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TODAY: In 1904, the first of Virginia Woolf’s writings to be accepted for publication, “Haworth, November 1904,” an account of a visit to the Brontë family home, is published anonymously in a women’s supplement to a clerical journal, The Guardian.

Also on Lit Hub:

Which literary stories made the biggest impact this year? • Palestinian stories and voices trace a long, painful year in Gaza • Gender, agency and freedom on both sides of the photographer’s lens • Just in time for those holiday family gatherings, here’s a less meta way to approach difficult conversations • Betsy Fagin talks to Peter MishlerRead “Winter” and “Sigh,” two poems by Roberta Iannamico • These new books are out now • Jane Ciabattari in conversation with Weike Wang • Olivia Rutigliano recommends more of Dickens’s spooky Yuletide stories • Read “What Zarqaʾ al-Yamama Didn’t Say,” a poem by Mohamed Abdelbari • On the innovative work of iconic New Yorker cartoonist Saul Steinberg • Our editors’ favorite Lit Hub stories of 2024Are you the asshole if you “loathe” writers who are too online? • The most-read Lit Hub pieces of 2024 • Maris Kreizman on her favorite book to television adaptations of 2024 • Katherine J. Chen rediscovers Henry James • These are 50 of 2024’s best nonfiction books •  Our 10 favorite book to screen adaptations from 2024 • The case for recognizing the brain rot of times gone byChris Knapp talks to Andrew Martin about creating realistic relationships •  Abdelrahman ElGendy on Mosab Abu Toha’s Forest of Noise 

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