Best of the Week: Nov 30 - Dec 4, 2015
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: In 1934, Joan Didion, tote bag model, is born.
- Welcome to December!! Anticipating the thousands of year-end lists to follow, the most notable, underrated, best fiction, and top ten books of 2015. | The New York Times, The Slate Book Review, BuzzFeed Books, The New York Times Book Review
- Jeanette Winterson and Marlon James discuss sex and violence, the crisis generation, and Facebook rants. | The Guardian
- Junot Díaz, R.L. Stein, Angela Flournoy, and other authors share which books they are most #thankful for. | BuzzFeed Books
- Pugnacious Paglia vs. Silent Sontag: Benjamin Moser on Susan Sontag’s infamously boring visit to Bennington. | Literary Bennington
- “How is it possible to feel exiled from a language that isn’t mine?” Jhumpa Lahiri on navigating languages and learning Italian. | The New Yorker
- “Milk it until it’s dead,” and other thoughts on posthumous publishing. | The Boston Globe
- Talking with a cultural Sasquatch: Edmund de Waal discusses the “investigation-travelogue-memoir-history of his lifelong experiences with porcelain.” | Hazlitt
- “Did he teach us anything about writing? No, not really.” Susan Taylor Chehak interviews her former teacher, John Irving. | Guernica
- Thoughts on T. Geronimo Johnson’s Welcome to Braggsville, which range from Prep to Absalom, Absalom! | Public Books
- The Latin American literature of biblioklepts, bibliomaniacs, and bibliophiles beyond Roberto Bolaño. | Full Stop
- “‘The quality of the Paris agreement equals the quality of life for the most vulnerable.’ Or the quantity of death.” Rebecca Solnit reports from the Paris climate summit. | Harper’s Magazine
- Publishing father figure Michael Pietsch calmly and once again assuages our collective existential crisis. | The Wall Street Journal
- Zadie Smith on the elegant explosion of binary thinking, childlike innocence in the face of literary artifice, and how NW could have been called Goodbye to All That. | The White Review
- “I, we, don’t need to read more diverse books—We’re reading them, we’ve written them, we’ve lived them.” A letter to the American literary community from the diversity (channeled by Morgan Parker). | Harriet
- “Is the novel dead because MFA programs are fighting a genre war with unlikable characters?” On the misconceptions and countless thinkpieces about genre and literary fiction. | Electric Literature
And on Literary Hub:
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- The late Paul West remembers a Newfoundland that time forgot. | Literary Hub
- Molly Crabapple on life as a Tumbleweed in Paris’s Shakespeare and Co. | Literary Hub
- The joy of writing about Bob Ross—creator of worlds, master of happy accidents—and his iconic PBS show, The Joy of Painting. | Literary Hub
- Part two of Edwidge Danticat’s conversation with Paul Holdengraber: on death, Haiti, and silver linings. | Literary Hub
- Marlon James is not the Updike of Jamaica: John Freeman talks to the Booker Prize winner about the year that was. | Literary Hub
- The man who made millions from old comics in a closet, which almost ended up in the bin. | Literary Hub
- How A Public Space editor Brigid Hughes rediscovered the lost genius of Bette Howland (along with her trove of letters from Saul Bellow). | Literary Hub
BuzzFeed Books
Electric Literature
Full Stop
Guernica
Harper's Magazine
Harriet
Hazlitt
Literary Bennington
lithub daily
Public Books
The Boston Globe
The Guardian
The New York Times
The New Yorker
The Slate Books Review
The Wall Street Journal
The White Review
Lit Hub Daily
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