Lit Hub Weekly: November 2 – 6, 2020

Literature

TODAY: In 1910, Leo Tolstoy dies.

Also on Lit Hub:

Turns out Gabriela Garcia Marquez was also against interpretation • How the literary world reinvented the book festival in real time • LA’s resident mountain lion is a lonely hunter • On the odd life of a Zoom poet-for-hire • Priya Basil on the living histories of regional cuisine • Valzynhya Mort: “Is there anything more beautiful than night in a Soviet microregion?” • What we talk about when  we talk about Titles Like This • Dan Moller on the technical challenges of playing Bach • Susana Moreira Marques on the comic misunderstandings of motherhood • Kathleen Flenniken reconsiders what it means to love one’s country • Michael Fischer on moving beyond the binary of criminality • Gilda Daniels on the roots of voter deception • Michelle Jackson on the myths of American opportunity • Loretta Napoleoni on the heroic women who stitched their way to freedom • Studying the art of the Middle Ages as a queer LatinxJerald Walker gets a bad haircut and goes downhill from there • A brief history of citational fiction and literary supercuts • Chris Stedman attempts to find humanity on the internet • Wayne Coyne on the last song he’d play before dying Patrick Rosal on family history, language ecosystems, and life in the cane fields • Meet the high school teacher who changed Kaveh Akbar’s life • Emily van Duyne on loving, and misunderstanding, Sylvia Plath • Charles Bowden on the US-Mexico border and what America has chosen not to understand • Spend some time with Cees Nooteboom wandering through Venice • Tony Conniff does a close reading of Bob Dylan’s “Tangled Up in Blue” • Sandra Cisneros on the #MeToo movement, narrative voice, and The House on Mango Street

Best of Book Marks:

On the occasion of its 60th publication anniversary this week, a classic review of John Updike’s Rabbit, Run • Heid E. Erdrich recommends five books about survival, from Cassandra López’s Brother Bullet to Toni Morrison’s Sula • New titles from Nicole Krauss, David Sedaris, Shirley Hazzard, and Megan Hunter all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

New on CrimeReads:

Crime and the city explores the “educated” novels of collegiate Cambridge • How the discovery of a rare pink diamond led Matthew Hart to thrillers • Susie Yang with six anti-heroines who test the limits of morality • John Connolly has a few thoughts on the state of Irish crime fiction • “Turmoil and fear and injustice have always existed”: an interview with Tana French • Michael Gonzales remembers a hospitable drug dealer who would become the victim of a senseless crime • Tara Lush on the sunburnt comfort of tropical cozies in trying times • Dominic Martell has some advice for helping your characters age gracefully • H. B. Lyle on Erskine Childers, the gentleman spy novelist who became a revolutionary • Is your character a serial killer or a vigilante? Layne Fargo has some ideas



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