Literature

TODAY: In 1907, science fiction writer Robert Heinlein is born.   “I am painfully aware of every single thing that I need from music, embarrassed by what I ask of it.” Jessica Hopper on rock, rapture, and what artists do that mortals cannot. | Lit Hub Music Julia Baird on honoring the “dull, repetitive, unglamorous
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July 6, 2021, 1:22pm This week’s issue of The New Yorker features an excerpt of Sally Rooney’s forthcoming novel, Beautiful World, Where Are You. As its title, “Unread Messages,” implies, the excerpts includes its fair share of texts, calls, feed-scrolling, and social media stalking. This isn’t new for Rooney, who nailed the sentimentality and self-editing
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July 2, 2021, 11:48am Across the pond at Sotheby’s London, a cache of Sylvia Plath’s letters and personal items are going under the hammer. There’s a family bible, some honeymoon period correspondence between Plath and Ted Hughes, a photo album full of pictures from happier times, a set of tarot cards, and a pretty cool
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July 2, 2021, 11:58am Former president Barack Obama was this year’s closing speaker at the American Library Association Annual conference on Tuesday. In a wide-ranging virtual conversation with Secretary of the Smithsonian Lonnie G. Bunch III, he discussed misinformation, racial justice, and (shocker) his memoir. In keeping with his audience, he also emphasized the importance
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TODAY: In 1883, Franz Kafka is born.    “That Barthelme had such a long and fruitful relationship with The New Yorker now seems remarkable, for he was in many ways the least likely New Yorker contributor ever.” Charles McGrath on the avant-garde genius of Donald Barthelme. | Lit Hub How Kurt Cobain’s favorite novel made its way onto Nirvana’s final album:
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