Lit Hub Weekly: April 26 – 30, 2021

Literature

TODAY: In 1908, Giovanni Guareschi, Italian journalist, humorist, and cartoonist, is born.  

Also on Lit Hub:

Eula Biss on how motherhood radicalized Adrienne Rich • Edward White examines Hitchcock’s treatment of women • Kate Guadagnino on finding solace in restoring a childhood dollhouse • Why have so many authors refused to let their heroines age? • Elissa Washuta talks about the desire to write a big book • Jaime Fuller tracks down two perfect quarantine readsBrandi Carlile remembers the existential dread of an 80s childhood • Cecilia Muñoz considers the myths wrapped up in immigration policyCapitalism will have a heyday with our emotional attachments to AI • What’s a philosopher, anyway? • Tobias Carroll looks to Ian Sinclair’s idea of “walking with a thesis” • Margaret Kimball on spilling her family’s secrets through graphic memoir • Faith Merino on growing up in a conspiracy theory household  • Kate Summerscale on the violent haunting that rattled an English suburb • Tom Whyman recommends books that explore philosophy through fiction • Maria Mutch on ditching the writing plan • Jason Guriel considers the legacy of Kay Ryan • Catriona Silvey wonders about the counterintuitive appeal of time loop stories • On the unlikely legacy of Milman Perry, who changed how we read Homer • On the women written out of the Oxford English Dictionary’s origin story • “How long can an albatross live with a green toothbrush stuck in its gullet?” • On the specific struggle of writing about a close group of friends during quarantine • Lauren Cerand remembers Giancarlo DiTrapano • Leidy Klotz probes the cultural origins of our need to add • Genki Ferguson expands on our understanding of objectophiliacs • Kimberly Grey on chronic pain and losing her mother • Ann McCutchan on writing a long-due biography of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings

The Best of Book Marks:

“Once again Mrs. Woolf makes use of her remarkable method of characterization”: a 1927 review of Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse • FingersmithMoby-DickThe Year of Magical Thinking, and more rapid-fire book recs from J. Courtney Sullivan • A month of literary listening: AudioFile’s best audiobooks of April • New titles by Jhumpa Lahiri, Martha Wells, and Elissa Washuta all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

More from CrimeReads:

Nominees for the Edgar Awards discuss the purpose of crime fiction and writing during the pandemic • Meg Gardiner with ten writing tips for keeping your thriller lean, mean, and exhilarating • We live in a world that conditions us to fear mental illness instead of to treat it. Vince Granata on the deadly consequences of this approach • Michael Nava on the LAPD’s secret history of citizen spying • Honoring the legacy of Eleanor Taylor Bland: a roundtable discussion on a legendary author • Olivia Rutigliano on the dognapping ring that terrorized 19th-century London, and the poet who fought back • Nick Kolakowski on getaway drivers in fiction and the dark side of the American Dream • Jesse Q. Sutanto on writing a cozy mystery inspired by the cheerful, conflicting advice of her wacky Indonesian family • Check out the best reviewed crime novels of April • Amy Suiter Clark with seven great thrillers that play with form



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