Sunday, June 19, 2016

LitHub Daily - Best of the week


LitHub Daily
Best of the Week: June 13 - 17, 2016

TODAY: In 2010, Nobel Prize winner José Saramago dies.
 
·         Homophobia, transphobia, and ideologically-nurtured hatreds of all kinds, coupled with semi-automatic weapons, provide the fuel for terror, in this case literally.” John Keene, Dawn Martin Lundy, and others respond to the mass shooting in Orlando. | Lambda Literary
·         “I think in a very realistic, modern way, a three-dimensional way, and my role as a writer is to create language… This is what the challenge is for me: language… the word, the sentence, the paragraph.” Don DeLillo on Underworld. | The Guardian
·         We are all too dumb for Helen DeWitt: How The Last Samurai cultivates ambition in its readers. | The Paris Review
·         “Books that don't engage the reader on an emotional level have a hard time staying with them, and if I want the reader to cry a little bit—and I do!—I also want them to laugh.” An interview with Dorthe Nors. | BOMB Magazine
·         “Peat is harvested from bogs, watery mires where the earth yawns open.” A short story by Karen Russell. | The New Yorker
·         Why we shouldn’t use periods, compellingly argued with the text conversation “I love my cat/I can’t live without her/Omg.” | The Washington Post
·         “I am sure the 49 patrons who died at Pulse that night didn’t necessarily think of themselves as brave for being there. But they were.” Alexander Chee on the courage of being queer. | New Republic
·         I am the writer, but I never write about this: Robin Wasserman on the difficulty of depicting her best friend’s death. | BuzzFeed Books
·         Emma Cline on her childhood fascination with Charles Manson (and his “house”), stripping the glamor from cults, and past truly odd jobs. | The New York Times
·         Sally Rooney and Joanna Walsh discuss the idea of “flow-state,” women and writing, and transgression. | Granta
·         How Kourtney and Scott’s breakup (almost) might relate to Newland Archer and Countess Olenska: Jason Diamond on the parallels between the Kardashians and Edith Wharton. | Guernica
·         “Beloved as she is by the progressives of the day, Didion began her career as a staunch conservative.” On Joan Didion’s politics. | The Hairpin
·         On the flirtation of science and poetry, a very deep romance. | Financial Review
·         It’s been a good half-year for poetry: Bernadette Mayer, Sjohnna McCray, and other must-read poetry collections from 2016. | Flavorwire
·         “For an emerging writer of short stories set in the African continent, Nadine Gordimer was a model and a light.” A. Igoni Barrett on meeting (and being read by) a literary icon. | Catapult
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment