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TODAY: In 1315, Ramon Llull, Spanish philosopher, mathematician, polymath, and logician, credited with writing the first major work of Catalan literature, dies.

Also on Lit Hub:

From two to two million: how many copies famous books sold in their first years • The story of Ernest Hemingway’s WWII-era Navy reconnaissance mission to Cuba • Catherine Lacey on the searching spirit behind Lore Segal’s long careerJulianne Moore on the women fighting to stop gun violence, and Moms Demand Action’s founder Shannon Watts shares the books that taught her to organize• Heather O’Neill read one hundred books just to write one • On the Wild West of dinosaur fossil hunting • Jonas Hassen Khemiri on surviving Sweden’s polarized political reality • On the violent crime that tells the story of U.S.-Japan relations in Okinawa • Catherine Chung on being—and writing—a woman who loves math • Louise Aronson on the contemporary othering of the elderly Alix Ohlin on motherhood, fertility, and gendered readings of women’s books • On confronting a well-educated white supremacist troll • How the alphabet helped Virginia Woolf understand her father • On Frank Malina, the rocket scientist whose dreams of spaceflight were as radical as his politics • Haim Shapira examines the poetry of numbers • Rachel DeWoskin on the literary and political value of rage • Why do we ignore the suffering in the poems of Mary Oliver and Elizabeth Bishop? • Domenico Starnone on the 20th anniversary of Interpreter of Maladies • What your favorite beach read says about you • The Lit Hub staff’s favorite stories of June

Best of Book Marks:

Can’t decide what to read on your summer vacation? Let the Best Reviewed Books of 2019 (So Far) be your guide • Here’s what the critics wrote about every 2020 democratic presidential candidate’s memoir • More News Tomorrow author Susan Shreve recommends five great novels about violence, from Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye to Philip Roth’s American Pastoral • Pete Tosiello on empathy in reviewing and the cannibalization of the American press • Emily Nussbaum’s tales from the TV revolution, a true crime chronicle of massacre and revenge in India, and the return of Kate Atkinson’s Detective Jackson Brodie all feature among the Best Reviewed books of the Week

New on CrimeReads:

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Michael Gonzales gives us a slam-bang history of the heroes of black pulp, from Shaft, to Ghost Dog, to Donald Goines’ Kenyatta • 50 years after Stonewall, a new true crime book reveals the untold history of sanctioned homophobic violence • Anita Anand on Udham Singh, “The Patient Assassin,” who waited 20 years to avenge a colonial bloodbath • June’s best international crime fiction, from Swedish thrillers to Cuban noir • 10 Australian gothic novels to make you shiver in the sunshine, as recommended by Felicity McLean • Tim Mason on the real life detectives who inspired Charles Dickens • Nancie Clare on the underappreciated art of naming characters in crime fiction • Bev Thomas on the surprising similarities between detective fiction and therapy • Lori Roy rounds up 5 novels using small crimes to explore larger ethical quandaries • Christin Brecher sets out to discover the best mystery-inspired board games around

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Lit Hub Daily

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