Lit Hub Daily: May 26, 2020
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: In 1897, Bram Stoker’s Dracula is published.
- If you enjoy and value Lit Hub please consider becoming a supporter! | Lit Hub
- Your 2020 summer books preview is here! In which we recommend our favorite upcoming titles to read while you keep your distance. | Lit Hub
- “When an eel is denied a way to achieve its main purpose in life—procreation—it seems able to live forever.” ?Patrik Svensson on the mysteries of the European eel. | Lit Hub Science
- “I’d gone there a few times in shiny tops or bell‑bottoms, but this was the first time I’d bent my gender all the way.” Meredith Talusan on race, drag, and transitions. | Lit Hub
- History is no longer a circle, nor is progress guaranteed: Szczepan Twardoch on our need to give meaning to catastrophe. | Lit Hub History
- On the life and times of Fred Birchmore, pioneering sportsman who cycled around the world. | Lit Hub Sports
- The Shining, Matilda, Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls, and more rapid-fire book recs from Kristen Arnett. | Book Marks
- Laird Barron on leg-breakers, Alaskan hard men, and writing toward a piece of the truth. | CrimeReads
- “No theoretical language I know of serves me in describing or interpreting this era of American unhappiness.” Marilynne Robinson considers the future of America. | NYRB
- An ode to the (highly stay-at-home-appropriate) fashion nightgowns in Sophia Coppola’s Virgin Suicides adaptation. | Refinery29
- What made Swedish journalist Patrik Svensson’s debut book, The Book of Eels, which blends memoir and science history, a breakout success in his home country? | The New York Times
- Following controversies about a lack of diversity in the world of romance fiction, the Romance Writers of America is thinking about how to improve its track record. | The Guardian
- “Science is an imperfect vehicle, as any truth-seeking discipline must be.” Two new books look at the impulse behind science denial and why misinformation is so persistent. | Undark
- Canceled your Memorial Day travel plans? These novels, set around the world, could help fill the void. | Los Angeles Times
- On the timeless art of the bookcase flex. | JSTOR
Also on Lit Hub: When all of New York City stopped reading the news at once • The letter that changed Emily Dickinson’s life • Read an excerpt from J.M. Coetzee’s new novel The Death of Jesus.
Article continues after advertisement
Lit Hub Daily
The best of the literary Internet, every day, brought to you by Literary Hub.