Features
History
News and Culture
0
Who is the Narrator of Marcel Proust’s
In Search of Lost Time
?
Saul Friedländer on the Many Functions of the Most Elusive
Figure in French Literature
December 15, 2020
By
Saul Friedländer
Posted In
Craft and Criticism
Features
Literary Criticism
0
Why Humility is Essential in
the Face of Nature
Carl Safina Talks to Andrew Keen on
Keen On
December 15, 2020
By
Keen On
Posted In
Features
Keen On
Lit Hub Radio
Nature
0
Emily Temple on Trippy Fiction and Summer Camps as Cults
This Week on the
So Many Damn Books
Podcast
December 15, 2020
By
So Many Damn Books
Posted In
Craft and Advice
Craft and Criticism
Features
Lit Hub Radio
So Many Damn Books
0
On Sylvia Plath’s Use of Tastelessness in
Ariel
Elisa Gabbert Talks to Sandra Newman and
Catherine Nichols on
Lit Century
December 15, 2020
By
Lit Century
Posted In
Craft and Criticism
Features
In Conversation
Lit Century
Lit Hub Radio
Literary Criticism
0
Madhuri Vijay Performs a Passage From Her Novel
The Far Field
From Our Radio Theater Podcast,
Storybound
December 15, 2020
By
Storybound
Posted In
Features
Lit Hub Radio
Storybound
0
Helen Drutt English on the Essentialness of
Creating by Hand
In Conversation with Naomi Shihab Nye on
The Quarantine Tapes
December 15, 2020
By
The Quarantine Tapes
Posted In
Art and Photography
Design
Features
Lit Hub Radio
The Quarantine Tapes
0
Botany and Revolution: How 18th-Century Naturalists Discouraged Ideas of Liberty
From the
Time to Eat the Dogs
Podcast with Michael Robinson
December 15, 2020
By
Time to Eat the Dogs
Posted In
Features
Lit Hub Radio
Nature
Science
Time to Eat the Dogs
0
The Best Reviewed Fiction
of 2020
Featuring Jenny Offill, Garth Greenwell, Hillary Mantel, Elena Ferrante, and more
December 15, 2020
By
Book Marks
Posted In
Craft and Criticism
Features
Literary Criticism
News and Culture
0
Mrs. Murakami’s Garden
Mario Bellatin, trans. Heather Cleary
December 15, 2020
By
Lit Hub Excerpts
Posted In
Daily Fiction
Excerpts
Fiction and Poetry
From the Novel
Novels
0
American Cheese
by Joe Berkowitz, Read by Charlie Thurston
Explore the World of Artisan Cheese in America
December 15, 2020
By
Behind the Mic
Posted In
Behind the Mic
Features
Food
Lit Hub Radio
0
John le Carré, legendary spy novelist, has died at 89.
December 14, 2020
By
Emily Temple
Posted In
Book News
News and Culture
The Hub
0
Lit Hub Daily: December 14, 2020
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
December 14, 2020
By
Lit Hub Daily
Posted In
Lit Hub Daily
0
Mute Force: Why #NativeTwitter Couldn’t Stop Talking About Baby Yoda
In Which Eric Gansworth Possibly Spoils
The Mandalorian
December 14, 2020
By
Eric Gansworth
Posted In
Features
Film and TV
News and Culture
Politics
0
Six Book Critics Walk Into a Zoom to Talk About Autofiction
A Totally Fictional Story by Marion Winik Featuring
a Martin Amis Cameo
December 14, 2020
By
Marion Winik
Posted In
Craft and Criticism
Features
Humor
Literary Criticism
Memoir
0
On the Willie Nelson Country-Pop Crossover That Changed Everything
Michaelangelo Matos Goes Deep on One of 1980s Biggest Duets
December 14, 2020
By
Michaelangelo Matos
Posted In
Features
History
Music
News and Culture
0
What Does It Mean to Read Great Food Writing in a Pandemic?
J. Kenji López-Alt on Editing an Anthology as Coronavirus Hit
December 14, 2020
By
J. Kenji López-Alt
Posted In
Features
Food
News and Culture
0
The Biggest Literary Stories
of the Year: 50 to 31
Not All of Them Are Bad, Promise
December 14, 2020
By
Emily Temple
Posted In
Book News
Events
News and Culture
Reading Lists
19
« First
‹ Previous
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
Next ›
Last »
Page 931 of 1785
Lithub
Daily
February 24, 2025
Lessons from Edward Gorey
Jamie Hood on Gisèle Pelicot, Virginie Despentes, and post-#MeToo narratives
How playwrights are responding to AI
More News
Close
to the Lithub Daily
Thank you for subscribing!
Email
Submit
Support Lit Hub.
Lit hub
Radio
Podcasts, Audiobooks + More
Now Playing:
All Stations