- Emily Temple reads every summer reading list (so you don’t have to). | Lit Hub Reading Lists
- Why Robert W. Service’s “The Cremation of Sam McGee” is a good poem for bad fathers. | lit hub criticism
- Through layers of loss and grief, Fatemeh Shams remembers Marjane Satrapi: “Marjane reminded me, as her work often does, that in the most desperate times, art, writing, and human connection are radical acts of repair.” | Lit Hub
- How one family’s history of struggle and survival in Jamaica highlights centuries of exclusion of black people in health care. | Lit Hub Health
- jessica winter searches Why does criticism of children’s literature miss the bigger issue?: “Librarians and teachers insist that what is more important than matters of taste is getting children ready to read at a critical moment in development.” | the new Yorker
- Chris Mautner shared An interview with Marjan Satrapi from 2006. | comics journal
- In an era of increasing ubiquity of AI, Dan Chiasson makes this point To require an impasse in the writing process. | NYRB
- “The whole gay world was around poets.” Lakshmi Rivera Amin Interviewed by Sarah Shulman. | hyperallergic
- Amy Goodman talks to John Nichols about this Purpose of journalism and threat to freedom of press. | Nation
- A literary and philosophical vision On being a garbage collector. | Harper’s
- Zia Zia on writing and boundaries of both human and artificial intelligence. | mit press reader
- Caleb Brennan explores The fascist internet nihilism of groper politics. | baffler
- Jeffrey Herlihy-On my exile, Edward said, and “Marks of ‘Americanization’.” | public books
- “Children are our little companions – they live in our triumphs and failures.” Hal Shrive Surveys children’s literature from a socialist perspective. | lux
- Patricia Lockwood wants to know What’s happening to American Catholicism. | london review of books
- Virginia McGee Richards remembers enslaved South Carolinians Who marched to freedom along the Inner Passage of the Lowcountry. | mit press reader
Also on Lit Hub:
How Squids Have Sex • Pain, Loneliness, and the 100th Anniversary of Virgina Woolf’s “On Being Ill” • Books About Cats and Their Owners • Phil Branch Exposes Blackness Through Film and Print • Cooking, Family, and Queer Domesticity • This Week in Literary History, Dante Alighieri’s Name Is Taken Before Florence • The Problem with American Patriotism • A Memoir from Working in Advertising to Lou Chekovsky How did writing help • Books about the United States (by non-American authors) • Heterodoxism? Try Heterofatalism • If You Want to Be an Astronaut, You’ve Got to Be Perfect at Interviewing • Contextualizing Birth Through the History of Midwifery • Finding Inspiration in Someone Else’s Marriage • Anti-Apartheid Resistance in 1970s South Africa • Greg Sarris on Telling the Stories of California’s Indigenous Communities • The Future of Ethnic Studies When Academia is in Crisis • Navigating American Racism as a Child with a Famous Father • Liberation fiction through Freud • A post office that handles letters for the dead • What even the most ordinary of us can learn from BDSM • The military and corporate powers that developed GPS • The ethics of adopting progressive blindness • On artificial light and insomnia • Why every novel is a climate change novel • The necessity of writing fiction • The surreal passage of time in suburban America • 5 reviews you need to read This week • Naomi Serpell and Angela Flournoy discuss Toni Morrison’s Tar Child • This week’s Independent Press top 40 bestsellers for fiction and nonfiction • The best reviewed books Of the Week • Is Caregiving the Solution to Ending the American Gerontocracy? • Is your friend going to name all the cool, famous writers she hangs out with? • Understanding an Absent Father Through Novels • How to Write a Novel in 33 Days

