Lit Hub Weekly: October 11-14, 2022

Literature

TODAY: In 1922, T. S. Eliot founds The Criterion magazine, the first issue of which contains his poem The Waste Land.  

Also on Lit Hub:

Jacqueline Woodson, Helen Phillips, and more contemporary writers reflect on 75 years of Goodnight Moon • Lydia Millet on long extinct creatures and boundaries real and imaginary • Antony Beevor on the Red Army’s campaign of terror • On Black PantherLuke Cage, and the responsibility of Black superheroes • Deborah E. Kennedy on how being broke made her a writer • The feminist history of science fiction • Reine Arcache Melvin on writing sex and violence • On the complementary pursuits of writing and homesteading • On the patriarchy beneath the possession in The Exorcist • The trailblazing illustrator and mountaineer who captured North America’s wildflowers • Nora McInerny reflects on the hijacking nature of anxiety • Vanessa A. Bee in praise of spite writing • Arwen Donahue on the doubts left behind by sudden death • On the waning years of Edward Hopper • “While the classical industry may have been designed with snobs in mind, classical music was not.” • The price of resisting Nazi propaganda in Germany • Transcendence and immanence in the work of Victoria Chang and Yusef Komunyakaa • What a young Charles Darwin saw upon anchoring in Tahiti • Peter Orner on murder and tragedy in Fall River, Massachusetts • Mary L. Dudziak on resisting the brutality of state numbers • On Italo Calvino, Anne Carson, and “the roiling mess” of romantic love



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