LitHub Daily: December 10, 2015
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: 1920, writer Clarice Lispector is born Chaya Lispector in a shtetl in Ukraine.
- Siri Hustvedt on gendered literature and why crying is manly when Knausgaard does it. | Literary Hub
- The last of our PEN Literary Awards longlist announcements: presenting the longlists for the PEN Award for Poetry in Translation and Translation Prize. | Literary Hub
- In the latest Phone Call from Paul, Paul Holdengraber calls Corey Doctorow to discuss poverty, privacy, and moving to America. | Literary Hub
- President Obama, a known bibliophile, has revealed Fates and Furies to be his favorite book of 2015. | People
- The story behind Gabriel García Márquez’s discovery by Carmen Balcells and the instantaneous conception of One Hundred Years of Solitude. | Vanity Fair
- Margaret Atwood, Yann Martel, and other writers join PEN in protesting the illegal house arrest of Chinese poets Liu Xiaobo and Liu Xia. | PEN International
- In which Wayne Koestenbaum imagines he would love Twitter, prescribes an antidote to logorrhea (compression), and envisions his next tunnel of words. | Tin House
- Investigating the promising but prematurely ended career of Hughes Allison, one of America’s pioneering black crime writers. | The New Republic
- From the Salem Witch Trials to McCarthyism to the present: The Crucible could be a Trump allegory. | Signature Reads
- Repurposing literature as management shibboleth: Is reading a good business investment? | The Baffler
- A selection of ten incredible poems written by queer people of color this year. | Lambda Literary
Also on Literary Hub: Tim Flannery writes from COP 21 about the agreement humanity needs to make to reverse climate change · Matthew Neill Null on Mark Costello, the lost legend of Iowa City · From Jean-Philippe Blondel’s The 6:41 to Paris, translated by Alison Anderson
Article continues after advertisement
Lambda Literary
lithub daily
PEN International
People
Signature Reads
The Baffler
The New Republic
Tin House
Vanity Fair
Lit Hub Daily
The best of the literary Internet, every day, brought to you by Literary Hub.


