[go: up one dir, main page]

TODAY: In 1631, Metaphysical poet John Donne dies.
  • Philosopher Mark Kingwell prepares for the cruel beauty of baseball’s opening day.| Literary Hub
  • Dionne Ford on slavery, immigration, and explaining the difference to her neighbors.| Literary Hub
  • The campus novel evolves yet again with Elif Batuman’s The Idiot. | Literary Hub
  • Playlists for classic novels, the first in a series: ten tracks for To the Lighthouse. | Literary Hub
  • Ursula K. Le Guin on Neil Gaiman’s attempts to metaphorically “domesticate a troll” in Norse Mythology. | Book Marks
  • “They were like the left and right hands of a pianist. Didion supplied delicate melody, while Dunne surged on with mighty supporting chords.” Susan Braudy recalls interviewing Joan Didion in 1977. | Jezebel
  • People will always want to both write and read about love: On A Separation and the evolution of the marriage plot. | The New Republic
  • “I didn’t want to blur the frontier between fiction and truth, I wanted to write all about truth.” An interview with French literary sensation Édouard Louis. | Work in Progress
  • On the novels of Mathias Énard, who “is constructing an intricate, history-rich vision of a persistently misunderstood part of the world.” | The New Yorker
  • Major Jackson, Evie Shockley, and other poets pick their favorite pop songs. | The Paris Review
  • John Midgley’s portraits of this year’s National Book Critics Circle winners, ft. commentary by Yahdon Israel. | Brooklyn Magazine
  • The award-winning literary magazine The Believer has switched ownership from McSweeney’s to the Black Mountain Institute. | The Associated Press

Article continues after advertisement
Lit Hub Daily

Lit Hub Daily

The best of the literary Internet, every day, brought to you by Literary Hub.

Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.