TODAY: In 1923, Nella Larsen graduates from the NYPL’s Library School and becomes the first professionally trained Black librarian.
- How Jane Austen subverted the kind of romance she mastered by writing Emma. | Lit Hub Criticism
- Lisa Owens explores the “taboo” ways women writers arrange the balance between creativity with family. | Lit Hub Craft
- Why do our public institutions struggle with trash? “Waste management as we know it has largely developed in opposition to municipal practices.” | Lit Hub Politics
- How swimming helped Kate Washington navigate self (re)discovery and caregiving fatigue. | Lit Hub Memoir
- Emeline Atwood explores the similarities between diving and creativity. | Lit Hub Craft
- Read “Hemlock, 1956,” a poem by Victoria Chang from the collection Tree of Knowledge: “A wooden door in front of everything. A door / on my country. A door in the lake. My poems.” | Lit Hub Poetry
- “They’d been dozing in and out of sleep for the next hour when Wilma crawled back beside the fire.” Read from Jason Stone’s debut novel, The Beauty of the Days Gone By. | Lit Hub Fiction
- “While nothing that he writes is of much interest, Nazir himself is shaping up to be an oddly appealing character.” Laura Miller on Jamir Nazir’s defense of his allegedly AI-generated story. | Slate
- Stephen Mihm explores the “fateful mid-sermon revelation” that led Melvil Dewey to create the Dewey Decimal System. | Smithsonian Magazine
- Why copyright isn’t enough to protect writers from having their work stolen by AI. | The Dial
- Publisher Bona Books breaks down what happened when they were deceived by AI (and why when it comes to AI, small presses get hit hard). | Bona Books
- Will McDonald examines myths, monsters, and gods in short fiction from Iceland and Sweden. | The Baffler
- On craft, critics, and the intense battles that take place in letters to the editor. | The Comics Journal
