Lit Hub Weekly: September 14 – 18, 2020

Literature

TODAY: In 1902, Japanese poet and critic Masaoka Shiki, a major figure in the development of modern haiku poetry who is credited with writing nearly 20,000 stanzas during his short life, dies.

Also on Lit Hub:

Walter Mosley on storytelling, writing advice, and Winnie the Pooh • What draws libertarians to New Hampshire? • Lan Cao on the beginning of her American life • In a family of readers, packing up my late father’s library was hardest of allLara Ehrlich on what becoming a mermaid taught me about being a modern woman • A conversation between Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum and Karen Russell • In case you need reminding, a book is not a baby • David Nasaw on the search for a home for the last refugees of World War II • Sharon Salzberg on the books that brought her closer to mindfulness • Alex Ross on Wagner’s complicated influence on American culture • Eva Nour on the writer’s view of the Syrian Regime • Anne Posten on what it’s like to fall hard for a text • Spending a night alone in Mount Everest’s death zone • Mary Rizzo considers Baltimore on the small screen • Omari Weekes and Elias Rodriques on reading Randall Kenan Alane Mason on the joy of editing Randall Kenan • Ashley Dawson on the endless commoditizing of American energy • Claudia Castro Luna on Seattle’s season of peaceful protest • Lincoln Michel proposes a new way to think about fictional worlds • Peter Balakian on the party of Lincoln’s “Big Government” origins • How a 1960s sci-fi fable expanded the meaning of Cuban pilgrimages • On the time Jimi Hendrix took the UK by storm • Erica Barnett on the books that helped her in recovery • Sophia Chang on entering the Wu-Tang Clan’s inner circle • Kailyn McCord wonders what serenity in an apocalypse might look like • Playwright Dan O’Brien knows that every family is unhappy in its own way: • Daniel Yergin on the 21st-century energy economy • Can America’s governors save our system of democracy? • Angela Chen on rethinking how we talk about love • Robert Michael Pyle on land ethics in the 21st century

Best of Book Marks:

New on CrimeReads:

Agatha Christie and the art of opening a mystery novel • Lisa Levy recommends five psychological thrillers to read this September • Ben Macintyre on a legendary spy and his unusual recruitment strategy in 1930s Shanghai • “How is it all these convenient things happen in novels?” Curtis Evans on the delightful marginalia of an exasperated Victorian reader • Why Lee Child edited a book about nicotine • Wendy Walker on eight great books about women who disappear • Micah Nemerever looks at five novels about destructive romantic friendships • Michael Gonzales on the art and life of comic book visionary Jeffrey Catherine Jones • Callie Hutton draws a thread between past and present with historical fiction • There is no crime fiction without politics, from Vanessa Lillie



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