<H2> June 6, 2025 </H2> |
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<H3> Megan Abbott on Criminal Conspiracies in the Fallen Suburbs </H3> |
<H3> Seven books to scratch that Pride and Prejudice itch. </H3> |
<H3> Melissa Febos on the Unexpected Joys, Discoveries, and Sexiness of Celibacy </H3> |
<H3> From Charlottesville to the White House: How the “Unite the Right” Rally Altered American Politics </H3> |
<H3> In Praise of Poetry About Bugs </H3> |
<H3> "The Songs Prove That We Were Here": Ocean Vuong on Sufjan Stevens </H3> |
<H3> Death, Desire, and the Poetics of the Automobile </H3> |
<H3> When the Sequoias Burn: Inside the Making of a California Megafire </H3> |
<H3> 22 Novels You Need to Read This Summer </H3> |
<H3> There's No Place Like Home—Except the Beach: Visual Stories of Montauk, New York </H3> |
<H3> Face Pies, Holiday Turkeys, Finger-Feeding Critics: The Five Best Food Scenes in Literature </H3> |
<H3> "Writing is Fighting:" Inside Toni Morrison's Literary Collaboration With Muhammad Ali </H3> |
<H3> Dwyer Murphy Explains How to Build a House (in Your Novel) </H3> |
<H3> What If It Is Happening Here? Lessons From the Anti-Fascist Novel in Trump’s Second Term </H3> |
<H3> The Power of Persuasion: Why Lawyers Love Jane Austen </H3> |
<H3> Kazuo Ishiguro Reflects on Never Let Me Go, 20 Years Later </H3> |
<H3> Darkest Nights: On the Literal Dreams of German Jews During Hitler’s Rise to Power </H3> |
<H3> Here’s Your 2025 Literary Film & TV Preview </H3> |
<H3> Lit Hub’s Most Anticipated Books of 2025 </H3> |
<H3> 20 Sci-Fi and Fantasy Books to Look Forward to in 2025 </H3> |
<H3> The Most Anticipated Children’s Books of 2025 </H3> |
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<H3> Transplants </H3> |
<H3> The Catch </H3> |
<H3> Songs of No Provenance </H3> |
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<H4> On the Lit Hub Podcast: Joan Didion’s Privacy, Writers Beware, and Wes Anderson </H4> |
<H4> A Step-By-Step Guide to Writing a Nonfiction Book </H4> |
<H4> What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week </H4> |
<H4> Beyond the Historical Trauma Plot: On Fictionalizing the Armenian Genocide </H4> |
<H4> Skeletons in the Literary Closet: Five Novels That Dangle Family Secrets Before the Reader </H4> |
<H4> Compulsory Silence: On the State-Led Suppression of Language in American Prisons </H4> |
<H4> From Transplants </H4> |
<H4> From The Catch </H4> |
<H4> From Songs of No Provenance </H4> |
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<H4> “Poetics,” a Poem by Aaron Shurin </H4> |
<H4> Writing Nature: The Healing Connection of Space and Spirit </H4> |
<H4> The World is Alive; or, How Robert Macfarlane Came to Trust His Senses </H4> |
<H4> There Are Too Many Books: What Happened to Publishing’s Summer Break? </H4> |
<H4> Who Thought This Was a Good Idea? On Notes to John and the Selling of Didion’s Privacy </H4> |
<H4> The Best Reviewed Books of the Week </H4> |
<H4> 5 Reviews You Need to Read This Week </H4> |
<H4> The Best Psychological Thrillers of June 2025 </H4> |
<H4> Lucas Schaefer Talks Texas, Boxing, and How To Use Crime Fiction to Explore Identity </H4> |
<H5> In Abbott's new thriller, three sisters in Grosse Pointe get drawn into an 'investment club.' </H5> |
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<H5> The Author of “The Dry Season” in Conversation with Sarah Viren </H5> |
<H5> Deborah Baker on Richard Spencer, White Nationalism, and the Challenges of Covering Neo-Nazis </H5> |
<H5> Hannah Brooks-Motl on Insect Verses by John Clare, William Blake, David Seung, and More </H5> |
<H5> The Author of "The Emperor of Gladness" Considers the Life Raft of Music </H5> |
<H5> Rosie Stockton Explores the Tension Between Our Obsession With Freedom and the Constraints of Car-Centric Capitalism </H5> |
<H5> Jordan Thomas on the New Challenges Firefighters Face in an Era of Climate Change </H5> |
<H5> For humans, by humans </H5> |
<H5> Rufus Wainwright and Jörn Weisbrodt: "The beach is the divide between one world, the dry, and another, the wet. It is a mythical place of transformation." </H5> |
<H5> Adam Roberts Recommends Culinary Moments from Nora Ephron, Charles Dickens, Bryan Washington, and More </H5> |
<H5> Melina Moe on the Editorial Relationship Between a Great American Writer and "The Greatest" </H5> |
<H5> “I needed to know about houses—big and rambling houses, and how they alter people.” </H5> |
<H5> David Renton Rereads Lewis and Roth in a New Era of Authoritarianism </H5> |
<H5> Natalie Jenner Explores the Legal and Judicial Side of One of English Literature’s Most Beloved Writers </H5> |
<H5> On the Decades-Long Creative Process Behind His Most Successful Novel </H5> |
<H5> Zoe Roth Puts Charlotte Beradt’s “The Third Reich of Dreams” in the Context of Our Current Reality </H5> |
<H5> 27 Shows and Movies to Stream and See This Year </H5> |
<H5> 291 Books We're Looking Forward to in the New Year </H5> |
<H5> Looking Ahead to the Year’s SFF Offerings From Amal el-Mohtar, Daryl Gregory, Katherine Addison, R.F. Kuang, and Many More </H5> |
<H5> Caroline Carlson Asks Dahlia Adler, Jashar Awan, Rachel Ekstrom Courage and Others About The KidLit They're Most Looking Forward To This Year </H5> |
<H5> You Get Editors’ Personalized Book Recs, an Ad-Free Reading Experience, AND the Joan Didion Tote Bag </H5> |
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