Lit Hub Weekly: July 19 – 23

Literature

TODAY: In 1900, Zelda Fitzgerald, neé Sayre, is born.   

Also on Lit Hub:

How Oscar Wilde won over the American press  Carole Hooven on the role of hormones in human speech  Conversations with strangers on a cross-country train Miljenko Jergović considers the visible erasure of Croatian Jews  Elie Honig on the “feigned ignorance” of William Barr  A more interesting way to talk about the line between a writer’s life and their fiction Rachel Yoder on navigating chronic pain through storytelling  On the Gilded Age women “sex radicals” who fought back against Anthony Comstock Thad Ziolkowsk on returning to New York’s waves on September 12, 2001  Stories from the Playboy Bunny Resort Lauren Markham and Jeff Frost on California’s endless season of heat What it was like to walk on the moon in 1971 “Faux meats are not progress, they are a distractionOn the 1983 kung fu film that sparked the genesis of the Wu-Tang Clan How we (mis)treat mental illness • Geoff Rodkey on accepting the realities of civilization-ending calamity Why negative descriptors tend to outlast their positive counterparts Athena Dixon on family legacies and the long reach of addiction Toward a syllabus of modern grieving K.E. Semmel on translating Mathilde Walter Clark’s Lone Star • Matt Mitchell on building his own intersex canon of poetry, with the help of Freaks and Geeks • How American textbooks misrepresent the struggle for racial justice Gail Scott on lit-crit’s underestimation of female genius Cedar Sigo on Eileen Myles and the “poet’s novel” • Geoffrey Hilsabeck on the dizzying dream of Vaudeville 



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