LitHub Daily: July 22, 2016
THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET
TODAY: In 1849, poet Emma Lazarus, the author of “The New Colossus” which appears on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty, is born.
- Living with racial battle fatigue: why fighting microagressions can feel like treading water. | Literary Hub
- Josip Novakovich on a life measured between glasses of wine. | Literary Hub
- On Rosamond Carr and the orphans of the Rwandan genocide: Nora Anne Brown on following in Carr’s footsteps at Mugongo. | Literary Hub
- “This book constitutes my discovery of and inquiry into questions that I’d always had both as an African immigrant and an African American.” An interview with Yaa Gyasi. | ZYZZYVA
- “How’d you hear about her all the way in New York?” Former Southerner Wei Tchou visits Flannery O’Connor’s farm. | The Paris Review
- David L. Ulin on the overlooked, wickedly twisted short stories of Roald Dahl. | The New Yorker
- “I fear that if we don’t resolve our intrinsic conflicts—our inherent national flaws—that our story will end in ruin.” Mat Johnson on America’s deeply complicated national narrative. | NPR
- At twelve, girls are too old for Heidi and too young for Carrie: A comic by Lynda Barry. | The New York Times
- “Maybe I will find in yage what I was looking for in junk and weed and coke:” How William Burroughs’s drug experiments inspired research on Parkinson’s disease. | The Guardian
- Drifting towards the mythological yet returning us to the kitchen table: On contemporary Southern women’s poetry. | Electric Literature
- In news that will shock no one, Kenneth Goldsmith has decided to defend Melania Trump’s plagiarism. | Quartz
Also on Literary Hub: On literary plagues: from the historical to the fantastic, how disease scars us all · Speaking with the legendary Goat Man · Those eyes, unchanged: from If I Forget You by Thomas Christopher Greene
Article continues after advertisement
Electric Literature
lithub daily
NPR
Quartz
The Guardian
The New York Times
The New Yorker
The Paris Review
Zyzzyva
Lit Hub Daily
The best of the literary Internet, every day, brought to you by Literary Hub.