Lit Hub Weekly: Lit Hub Weekly: Edgar Allen Poe, James Bond, and the Far Reaches of Hyperspace
Lit Hub Weekly September 27 - October 1, 2021
TODAY: In 1902, Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Peter Rabbit is published by Frederick Warne & Co.
“If you determine to abandon me, I will be doubly ambitious.” How to deal with rejection (and get revenge) like Edgar Allan Poe. | Lit Hub History
Timothy Morton muses on hyperspace, the field beyond the speed of light, and how it relates to stream-of-consciousness narratives. | Lit Hub Science
Elegy for the unforgiven: Askold Melnyczuk examines his “impulse to probe the hearts and minds” of unsympathetic characters. | Lit Hub Craft
Sally Rooney’s Beautiful World, Where Are You, Colson Whitehead’s Harlem Shuffle, and Lauren Groff's Matrix all feature among the best reviewed books of the month. | Book Marks
Olivia Rutigliano ranks every James Bond film ever made, from Connery to Craig. | CrimeReads
“If characters are being created for illustrative purposes or representative purposes, you’re kind of fucked.” Jonathan Franzen and Merve Emre in conversation. | Vulture
Ruth Ozeki discusses her Japanese identity, Shintoism, and writing after loss. | Harper’s Bazaar “If I were to expose myself, I would become a character, a public fiction that would also condition the fiction of the writing.” Elena Ferrante and Marina Abramović, in (email) conversation. | FT
Examining the long, complex history of book censorship in the US. | Teen Vogue
Namwali Serpell delves into “the fantasy of American race transformation” and the history of “passing” narratives. | The Yale Review
“Please try to notice if every artist isn’t ruthless in some way.” Read an excerpt from Patricia Highsmith’s diaries. | The New Yorker
Anika T. Prather discusses the role of the classics in struggles for racial equality, and makes the case for their continued relevance for Black students. | The Point
Jocelyn Nicole Johnson on her new collection and being a debut author at 50. | The New York Times
“I think we’re seeing a great falling apart, a great fracturing and fragmentation.” Chuck Palahniuk talks to Kathryn Borel about writing in the internet age and more. | The Believer Richard Powers discusses the inspiration behind his new book, ornithology, and the possibilities of alien life. | Rain Taxi
Hanif Abdurraqib breaks down the legacy of Soul Train. | NPR
“There’s something wonderfully defiant about the way she dumped English, like a child asserting that he no longer plans to wear shoes.” On Jhumpa Lahiri’s turn toward Italian. | LARB
John Warner defends the “big, splashy,” Sally Rooney-style book promotion. | Chicago Tribune
Where did Tracy K. Smith find hope in the last year? “I felt that I could clearly see there were people in my community that I felt capable of helping and advocating for.” | TIME
“Forgive the dramatics, but I had never been so completely the target audience for something before.” Patricia Lockwood considers the album It’ll End in Tears by This Mortal Coil. | Harper’s
An audiovisual translator discusses the process of creating subtitles and dubs for TV and films. | Zócalo Public Square
ENTER FOR A CHANCE TO WIN
ALSO THIS WEEK ON LITERARY HUB
Lauren Groff on girlhood in the middle of nowhere • How to make your surroundings insect-friendly • Lucy Ellman talks matriarchy, Jane Austen, and Moby-Dick • Pico Iyer on the deep pleasure of Handel’s chorale music • The theory of (artistic) relativity, illustrated • How the Black Panther salute links the Black community • Christopher Sorrentino on bargaining his writing career for his father’s life • On the long-necked mouth-breathers we have to thank for our existence • Lauren Arrington on the “famously unrepentant” Ezra Pound • What would it look like to rethink safety from a feminist, abolitionist perspective? • Robert A. Jensen considers the aftermath of tragedies • Seth G. Jones on the new weapons of war • Frances Hodgson Burnett really, really loved gardens • Jon McGregor on learning about aphasia at the local support group • Retracing the failed utopian promise of fossil-fueled abundance • Natalie Starkey on the mysteries of space volcanoes • Omar Mouallem on the push and pull of his Muslim identity • Why we doubt accusers while protecting abusers • Jean Huang on Little Women and citrus as currency • Roy Peter Clark’s advice for writing cinematically • The literary film and TV you should stream in October • How the Zanzibari coast became famous… for modern-day pirates
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The Book Marks Bulletin: October 1, 2021
Friday, October 1, 2021
Click here to read this email in your browser. Narrative Prizes 2021 LIT HUB'S HOME FOR BOOK REVIEWS BOOK MARKS BULLETIN 10/1 In literary land this week: James Patterson and Scholastic are joining
Lit Hub Daily: The Literary Film and TV You Should Stream in October
Friday, October 1, 2021
Lit Hub Daily: October 1, 2021 Click here to read this email in your browser. Narrative Magazine Prizes 2021 Lit Hub Daily October 1, 2021 In 1914, Daniel J. Boorstin, the twelfth Librarian of the
Lit Hub Daily: How to Deal with Rejection Like Edgar Allan Poe
Thursday, September 30, 2021
Lit Hub Daily: September 30, 2021 Click here to read this email in your browser. La Guera Rodriguez by Silvia Marina Arrom Lit Hub Daily September 30, 2021 In 1868, the first volume of Little Women is
Lit Hub Daily: What Hyperspace and Virginia Woolf Have in Common
Wednesday, September 29, 2021
Lit Hub Daily: September 29, 2021 Click here to read this email in your browser. Narrative Prizes 2021 Lit Hub Daily September 29, 2021 In 1967, Carson McCullers dies. TODAY: In 1967, Carson McCullers
Lit Hub Daily: Lauren Groff on Growing Up in What Felt Like the Middle of Nowhere
Tuesday, September 28, 2021
Lit Hub Daily: September 28, 2021 Click here to read this email in your browser. Bewilderment by Richard Powers Lit Hub Daily September 28, 2021 In 1966, André Breton dies at 70. TODAY: In 1966, André
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