Lit Hub Weekly: January 4 – 8, 2021

Literature

TODAY: In 1908, Simone de Beauvoir is born in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, France. 

Also on Lit Hub:

Has the Parent Plot supplanted the Marriage Plot? Peter Ho Davies reflects on the new coming-of-age momentDaniel Simpson goes deep into the chakras, an oft-misunderstood aspect of yoga • Lore Segal grapples with the perennial question, “Where do you get your ideas?” • On teaching a bird to fly • Nuala O’Connor considers the interior life of Nora Joyce • Randon Billings Noble on the tricky business of rendering epiphanies in nonfiction • Danielle McLaughlin on what goes into a writers notebook • Devon Price examines the “Laziness Lie” at the heart of the American myth • Koa Beck: Why don’t advertisers target queer women? • Camilla Pang on wave patterns as personality types • A poem by Kaveh AkbarArthur Miller on the surreal, ideological violence underlying the 1968 Democratic Convention • The early women pioneers of trail hiking

Watching Cuties, teaching Lolita, and examining moral panic • How to build an antiracist workshop Andrew Blauner considers the enduring lessons of “Peanuts” • Daniel Lieberman has some ideas on how to make exercise more fun • Tom Vanderbilt learns to sing in his fifties • English teacher Heather Clark about creating spaces for creativity, even amid a pandemic • The quotidien uses of the fourth dimension, revealed!

Best of Book Marks:

A new Andy Weir space thriller, the latest in Martha Wells’ Murderbot series, and an epic West African fantasy all feature among the most anticipated sci-fi and fantasy books of 2021 • A Little LifeThe Second Sex10:04, and more rapid-fire book recs from Follow Me to Ground author Sue Rainsford • From the archives: a classic review of Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God • Frog and ToadRebeccaBeloved, and more rapid-fire book recs from Jenn Shapland • New titles from Robert Jones Jr., Eley Williams, Peter Ho Davies, and Gretel Ehrlich all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

New on CrimeReads:

Stacie Murphy traces the history of NYC through 10 historical novels • 10 novels you should read this January • Oliva Rutigliano rounds up 10 classic crime novels now entering the public domain • David Masciotra on Hemingway’s revealing (and very political) only crime novel • Sabina Stent on Hollywoodland, the best neo-noir you probably haven’t seen • Zach Vasquez on noir fiction that explores the narrative of racial passing • Craig Pittman on an icon of Cuban-American Miami crime writing • Rachel Hawkins looks at the many retellings of Jane Eyre • Jon Lellenberg revisits Arthur Conan Doyle’s science fiction classicThe Lost World • Crime and the City heads to Rio



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