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Mary Kate Frank wonders why we covet writers’ everyday objects… while coveting Joan Didion’s seashell collection, now at auction. | Lit Hub
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12 new books to look forward to this week, featuring Patti Smith, Eileen Myles, Hanif Abdurraqib, and more. | The Hub
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“From the first day, everything changed.” How living in Naples changed Shirley Hazzard’s life. | Lit Hub Biography
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Toby Wilkinson examines the technology in King Tut’s tomb, which tells the story of “a civilization at the height of its power and influence.” | Lit Hub History
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Nick Hornby doesn’t often give novels as gifts, and other insights from the Lit Hub Questionnaire. | Lit Hub
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Take a look inside Jason Reynold’s (stunning) home: “Books are perhaps the only thing easier to find than works of art.” | Lit Hub Style
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Why verse novels are gay (and glorious). | Lit Hub Criticism
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Jeff Patterson dives deep into a Florida cold case. | CrimeReads
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“They’re easy to overlook even as they go about their quiet work of keeping American literature alive.” Margaret Renkl on the quiet, crucial work of university presses. | The New York Times
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Julia Métraux explores how fairy tales pass along specific messages about women’s bodies and feminine beauty. | JSTOR Daily
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A look at the growing trend of mindfulness books for children. | The Guardian
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Celebrating authors who write across genre lines. | San Francisco Chronicle
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“I think that that’s the role of literature, that’s the role of reading, to move you, to shake you up and to make you someone new.” A conversation with Tracie D. Hall, the longtime librarian being honored at the National Book Awards. | NPR
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The Brooklyn Public Library’s most-borrowed books of all time might surprise you. | The Hub
Also on Lit Hub: Sofia Coppola in praise of Edith Wharton’s beloved antiheroine Undine Spragg • Meg Howrey recounts narrating her own novel • Read from Johanne Lykke Holm’s newly translated novel, Strega (tr. Saskia Vogel)