[go: up one dir, main page]

Article continues after advertisement
TODAY: In 1865, first issue of The Nation is published.

Also on Lit Hub:

“To Mary Frances, food was a metaphor for living.” Ruth Reichl on M.F.K. Fisher’s lifetime of joyous eating • On Peter Matthiessen’s lifelong fascination with Bigfoot • Gabriel Urza on what fiction writers can learn from magicians • On what you can find mushroom hunting in Central Park • Peter Hessler: In Cairo, the garbage collector knows everything • Barbara Bourland on value and excess in the art market • Janet Messineo on the obsession that follows losing a big fish • Mamta Chaudhry on five novels narrated by ghosts • We may not know if Mercury is in Retrograde (no—but maybe?), but we do know what you should read this month, based on your Zodiac sign, plus Lit Hub contributors recommend ten books you should read in July

Best of Book Marks:

Audrey Barbakoff on empowering patrons, tongue-in-cheek sci-fi, and Discworld’s orangutan librarian • 5 Sci-Fi and Fantasy Beach Reads for July: feat. Chuck Wendig’s sleeping sickness saga, Helen Phillips’ eerie meditation on motherhood, and an anthology of lunar sci-fi • This week in Secrets of the Book Critics: Allen Adams on omnivorous reading, reimagined Shakespeare, and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

Article continues after advertisement

New on CrimeReads:

Here are your essential crime and mystery reads for July • David Gordon recommends 12 films that depict the gritty realities of life in New York City • Araminta Hall looks at 7 crime novels about destructive, obsessive love • Celebrate the life of James M. Cain with 25 of the greatest lines ever written by the crime fiction giant • Crime and the City visits Dubai, port city and playground for the rich, in possession of a wealth of quality crime fiction (get it? wealth?) • Nina Laurin speaks up in defense of the “girl” in the title • Emily Liebert takes a look at 7 thrillers about women in conflict, because hey, friendship is complicated •  A brief history of the Ned Kelly Awards, from Aoife Clifford • Maureen Callahan gives us a master class in interrogation • Riley Sager tours crime fiction’s creepiest apartments and hotels

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.