-
“Her books gave us hope that one day we would be able to speak our minds, to express what we truly felt, to chart our own destiny.” Kristina Gorcheva-Newberry on reading Toni Morrison in Moscow. | Lit Hub
-
OSCARS WEEK: Criticism, side reading, and what to try next if you liked Drive My Car and King Richard. | Lit Hub Film
-
Read an open letter from Writers for Democratic Action, urging southern writers to register people to vote at literary events. | Lit Hub Politics
-
Peter Kalu considers the superhero stories that shaped him, and why we’re right to be wary of our caped icons today. | Lit Hub
-
“I wish you a sexy, dangerous, jazz-shaped immortality.” Read Diane Seuss’s commencement address to the Bennington Writing Seminars. | Lit Hub
-
Is every coming-of-age story an apocalypse story? | Lit Hub
-
Jeevan Vasagar reports on the efforts of Singapore’s government to “tame the internet” and suppress dissent. | Lit Hub Politics
-
“Like writers, physicians are the collected stories of others.” Xi Chen makes the case for more writers practicing medicine (and vice versa). | Lit Hub Health
-
Frankenstein, The Velveteen Rabbit, Autobiography of Red, and more rapid-fire book recs from Melissa Febos. | Book Marks
-
The Museo della Cucina, a new cooking museum in Rome, showcases the oldest mass-printed cookbook, recipes from Pope Pius V’s chef, and more culinary treasures. | Hyperallergic
-
John Tirman recommends books that illuminate the trauma of civilians caught in wars. | The Washington Post
-
Beloved author Beatrix Potter’s drawings of animals and the English landscape are now on view at London’s Victoria & Albert Museum. | Artnet
-
Ostap Kin revisits Ukrainian poetry of the late 20th century with titles that “present vibrant poetic voices, showcasing a wide array of techniques, forms, and themes.” | Los Angeles Review of Books
-
A librarian in Texas lost her job after not complying with an order by her boss to remove certain books called “inappropriate” by patrons. | KXAN
-
Take a deep dive into Patricia Highsmith’s literary (and personal) relationship with snails. | Vulture
-
“Baobab trees are built for benedictions, and for wonder.” Jori Lewis on the wisdom and resiliency of Africa’s baobab trees. | Emergence Magazine
Also on Lit Hub: Kevin Wilson on the fever dream brilliance of Harry Crews • Monique Roffey on rewriting the mermaid myth • Read a story from Ladee Hubbard’s new collection, The Last Suspicious Holdout