The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day
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Michael Wood wants to know: Why do we always forget that Marcel Proust is funny? | Lit Hub Humor
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What do writers do on Instagram? Cornelia Parker looks to Amit Chaudhuri, Andrew O’Hagan, Kamila Shamsie, and others. | Lit Hub Photography
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Christina Lamb on the widespread practice of sexual violence during wartime: “In every warzone I went to, I heard the same cry for justice.” | Lit Hub Politics
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“A veritable comedy for our times.” Rolando Pérez on Giannina Braschi’s groundbreaking Puerto Rican Spanglish novel, Yo-Yo Boing! | Lit Hub Criticism
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Anna Funder’s Wifedom, Yunte Huang’s Daughter of the Dragon, and Jerome Charyn’s Ravage & Son all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week. | Book Marks
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“At its best, our literature is possessed of an expansive moral imagination about forgiveness that goes beyond legal redress and the payment of debts.” Ayana Mathis on literature and forgiveness. | The New York Times
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Feroz Rather considers what a truthful, empathetic novel about the nationalist strife in South Asia looks like. | Public Books
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Inside The Untitled, Unauthorized Hunter S. Thompson Musical, which takes a “disruptive approach to the bio-musical.” | Los Angeles Times
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“Writing is something that everyone does and that many people believe they do well.” Xochitl Gonzalez on MFAs and ChatGPT. | The Atlantic
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Michelle Tea is launching a new press: Dopamine Books. | Publishers Weekly
Also on Lit Hub: The greatest Velmas of history and fiction, from Agatha Christie to Harriet the Spy • Yves Jeffcoat on writing that centers identity • Read from Genevieve Plunkett’s debut novel, In the Lobby of the Dream Hotel