[go: up one dir, main page]

TODAY: In 1871, author James Weldon Johnson, the first African-American professor to be hired at New York University, is born. 
  • It’s Father’s Day on Lit Hub: A father, a son, a squid in the bed: Chris Forhan on the genius of four-year-old poets • Christy Wampole on longing, addiction, and patrilineal transmissionSix tales about fathers and sons that do not feature fathers and sons • Steve Edward on fatherhood: ruining the writing career, saving the writing • Patrick Ryan on the last book his father read • Gretchen Marquette on her father’s unexpected poetic life • Allison Wright visits dive bars with her dad. | Literary Hub
  • The Brooklyn Book Festival has announced the lineup for its 11th annual festival, which includes Margaret Atwood, Sherman Alexie, Salman Rushdie and Joyce Carol Oates. | The New York Times
  • On the flirtation of science and poetry, a very deep romance. | Financial Review
  • “Some things just don’t need to be done twice—especially since I feel like I did it right the first time.” An interview with Richard Ford. | Granta
  • It’s been a good half-year for poetry: Bernadette Mayer, Sjohnna McCray, and other must-read poetry collections from 2016. | Flavorwire
  • Anna Noyes on narrations serving as a kind of confessional, the rigid set of expectations hemming women and girls in, and instances of trespass. | Electric Literature
  • “For an emerging writer of short stories set in the African continent, Nadine Gordimer was a model and a light.” A. Igoni Barrett on meeting (and being read by) a literary icon. | Catapult
  • Dancer from the Dance, Stone Butch Blues, and other books that illustrate the immense importance of gay bars. | The Alignist
  • “The One Where She Doesn’t Need Help Getting the Flowers,” “The One with the Phonies,” and other classic novels retitled like episodes of Friends. | The New Yorker

Also on Literary Hub: In Charleston, one year later: Shani Gilchrist on the continued complexities of her chosen city · American noir and the outlaw lit of James Sallis · The lost dog: From Pauls Toutonghi’s Dog Gone

Article continues after advertisement
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.