[go: up one dir, main page]

TODAY: In 1810, Lord Byron swims across the Hellespont, a tumultuous strait in Turkey, just as legendary Greek hero Leander supposedly swam the same four-mile stretch.  

Also on Lit Hub:

Forrest Gander talks to Poets.org • Milo Todd on tracing and preserving trans history • Alok A. Khroana examines William Dalrymple’s The Golden RoadRead “Shots Fired on New Year’s Eve,” a poem by Ali Black • Harry Bliss and his close encounters with Sy HershResurrecting Murray Kempton, a forgotten American journalist • Reimagining movies as vintage book covers • Recovering World War II’s stolen and looted artworks • Nin Andrews on writing a memoir about her fatherShelby Van Pelt remembers her first writing class • Guadalupe Nettel on capturing the surreal in the day to day • Zoe Roth examines Charlotte Beradt’s The Third Reich of DreamsThe literary film and TV coming to streaming in May • April’s best reviewed books • Courtney Gustafson explores casual misogyny in animal rescue • These are April’s best book covers • Get ready for April paperbacksHow London’s Great Plague of 1666 paved the way for modern research • The most anticipated May audiobooks • My mean, rich, hot ex-friend is a mediocre literary darling and I hate it • Dive into the history of surf literature5 book reviews you need to read this week • The historical role of baseball in Black communities • Lauren Haddad sings the praises of Twin Peaks • Ancient Rome’s most famous emperors • On the Lit Hub Podcast: Leaving Twitter, publishing poetry, and talking about… men who read? • Ten new universe-expanding children’s booksNew poetry collections are coming in May • On being both a parent and a memoiristThis month’s SFF brings stories of queer futures 

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.