<H2> April 7 – 11, 2025 </H2> |
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<H3> Viet Thanh Nguyen: Most American Literature is the Literature of Empire </H3> |
<H3> Viet Thanh Nguyen on Finding the Foreign in Ourselves and Those Most Like Us </H3> |
<H3> 5 Book Reviews You Need to Read This Week </H3> |
<H3> On the 40-Year Friendship of Toni Morrison and Fran Lebowitz </H3> |
<H3> New York Noir: From the Graphic Adaptation of Paul Auster’s New York Trilogy </H3> |
<H3> Happy Birthday, Lit Hub, You’re Ten Years Old </H3> |
<H3> Sally Rooney on the Short Stories of Thomas Morris </H3> |
<H3> On My Grandfather’s Novel: F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby at 100 </H3> |
<H3> A Close Reading of the Poetry of Val Kilmer </H3> |
<H3> Our Freedom is Fragile: Lessons From the Jewish Children Who Fled Nazi Germany </H3> |
<H3> Silence is Collaboration: Academics Must Speak Out Against Fascism </H3> |
<H3> American Literature’s White Whale: Why the “Great American Novel” is Still Worth Pursuing </H3> |
<H3> A Single Ray of Light: On Ray Bradbury’s “All Summer in a Day” and Living in the Shadow of Long COVID </H3> |
<H3> On the Episode That Changed Ira Glass’s This American Life Forever </H3> |
<H3> The Literary Film & TV You Need to Stream in April </H3> |
<H3> How Tennis Helped Me Manage the Competitive Beast That Was Ruining My Writing </H3> |
<H3> Life After One-Word Virality: Yes, I’m the Person Who Came Up With #Scandoval </H3> |
<H3> Bold and Boundary-Pushing: How to Dress Like David Bowie </H3> |
<H3> Graydon Carter on The Golden Age of Magazines </H3> |
<H3> The Reforestation of American Civic Life: What Publishing Can Do in the Face of the Trump </H3> |
<H3> The Timeless Magic of Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities at 50 </H3> |
<H3> How Mr. Darcy Became One of Jane Austen’s Most Memorable Creations </H3> |
<H3> A Columbia University Professor Speaks Out Against the Kidnapping of Mahmoud Khalil </H3> |
<H3> The Best Villains in Literature Bracket: And The Winner Is... </H3> |
<H3> “A Conflicted, Imperfect Love.” Jesmyn Ward on William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying </H3> |
<H3> Here’s Your 2025 Literary Film & TV Preview </H3> |
<H3> Lit Hub’s Most Anticipated Books of 2025 </H3> |
<H3> 20 Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books to Look Forward to in 2025 </H3> |
<H3> The Most Anticipated Children’s Books of 2025 </H3> |
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<H3> Our City That Year </H3> |
<H3> “Wales” </H3> |
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<H4> Drop is a Rom-Com Psychological Thriller for Our Surveillance Age </H4> |
<H4> Watch the Book Trailer for Sophy Roberts's Bestselling A Training School for Elephants. </H4> |
<H4> New on the Lit Hub Podcast: Traci Thomas of The Stacks, Jonny Diamond on Lit Hub’s 10th Birthday, and More Poetry! </H4> |
<H4> How Buffy the Vampire Slayer Continues to Inspire Generations of Fans </H4> |
<H4> Natalia Theodoridou on Unraveling a Short Story into a Novel </H4> |
<H4> How to Write a Novel While Driving on the Sam Houston Tollway </H4> |
<H4> From Vanishing World </H4> |
<H4> From Our City That Year </H4> |
<H4> From Open Up </H4> |
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<H4> The Second Life: On Translating Literature Into Farsi and Life into English </H4> |
<H4> The Incendiary Feeling of Freedom: On Phillis Wheatley Peters and the Poetry of Survival </H4> |
<H4> Abolitionists and Confederates: On the Complex History of American Jews During the Civil War </H4> |
<H4> What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week </H4> |
<H4> Following the “Mom Rule.” On Writing Sci-Fi My Mother Could Get Behind </H4> |
<H4> The Best Reviewed Books of the Week </H4> |
<H4> 5 Reviews You Need to Read This Week </H4> |
<H4> The Terrifying Draw of the Desert </H4> |
<H4> A Duty of Care: Barbara Early on Doing Justice to Jessica Fletcher </H4> |
<H5> “An imperial literature prefers the realism of showing the imperfect domesticity within an American empire.” </H5> |
<H5> “That is the joy of otherness, an awareness that even seeing oneself face to face means that the very notion of otherness is present.” </H5> |
<H5> “How do we lie to ourselves so convincingly, and what is the cost of those lies?” </H5> |
<H5> Priya Vulchi Considers the Lifespans of Literary and Political Friendships </H5> |
<H5> Mystery, Murder and an Existential Search For Meaning and Purpose </H5> |
<H5> Yes, We've Survived a Whole Decade on the Internet </H5> |
<H5> Read “Wales” From Morris’s New Collection, “Open Up” </H5> |
<H5> Eleanor Lanahan Reflects on the Literary Legacy of a Timeless American Novel </H5> |
<H5> Nick Ripatrazone Revisits the Work of a Wounded Heart </H5> |
<H5> Pamela Newton on the Legacy of the Kindertransport </H5> |
<H5> An Open Letter From South Jersey </H5> |
<H5> Ed Simon on the Importance of Chasing an Elusive Literary Ideal in an Era of National Decline </H5> |
<H5> Jessie Chaffee: “For a moment, I am the girl, her existence of gray monotony broken by a sliver of sunlight while others revel in the day’s abundance.” </H5> |
<H5> Or, On the Importance of Fact-Checking </H5> |
<H5> Small Things, Big Things, Scary Things </H5> |
<H5> Kayla Kumari Upadhyaya on Finding Balance Between Drive and Acceptance </H5> |
<H5> Hannah Selinger on Coining the Perfect Portmanteau (and Writing a Whole Book) </H5> |
<H5> Natalie Hammond Offers a Few Tips to Bring Rock Star Style Into Your Wardrobe </H5> |
<H5> Terry McDonell Talks to Legendary Editor About His New Book </H5> |
<H5> Part Three of Josh Cook’s Series on the Challenges We Face </H5> |
<H5> Anthony Doerr Reflects on His Long History Deciphering the Literary Puzzles of a Postmodern Masterpiece </H5> |
<H5> Janet Todd Explores the Origins and Afterlives of a Longtime Object of Literary Desire </H5> |
<H5> “We will not take lectures on antisemitism from segregationists and neo-nazis.” </H5> |
<H5> From 64 to 1 </H5> |
<H5> “I realized he was kin in telling this complicated, complex story that is Mississippi.” </H5> |
<H5> 27 Shows and Movies to Stream and See This Year </H5> |
<H5> 291 Books We're Looking Forward to in the New Year </H5> |
<H5> Looking Ahead to the Year’s SFF Offerings From Amal el-Mohtar, Daryl Gregory, Katherine Addison, R.F. Kuang, and Many More </H5> |
<H5> Caroline Carlson Asks Dahlia Adler, Jashar Awan, Rachel Ekstrom Courage and Others About The KidLit They're Most Looking Forward To This Year </H5> |
<H5> You Get Editors’ Personalized Book Recs, an Ad-Free Reading Experience, AND the Joan Didion Tote Bag </H5> |
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