The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day
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40 books to understand Palestine, from Ghassan Kanafani’s Men in the Sun to Adania Shibli’s Minor Detail. | Lit Hub Reading Lists
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“We believe that peace is possible and that it starts with choosing to protect civilians now.” A statement of solidarity with Gaza from more than 100 literary translators. | Lit Hub Politics
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Kali Fajardo-Anstine invites you into the Southwest lands of Willa Cather’s Death Comes for the Archbishop. | Lit Hub Criticism
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24 exciting new books published today. | The Hub
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This month’s Lit Hub Asks: 5 Authors, 7 Questions, No Wrong Answers features Jesse David Fox, Lexi Freiman, Lindsay Hunter, E. J. Koh, and Ed Park. | Lit Hub Questionnaire
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A gator is never just a gator: Rebecca Renner explores alligator poaching in the heart of the Everglades. | Lit Hub Nature
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Warren Bronson on the sacredness of prison libraries: “It’s the exploration, the rubbing elbows with those who are fellow seekers of a different stripe.” | Lit Hub
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Joanne McNeil on classism, Patricia Highsmith, and what minimum-wage jobs taught her about writing novels. | Lit Hub
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Required reading: Guernica has collected the work about Palestine it has published since 2010. | Guernica
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“There is no next book.” On the book club that’s been reading Finnegan’s Wake for 28 years. | The Guardian
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An ode to Jezebel, from the site’s former editor Kate Dries. | LA Times
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“We really feel death every second. We smell death everywhere.” Testimonies from Gaza. | n+1
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“‘Kairos’ is her most direct and sustained depiction of the historical rift she herself lived through and thus her most explicitly personal novel.” Ross Benjamin on Jenny Erpenbeck’s ambivalent nostalgia. | The Point
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Nine books to read if you love The Crown. | New York Times
Also on Lit Hub: The false promise of climate fiction • On building a personal library of bad behavior • Read from Celina Baljeet Basra’s debut novel, Happy