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TODAY: In 1914, the first English-language performance of George Bernard Shaw’s comedy “Pygmalion” premieres in London. starring Mrs. Patrick Campbell and Herbert Beerbohm Tree.

Also on Lit Hub:

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A feminist critique of Murakami novels, with Mieko Kawakami, and… Murakami himself • Ta-Nehisi Coates on the privilege of knowing the late, great David Carr • Veronica Roth on writing dystopian fiction that longs for a better world • Visit the quiet London enclave where Virginia Woolf, Hilda Doolittle, and others forged a home • How to pay attention in a time of crisis: A reading list for the (understandably) distracted • Sahar Mustafah makes the case for teaching “depressing” books • On Helen Hamilton Gardener’s fight against sexist science in the 19th century • Meet Nancy Wake, the most incredible woman you’ve never heard of Sara Martin falls in love with libraries, again and again • Chris Lamb recalls some of the best political putdowns even captured on video Marie Mutsuki Mockett on the cultural lessons of two chaotic imaginary cats • How having a writing community stimulates creativity • Finding permission to fail in A Confederacy of Dunces Helen Pilcher on the interspecies bond that changed the course of human history Rowan Hisayo Buchanan on negotiating wellness and sickness Chris Martin on what we can learn from each other—and the natural world On early Judaism and its conception of the afterlifeMoby-Dick‘s powerful message for the Atomic Age • Chelsea Bieker on motherloss and the painful edge of grief and love • How Ellen Meeropol wrote her novel from within the Rosenberg family legacy • On the reimagined grammar(s) of C. Pam Zhang’s debut novel • How did England get its bizarro street names? • A look at Elizabeth George’s no-frills writing routine • Betsey Johnson recalls striking out on her own (on the eve of the cotton Lycra revolution) • On leaving a life and moving to Alaska—with a pack of sled dogs as companions • On gendered violence and female rage

Best of Book Marks:

From a deadly virus novel to a work of darkly feminist sci-fi, here are five SFF books to ease your April isolation • The Ancestor author Danielle Trussoni recommends five books about family secrets, from Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca to Dani Shapiro’s Inheritance • PriestdaddyMy Dark VanessaThe Brothers Karamazov, and more rapid-fire book recs from Cat Person author Kristen Roupenian • From the archives: a classic review of Kurt Vonnegut’s first novel • New titles from Anne Tyler, Don Winslow, Julia Alvarez, and Eric Eyre all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

New on CrimeReads:

Lisa Levy recommends April’s best psychological thrillers to read while sheltering in place • Don Winslow talks with CrimeReads editor Dwyer Murphy about his long-awaited return to California Noir • Craig Pittman on how Elmore Leonard became a Florida Man • Anika Scott knows that the best historical fiction features morally gray characters • Olivia Rutigliano wants everyone to know that Agatha Christie is THE best-selling novelist in history • Megan Campisi on the strange, sordid world of Elizabethan true crime • Andrew Welsh-Huggins on the evolution of Columbus, Ohio from Cowtown to Crimetown • Kristine S. Ervin on a daughter’s grief, a forensics expert, and an unsolved murder • Tess Gerritsen on suing Hollywood for copyright infringement • Brenda Chapman celebrates unconventional women in long-running series

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