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Lit Hub Daily: November 21, 2024
- Amid a wave of divorce books, Kim Young considers the life of Lee McCarthy, Cormac McCarthy’s first wife: “Lee left before it was easy or normal to leave. She left in 1963.” | Lit Hub
- “My problem was I thought you had to know what you were doing. Nonsense. You just have to start.” Abigail Thomas gifts words of wisdom to younger writers. | Lit Hub Craft
- Dive into Sergio de la Pava’s TBR list, featuring Laura Restrepo, Italo Calvino, Flann O’Brien, and more. | Lit Hub Criticism
- “Knapp’s narrator is a flâneur with push notifications.” 5 book reviews you need to read this week. | Book Marks
- Michael Maslin explores what it means to be a New Yorker cartoonist through the careers of Liana Finck and Ed Steed. | Lit Hub Art
- “They say that walking is controlled falling, they say put one foot in front of the other, they say things will return to normal and you will adjust to the change, as if those are similar promises, and possible.” Read from Anna Moschovakis’ new novel, An Earthquake Is a Shaking of the Surface of the Earth. | Lit Hub Fiction
- Sam Bowden considers cross-cultural literary translations. | Asymptote
- “I do believe that all great works of literature have an ethical core.” Merve Emre talks to Devika Rege about craft, democracy, and nationalism. | Public Books
- Robin Wall Kimmerer and Jenny Odell discuss ecology, economics, and the currency of a gift economy. | Orion
- Kristen Ghodsee looks to Eastern Europeans’ experiences of “internal immigration” amid authoritarianism for lessons on escapism. | The New Republic
- “Every artist has to go through this process of selection and omission every moment…” Sumana Roy examines “etceterization” in literature. | Los Angeles Review of Books
- Brian Nicholson talks to cartoonist Michael Shea-Wright about teaching art, writing and comics, and depicting action on the page. | The Comics Journal