Lit Hub Weekly: April 12 – 16, 2021

Literature

TODAY: In 1897, Thornton Wilder, the only writer to win Pulitzer Prizes for both fiction and drama, is born. 

Also on Lit Hub:

Salman Rushdie on the world of Midnight’s Children, forty years on • How Björk helped Iceland weather the global financial crisis • Searching for answers to Mt. Everest’s greatest mystery • J. Nicole Jones on familiar ghosts and family legacies • Ross King on the laborious process of bookmaking in the 15th century • Why were women written out of the story of the gold rush? • Emily Raboteau on what the pandemic showed us about a certain kind of New Yorker • Maria Kuznetsova offers 15 lessons from writing two novels that didn’t sell • Simon McCarthy-Jones makes a case for small vengeances • Phoebe Hamilton-Jones on the literature of rewilding • Kristin van Ogtrop considers the difficulty of maintaining friendships in middle-age • Katherine Heiny recommends books about the chaos of modern dating • Paying tribute to African American literature scholar Nellie Y. McKay • Jason Guriel considers the author bio • Melissa Scholes Young on three generations of American Dreaming • Andrea Bajani takes a road trip to Italy, Texas • Natalie Baszile honors the unsung history of Black and brown farmers • Ayanna Thompson considers racial tropes in film and TV • On the first gay rally against police violence in America • Lisa Napoli looks back at four women who changed broadcast journalism • The story of the first USSR cosmonauts • Chelsea Wald traces the global history of urban sewer systems • Bruno Lloret recommends six Latin American novels that break with tradition • Paul Theroux is always writingWhat poetry can teach novelists • Michael Spitzer on how the brain recognizes music • How the Civil War gave Walt Whitman a call to action • Kim Todd on four fearless “girl stunt reporters” • The task of editing Beat legend Michael McClure • The joys of translating Eve Baltasar

Best of Book Marks:

Harlem ShuffleTheir Eyes Were Watching GodGeorge and Martha, and more rapid-fire book recs from Emma Straub • “Gross, grotesque, gruesome, and horrible throughout”: a 1963 review of Günter Grass’ “Teutonic nightmare,” The Tin DrumWild Seed, The Dutch House, Edith Hamilton’s Mythology, and more rapid-fire book recs from Stephanie Dray • New titles by Patrick Radden Keefe, Elizabeth McCracken, and Cynthia Ozick feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

More on CrimeReads:

April’s best new crime nonfiction releases • Plotting murder in the public library with Will Thomas • Escape your travel limitations with these ten international thriller series, selected by author Kris Calvin • Edward White on Rear Window and Hitchcock, the voyeur • Danielle Trussoni explores the dizzying allure of Alpine mysteries • Sally Hepworth on sisters, rivalry, and psychological thrillers • Matthew John Phillips on the complex history of ‘gay panic’ and the 2001 thriller The Deep End • Olivia Rutigliano invites you to one of the most productive dinner parties in literary history • A.E. Osworth on suspense fiction in the age of digital surveillance • Bridget Foley on cowardice and crime fiction



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