Lit Hub Daily: March 11, 2020
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: In 1916, Ezra Jack Keats, writer and illustrator of children’s books including The Snowy Day, is born.
- Yan Lianke, in a letter to his students: “I hope that each of you, and all of us who’ve experienced the catastrophic COVID-19 will become people who remember.” | Lit Hub
- Fill the Thomas Cromwell-shaped hole in your heart with these ten great works of historical fiction. | Lit Hub
- “How do we know what’s actually happening outside the dark vault of our skulls?” Will Storr on the neuroscience behind the world we see. | Lit Hub Science
- Terminal pain and the origins of the end-of-life movement: Gerald Posner on Cicely Saunders, the UK nurse-turned-physician who fought for the rights of the dying. | Lit Hub History
- “Most days I do not hear the siren. When I do, I watch my students’ faces and indulge a spasm of prayer.” Erica Berry on teaching under lockdown in America. | Lit Hub Politics
- When it comes to historical documents, spotting forgeries is a fraught and risky business. | Lit Hub
- Tove Jansson falls in love: The Moomin creator on five decades of life with Tuulikki Pietilä. | Lit Hub
- The Art of the Hand-Sell: 14 indie booksellers rave about their favorite reads. | Book Marks
- Katie Orphan rounds up the essential crime novels of Los Angeles, from Mildred Pierce to Devil in a Blue Dress and beyond. | CrimeReads
- Cool, bored, passive, estranged: Jess Bergman on the affected young women of our new “literature of relentless detachment.” | The Baffler
- Peter Rabbit 2, based on more of Beatrix Potter’s classic stories, is the second major film release to be delayed because of the coronavirus. | The Hollywood Reporter
- “The plague was Shakespeare’s secret weapon. He didn’t ignore it. He took advantage of it.” So… there’s that! | Slate
- Here are the finalists for the 2020 Lambda Literary Awards. | The Hub
- Since 2016, the Echo mobile library has been bringing books to Greek refugee camps. | The Guardian
- American Dirt wasn’t the first time Oprah’s Book Club has entered the fray of publishing-related controversy. | Los Angeles Times
- “No one should feel sorry for me or any other writer in this position. But I do kind of envy the writers who don’t have this discourse around their book.” Read a profile of Kate Elizabeth Russell. | Buzzfeed News
Also on Lit Hub: Two poems by Carolyn Forché from the collection In the Lateness of the World • Honor Moore on the secrets mothers and daughters keep from one another • Read an excerpt from Kate Elizabeth Russell’s debut novel My Dark Vanessa.
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