Literature

May 7, 2021, 12:04pm If so, you’ve come to the right place. Someone (who goes by the name of MysigMind) is making long playlists of classical music—we’re talking Rachmaninoff, Liszt, Vivaldi, all the greats—geared specifically for 19th century villains in (slightly) different situations. For instance, A playlist for a 19th century villain scheming against his
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May 7, 2021, 12:10pm One hundred and twenty-six year ago today, H. G. Wells’ seminal science-fiction novella, The Time Machine, was first published. The story of an Victorian English scientist (and gentleman inventor) who builds a big ‘ol steampunk time machine and uses it to travel to the year A.D. 802,701 (where perilous adventures with
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May 7, 2021, 12:47pm The 215 Literary Arts Festival—in partnership with Rutgers University Camden, The Stables, and Laternfish Press—is bringing together a band of writers, editors, musicians, and DJ librarians to celebrate the vibrant literary arts scene in the Philadelphia area, from May 10th to 15th. The Festival, founded in 2001, has hosted an array
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TODAY: In 2012, Maurice Sendak dies.    Cross your legs, stretch your hymen: Danielle Dreilinger on the college courses that sought to curb divorce. | Lit Hub “It changes it from an entertaining satire about grubbing minor poets into a truly great story about thwarted friendship and human loneliness.” How a Robert Bolaño story influenced Chris Powers’
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TODAY: In 1812, Robert Browning is born. Phoebe S.K. Young considers how companies brand The Great Outdoors (i.e. aggressively), and COVID’s impact on our concept of camping. | Lit Hub Maggie Shipstead takes the Lit Hub Questionnaire, and confesses that she still hasn’t read War and Peace (no judgment). | Lit Hub Questionnaires “He had
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May 6, 2021, 12:50pm Stacey Abrams has had a busy year: on May 11th, Doubleday will publish her political thriller While Justice Sleeps, and Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Random House, has just picked up her three out-of-print romances for re-publication. (And that’s not to mention Abrams’s work as a politician and voting rights advocate.)
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May 5, 2021, 1:17pm The Clio Awards, which recognize innovation in advertising, design and communication, have just awarded their grand prize to “The Uncensored Library,” a library that houses books and articles censored in their country of origin—a library built entirely in Minecraft. Reporters Without Borders, aided by creative agency DDB Germany and production company
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TODAY: In 1927, Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse is published. Annette Gordon-Reed on Juneteenth, an oral history of ACT UP, and a new Bob Dylan biography all feature among May’s new and noteworthy nonfiction. | Lit Hub Reading Lists David Coggins wants you to experience the poetry of fly-fishing. | Lit Hub Sports “My main problem
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May 4, 2021, 3:51pm St. Vincent, aka Annie Clark, is gearing up for a new album release in ten days, which—in classic St. Vincent form—means a completely reinvented sonic and visual palette via teasers and singles. Clark’s new album, Daddy’s Home, wears its ‘70’s influences on its sleeve, but oldies rock isn’t all Clark’s been
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TODAY: In 1916, journalist and urbanist Jane Jacobs is born. It’s a war, a war of punctuation marks; these famous writers are—perhaps unsurprisingly—willing to die on these comma-ridden hills! | Lit Hub Happy New Books Tuesday, from these 23 releases that are begging to be read by you. | The Hub “Gathering observations and making
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