Lit Hub Weekly: July 8 – 12, 2024

Date:

Share post:


TODAY: In 1930, Almost 6,000 spiritualists gathered in the Royal Albert Hall for a memorial to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, attended by his relatives. The medium Estelle Roberts relayed a private message to Doyle’s widow which she affirmed to be genuine. 

  • “Perhaps I’ve seen enough of the interior lives of that generation of Canadians.” Jonny Diamond on Alice Munro, Andrea Skinner, and his own mother’s failure to protect him. | Lit Hub
  • “I risked being called a liar twice: first, in my claims about Plath’s experience of intimate partner violence, and also in my own.” Emily Van Duyne on how our culture continues to blame the victims of male violence. | Lit Hub Biography
  • Janie Kim considers bioluminescence and the pursuit of open-ended questions in science and fiction. | Lit Hub Science
  • “The legend of the Devil’s contract is the most alluring…story ever told.” Ed Simon on what the age-old Faustian bargain reveals about the modern world. | Lit Hub Criticism
  • Robert Barsky considers the influence of George Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia on Noam Chomsky. | MIT Press Reader
  • Katherine Churchill examines what monsters and folktales have to do with reproductive freedom. | JSTOR Daily
  • “This is why I love Thoreau, because the revelation for him is not God but experience.” Jessie Kindig on metaphor and Transcendentalism. | The Point 
  • Sasha Frere-Jones on over fifty years of The Poetry Project and its New Year’s Day Marathon. | The Nation
  • Sarah Jaffe remembers author and organizer Jane McAlevey. | The Baffler
  • How do celebrity book clubs actually work? “While I fully believe that celebrities aren’t playing some nefarious game of imprint chess to benefit themselves, the pieces are still visible on the board.” | Esquire
  • “Can a simple act of syntactical rearrangement really have such a profound effect on how we read and write about lives?” Isabella Stuart on Sheila Heti and the “I”. | Public Books
  • Justin Taylor talks about his novel Reboot, fan culture, and celebrity. | Language Arts
  • “Just around the time I was introduced to Natalie Merchant’s music…Mary Pipher’s book Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls (1994) made cultural waves as an exposition of girlhood and adolescence.” On Natalie Merchant and Hamlet’s Ophelia. | Los Angeles Review of Books
  • “Dr. Frankenstein in this metaphor is the translator:” Some (mixed) metaphors for translation. | The Paris Review
  • John Bucher considers the storytelling potential of knots. | Atlas Obscura 
  • Andre Pagliarini revisits The Motorcycle Diaries: “If the softer Che made the diaries such a hit in the 1990s, what stands out today is how hard-fought its optimism is—how much effort must sustain its conviction that a better world is possible.” | The New Republic
  • “Like many parts of my life during this time, Kundera became a secret.” On the influence of Milan Kundera. | The Point
  • Marsha Gordon on the life and work of novelist Ursula Parrott, “a trenchant observer of women like her, who were smart, ambitious and adventurous but who failed to navigate a brave new world in which the odds seemed stacked against their well-being and continued success.” | The New York Times

Also on Lit Hub:

Christian Gullette on architecture, liminality, and grief • KB Brookins recommends trans memoirsThe case against italicizing non-English words • On teaching In Cold Blood to incarcerated women • Olivia Laing on keeping a garden in a time of climate crisis • Mateo Askaripour on the perks of genre agnosticismIf you’re going to platform extremists, you should at least check their facts • Taffy Brodesser-Akner on psychics and writer’s block • Pamela Jean Tinnen on writing through griefDan Sheehan talks to Kevin Barry • Ben Shattuck sings the praises of a secluded writing space • Teddy Wayne asks authors 7 questions with no wrong answers • Asha Thanki on the trap of “authentic” writingOur most anticipated books for the second half of 2024 • Beauty standards in the age of artificial intelligence • What happens when an American family moves to the south of France • Stacey D’Erasmo considers how artists sustain their practices • Jan Carson on capturing the complexities (and failures) of Northern IrelandCuban-American stories and the ways popular idioms resonate across generations • “Why won’t my local indie stock my book? Am I the literary asshole?” • Peter Hessler on Wuhan before the pandemic and since • What listening to music and writing have in common • Emma Specter examines how diet culture influences disordered eating • Why everyone deserves their day in court • Brittany Ackerman on her mental breakdown at an esteemed writing conferenceThe origins of Anonymous, from 4chan and beyond • The process of building your novel’s clock • Why would an American set novels in Nova Scotia? • Zoë Eisenberg and Rhaina Cohen on writing about intimate friendships





Source link

Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lamber is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes about arts, entertainment, lifestyle, and home news. Nicole has been a journalist for years and loves to write about what's going on in the world.

Recent posts

Related articles

Billionaires Are Bad: Revisiting 50 Shades of Grey in the Age of Mega-Rich Creepers

“It’s my body.” That’s what virginal Anastasia Steele tells billionaire Christian Grey when he asks her to...

Lit Hub Daily: November 21, 2024

The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day ...

An Ageist Disease: On Living in Fear of Alzheimer’s

The one disease I fear most is Alzheimer’s, and I am sure that I am not the...

Embrace the Journey: An Octogenarian’s Advice For Younger Writers

I’ve always been curious about why one chooses fiction for one story and nonfiction for another. For...

On the Fragility of American Democracy… and the Power of Young Black Activists to Save It

In every era, young Black activists have been the vanguard in the struggle to make American democracy...