Lit Hub Weekly: May 10 – 14, 2021

Literature

TODAY: In 1856, L. Frank Baum is born.  

Also on Lit Hub:

How a pandemic reading project turned Josh Raff into an Austenite • Read an interview with Anne Carson and Robert CurrieSean Flynn sets out to purchase a peacock • Antonia Pont in praise of sitting • Why do we find creepy children so compelling? • A brief history of the Times wedding pages • How an Irish barman left his mark on the literary world • Anna Dorn on trying to avoid a law career • On being told that your debut novel is plotless • Kate Durbin talks to Chelsea Hodson about the Greek Chorus of objects on Hoarders • John Domini reckons with the Neapolitan Mafia • Sarah Sentilles on the complicated pain of trying to adopt a child • Alison Bechdel on transcendentalism and bliss • Nesrine Malik investigates the roots of “political correctness”Jennifer Weiner takes the Lit Hub Questionnaire • Andrew McCarthy on landing his career-changing role in Pretty in Pink • Suzanne Simard on the moral reckoning of clear-cutting a forest • The most discussed books on the internet, according to robots • Ashley Nelson Levy wonders how the pandemic might change motherhood literature • Who owns the seaside, anyway? • Marc Hamer on following the Vita Sackville-West school of gardening • On the redemption of Rudy Gobert, COVID Patient Zero of the NBA • Nandana Dev Sen on translating her mother • Martha C. Nussbaum on abuse in the art world • “I thought: Oh, thank God. There are gay women in heaven” • When did mountain climbing become equivalent with business success? • How desire propels the writing life • Joshua Corey on the “macabre waltz” of Hannah Arendt and Martin HeideggerHow the singular “they” saved a translation • Tobias Carroll rereads the work of M. John Harrison

The Best of Book Marks:

Jane EyreAnna Karenina, Charlotte’s Web, and more rapid-fire book recs from Mary Morris • From the archives: The authority of suicide in Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar • Dracula, The Time Traveler’s Wife, The Men Who Stare at Goats, and more rapid-fire book recs from Ruth Ware • New titles by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Stacey Abrams, and Edmund de Waal all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

More from CrimeReads:

Kaira Rouda on a new trend in domestic suspense titles • Julia Sirmons with a field guide to the long history of skyjackings • 80+ crime novels, mysteries, thrillers, and nonfiction books to keep you reading all summer long • Otto Penzler on Mary Roberts Rinehart, America’s answer to Agatha Christie • Heather Martin, Lee Child’s biographer, on a new book that reveals insights into Child’s journey • S.A. Lelchuk with 9 great thrillers featuring alter egos • Olivia Rutigliano on the persistent mystery of Arthur Conan Doyle’s name • Iona Whishaw recalls a family history of espionage • Lisa Levy with 5 psychological thrillers you should read this May • Zack Budryk on Mare of Easttown and the prestige crime series



Articles You May Like

Writers Guild Awards 2024 Winners List (Updating Live)
You’ll Have Role Clarity By June
Norwegian Air CEO Shares His Outlook for Summer 2024
Count Your Macronutrients | Valet.
Amy Schneider Selection for ‘Masters’ Tournament Sparks Backlash