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Literary Hub »Lit Hub Daily: July 14, 2026

Literary Hub »Lit Hub Daily: July 14, 2026

The best of literary internet

Today: In 1904, Anton Chekhov died of tuberculosis.

  • “I usually write things my own way.” Eric Olsson introducing Sigrid Núñez at the release of her collection, it will come back to you. | Lit Hub Craft
  • Angela Flournoy Finds Out Why Jean Called Makdisi beirut pieces “A Memoir of Surviving Less Than Endurance.” | lit hub criticism
  • The 20 new books published today include titles from Sigrid Nunez, Julie Buntin and Pamela Colloff! | Lit Hub Reading Lists
  • “The distance between us could not be bridged – only recognized.” Elizabeth H. Winthrop remembers trying (and failing) to kill children in a Syrian detention camp. | Lit Hub Craft
  • Julie Buntin, Nathaniel Rich, Parini Shroff and other authors answer our questions about the art of writing and the literary life with new books. | Lit Hub in conversation
  • Alicia Upano recommends books focused on messy love by Crystal Hana Kim, Kamila Shamsie, Louise Kennedy, and more! | Lit Hub Reading Lists
  • “He doesn’t remember me, but I know who he is.” Read from Julie Buntin’s new novel, famous men. | Lit Hub Fiction
  • “As we look at the charred flesh in Gaza, we’re also looking at the wreckage of this older version of the Western empire. With both of those in mind, how to combine the frames to keep watching?” Isabella Hammad on Gaza, destruction and mourning. | equator
  • David Cole believes Ruling against Florida’s Stop Voc Act. | NYRB
  • Katie Kitamura tells Ann Tashi Slater about it Importance of looking out the window. | tricycle
  • Can your landlord evict you? Because of having too many books? | the new York Times
  • Cartoonist Archie Bongiovanni David Wojnarowicz is in Minneapolis, held by ICE, and stone butch blues. | comics journal
  • “The penthouse was a revolving door of riders, packers weighing product, chefs fussing over candy molds, a dispatcher running logistics, and the mastermind of it all: the boss, whom I’ll call Ray.” Ariel Delgado Dixon remembers New York’s grass underground. | dirt

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