Literature

July 2, 2021, 1:52pm Zakiya Dalila Harris’ The Other Black Girl, Brandon Taylor’s Filthy Animals, Doireann Ní Ghríofa’s A Ghost in the Throat, and Lawrence Wright’s The Plague Year all feature among the best reviewed books of the month. Brought to you by Book Marks, Lit Hub’s “Rotten Tomatoes for books.” Fiction 1. The Other Black
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TODAY: In 2010, English screenwriter and author Beryl Bainbridge dies.   If “national characteristics don’t create national unity,” asks George Packer, what could? | Lit Hub Politics “I feel a defiance to those who would have me disappear.” Anita Sethi reclaims her existence in the wake of racial trauma. | Lit Hub Theodore R. Johnson considers
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July 1, 2021, 2:02pm The Shirley Jackson Awards have announced their impressive list of nominees for the 2020 awards. The awards were established to celebrate the literary career of Shirley Jackson and recognize works that represent “outstanding achievement in the literature of psychological suspense, horror, and the dark fantastic.” A jury of professional writers, editors,
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TODAY: In 1915, short story writer and novelist Jean Stafford (here, in between Robert Lowell and Peter Taylor) is born.  In the latest installment of The Longest Year: 2020+, Isadora Kosofsky documents an LA Covid ward, and Suzanne Koven reflects on treating patients in another ward across the country. | Lit Hub Photography Humans have
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‘To every thing there is a season’, ‘nothing new under the sun’, ‘vanity of vanities’, ‘evil under the sun’, ‘the sun also rises’: perhaps there is no Old Testament book more chock-full of memorable phrases than the Book of Ecclesiastes. In essence, the author of Ecclesiastes tells us that everything we do is ‘vanity’: empty,
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TODAY: In 1984, American playwright Lillian Hellman dies at 79.   Lavinia Liang considers the “Eastern Western,” a growing body of literature that’s reclaiming a xenophobic genre. | Lit Hub Criticism “There are certain novels that have the remarkable quality of being both timely and prophetic.” Margot Livesy on Kathrine Kressmann Taylor’s Address Unknown, which exposed
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‘Envy’ is a poem by Mary Lamb, who is best-remembered for her Tales from Shakespeare which she co-authored with her brother, Charles. But she was also a fine poet, who, in ‘Envy’, presents to us an important truth about the nature of envy and the futility of believing the grass always greener on the other
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