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Edafe Okporo reflects on life as a gay ex-priest in Nigeria. | Lit Hub Religion
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“Glory Hallelujah!! A delicious poke in the snoot for Hitler.” Read excerpts from Mary Churchill’s World War II diary. | Lit Hub History
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When the smoke cleared in Hell Creek, Montana, exposing a “child’s conception of a monster”—aka the first T. Rex fossil. | Lit Hub Paleontology
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“Writing a novel is such a big How—a Voltron, really, of many little Hows.” After going from scripts to books, Carter Bays has some advice. | Lit Hub Craft
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A hotbed of countercultural ideas: Joanna Scutts on the early days of the the Heterodoxy Women’s Club. | Lit Hub History
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Anthony Almojera recalls becoming a “one-man EMS publicity department” in March 2020, as the overwhelmed New York City health system looked poised for collapse. | Lit Hub Life in a Pandemic
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“Language is not merely a tool of communication, but also a place where reality can be shaped.” Toward a definition of Indigenous futurism. | Lit Hub
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Leila Mottley’s Nightcrawling, Tom Perrotta’s Tracy Flick Can’t Win, and Andrew Holleran’s Kingdom of Sand all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week. | Book Marks
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Queer mysteries and thrillers to read all year long. | CrimeReads
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“In 2021, the most challenged books included Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe, Lawn Boy by Jonathan Evison, and All Boys Aren’t Blue by George M. Johnson.
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All feature LGBTQ content.” Experts answer the FAQs of book banning. | The Washington Post
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Ahead of Bloomsday, step inside Ulysses Rare Books, the antiquarian bookshop near Davy Byrne’s pub (IYKYK). | Financial Times
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Playwright Lynn Nottage shares the books that changed her life. | Vogue
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A new exhibition shows the ways that children’s books captured the civil rights movement. | The New York Times
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“To read the works of Gerald Murnane is to feel a nearly inexpressible sensation of expansion.” Robert Rubsam on Last Letter to a Reader. | The Baffler
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Heather Schwedel investigates the latest titling trend in women’s fiction: the “protagonist does a thing” formula. | Slate
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A look at the oldest cookbooks from libraries around the world. | Atlas Obscur
Also on Lit Hub: The final journals of Antigone Kefala, one of Australia’s most significant writers • Tom Perrotta on how to keep a story’s momentum going • Read from Ida Jessen’s newly translated book, A Postcard for Annie (tr. Martin Aitken)