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An Ode to the Ode: Lory Bedikian on How the Form Helped Her Grieve and Grow
The Author of “Jagadakeer: Apology to the Body” Explores the Many Meanings and Possibilities of a Poetic Category
September 6, 2024
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Lory Bedikian
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8
Suffering, Grace and Redemption: How The Bronx Came to Be
Ian Frazier on the Early History of New York City's Northernmost Borough
September 6, 2024
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Ian Frazier
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10
Reckoning and Refoundation: How the Tokyo Trials Created Modern Asia
From Gary J. Bass's Cundill Prize-Shortlisted “Judgment at Tokyo”
September 6, 2024
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Gary J. Bass
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“Because We’re So Poor”
Juan Rulfo (trans. Douglas Weatherford)
September 6, 2024
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Little Free Library has a new map to help places hit hardest by book bans.
September 5, 2024
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James Folta
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Lit Hub Daily: September 5, 2024
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
September 5, 2024
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American Nightmare: Alice Driver on the Immigrants Who Risked Their Lives at a Meatpacking Plant During Covid
The Author of “Life and Death of the American Worker” in Conversation with Sarah Viren
September 5, 2024
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How the Weimar Republic’s Hyperinflation Transformed Gender Relations in Germany
Harald Jähner on the Economic, Social and Moral Landscape of Weimar Berlin
September 5, 2024
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Harald Jähner
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5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week
“The men in her fiction are black holes who threaten to extinguish the light of any woman or child unlucky enough to get near them.”
September 5, 2024
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Humanity’s Strangest Language: On the Joys of Translating Math
Ben Orlin Considers New Ways to Think About—and Have Fun With—Numbers, Variables and Equations
September 5, 2024
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Ben Orlin
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Toward a More Generous Pedagogy
Michele Herman on Bringing the Golden Rule to Her Classroom
September 5, 2024
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Michele Herman
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Korean Revolutionary Kim San on Moral Courage in the Face of Imperialist Violence
“To rise above oppression is the glory of man; to submit is his shame.”
September 5, 2024
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Kim San
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Letting Places Grow Like Characters: Transforming Your Hometown into a Fictional World
Shannon Bowring on Setting a Book’s Sequel in the Same, Yet Evolving, Literary Universe
September 5, 2024
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Shannon Bowring
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“A Word About a Word Addressed to a Word.” On Embracing the Fictiveness of Fiction
For Maureen Sun Transparency Is Not Always a Virtue
September 5, 2024
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Maureen Sun
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I Think Memoirs Nowadays Are Just Completely Self-Involved: Am I the Literary Asshole?
Kristen Arnett Answers Your Awkward Questions About Bad Bookish Behavior
September 5, 2024
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Herscht 07769
László Krasznahorkai (trans. by Ottilie Mulzet)
September 5, 2024
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Alissa Quart on the Dangerous Lie of American Bootstrap Narratives
In Conversation with Whitney Terrell and V.V. Ganeshananthan on Fiction/Non/Fiction
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Here’s the shortlist for the 2024 Cundill History Prize.
September 5, 2024
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Spammy political fundraising texts from fictional characters.
September 4, 2024
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On the weird literary origins of
Beetlejuice
(Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice…).
September 4, 2024
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Brittany Allen
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