Lit Hub Daily: May 21, 2019
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: In 1832, Washington Irving returns to the United States after living in Europe for seventeen years.
- “To those who are protective of the verb to read, I ask what is gained by insisting on the distinction?” James Tate Hill offers a brief history of the audiobook. | Lit Hub
- Seven conversations with T.C. Boyle: a writer in his habitat, living his best life. | Lit Hub
- “Those Golden Arches cast the largest shadow.” Ryan Chapman examines the influence of McDonald’s on his novel. | Lit Hub
- Jay A. Fernandez would like book reviewers to dispense with the casual narcissism (and a few other things). | Lit Hub
- “The problem of representation has created discord in the collective imagination.” Ebony Thomas on writing toward fantastic spaces as a person of color. | Lit Hub
- “It all starts with listening.” Anna Deavere Smith’s notes on Notes From the Field. | Lit Hub
- Can we reverse the tide of an anti-science America? | Lit Hub
- “You better make them care about what you think,” and other invaluable advice from Nora Ephron, national treasure. | Lit Hub
- Dawson’s Fall author Roxana Robinson recommends five historical novels that inspire her, from Wolf Hall to My Beautiful Friend. | Book Marks
- Kellye Garrett on activist-turned-crime-writer Barbara Neely, and her iconic protagonist, Blanche White, the first black female sleuth to be embraced by mainstream publishing. | CrimeReads
- The Amazon Literary Partnership has awarded $1 million in grants to 66 literary non-profits in the US this year, in addition to providing $120,000 each to the Academy of American Poets and the Community of Literary Presses and Magazines. | Publishers Weekly
- “He heard the scrape of her lighter, then saw smoke float over him, unravel. For a long time he had been speaking.” Read an excerpt from Ben Lerner’s forthcoming novel, The Topeka School. | The New Yorker
- Narrative Magazine, one of the first digital-focused literary publications, turned 15 last week. The birthday celebration included luminaries like George Saunders and the guest of honor, Tobias Wolff. | San Francisco Chronicle
- “He is one of those writers whose work has influenced you even if you’ve never read him.” Alexander Chee on the legacy of Younghill Kang’s 1937 novel East Goes West. | BuzzFeed News
- Recapture your Salinger-obsessed youth with the Franny paper doll you never knew you always wanted! | The Paris Review
- “I couldn’t help but wonder: Can New York City survive without strong public libraries?” Sarah Jessica Parker invokes the ghost of Carrie Bradshaw to protest library budget cuts. | Page Six
- “To this day, I worry that if I mess up, others like me might not be asked or allowed.” Min Jin Lee on public speaking and power. | The New York Times
Also on Lit Hub: An interview with Frugal Bookstore, a Boston bookstore with a focus on writers of color • Read an excerpt from Jo Lendle’s debut novel, All the Land (trans. Katy Derbyshire).
Article continues after advertisement
Lit Hub Daily
The best of the literary Internet, every day, brought to you by Literary Hub.