Lit Hub Weekly: April 5 – 9

Literature

TODAY: In 1925, The Great Gatsby is published.

Also on Lit Hub:

Phillip Lopate considers America’s post-WWII essay boom • On the foundational white supremacy of border control • Erik Hoel on the joy of growing up in an indie bookstoreGina Frangello on rage and infidelityJudy Batalion on Jewish resistance fighters in PolandWriting advice from Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney • Rick Moody takes a close look at Rick Schatzberg’s The Boys • Five audiobooks that celebrate trailblazing women • Cynthia L. Haven on the unsung translator George L. Kline • Steve Hall recommends seven formally innovative books • Michio Kaku has some questions about black holes • Sanjena Sathian on balancing solitude and community at an MFA • A brief history of literary marginaliaHelen Oyeymi talks to Kristin Iversen about setting her new novel on a train • How Bruce Springsteen’s “Jungleland” inspired a debut novel • Gabrielle Bluestone on the Fyre Festival and the evil genius of hype • How The Matrix paved the way for the Marvel universe • Nothing but love for a writer’s-blocked, anxious Jane Austen • A physician turns to J.M. Coetzee to consider elder care • How Leonora Carrington’s self-portrait helped Michaela Carter fictionalize the infamous artist • Victoria Law on the historical inevitably of the modern prison system • On Tolkien’s lifelong linguistic obsession • Ed Simon on Pittsburgh, the Paris of Appalachia • Morgan Jerkins recommends books that capture Black motherhood • Mark Edmundson’s boyhood (and perpetual) love for Walt Whitman • Tiana Nobile on the origin stories of Asian-American adopteesJessica Bacal has some advice for moving on from rejection • Kate Lebo traces a symbolic history of pomegranates • Targeted ads are more than just creepy—they’re also incredibly dangerous to democracy • Raynor Winn recommends nature memoirs • Stephanie Dray travels to Auvergne to uncover the history of Adrienne Lafayette • Jasmin Darznik on legendary photographer Dorothea Lange 

Best of Book Marks:

The Art of the Hand-Sell: booksellers from nine indies rave about their favorite reads • Sabbath’s TheaterKidnappedThe Death and Life of Great American Cities, and more rapid-fire book recs from Phillip Lopate • White OleanderBelovedA Home at the End of the World, and more rapid-fire book recs from Chelsea Bieker • New titles by Haruki Murakami, Jeff VanderMeer, Rachel Kushner, and Brandi Carlile all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

New on CrimeReads:

Dario Diofebi with a brief moral history of online poker • Legendary critic Marilyn Stasio on a lifetime of book reviews • Neuroscientist and novelist Erik Hoel thinks murder mysteries are a lot like science • Flynn Berry on the hidden history of women and the IRA • Edward Brooke-Hitching on the most indecipherable coded text ever discovered • Adele Parks with characters so bad, they’re great • Jane Healey honors the pioneering women spies of the OSS • Jennifer McMahon with scary reads for scary times • Dan Stout on striking a balance between world-building and action • Richard O’Rawe, a former bank robber for the IRA, on writing a heist novel



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