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Lit Hub Daily: November 27, 2024
- 2024 MacArthur Fellows Jericho Brown, Ling Ma, Jason Reynolds, and Juan Felipe Herrera, talk writing, book recommendations, and more. | Lit Hub In Conversation
- “Why are aspiring writers convinced that ‘real’ writers don’t struggle?” Samina Ali provides some advice for confronting your writerly fears. | Lit Hub Craft
- Merve Emre and Adam Dalva discuss how George Gissing’s The Odd Women defied both social and literary norms. | Lit Hub Criticism
- Graves, windows, and wide open space: these are November’s best book covers. | Lit Hub Design
- “We nodded as one, but five minutes later Nina and I snuck into Seryozha’s room and watched the storm cover Varna in a blind rage.” Read from Juhea Kim’s new novel, City of Night Birds. | Lit Hub Fiction
- On Nadine Gordimer, Stanley Middleton, and the controversy of 1974’s shared Booker Prize. | The Booker Prizes
- “With all this emphasis on the contents of the story—that it be serviceable to the point of literal disbelief—the form in which it’s told falls by the wayside.” Tajja Isen wonders why readers and publishers are turning away from memoir. | The Walrus
- Kimberley D. McKinson considers monsters, mythology, and the apocalyptic promises of big tech. | Public Books
- Jacqueline Woodson, Weike Wang, and more present stories of Thanksgiving (composed on napkins). | Esquire
- “Art was his medium—consequently he inherited its millennia of baggage.” Daniel Felsenthal on the letters of Joe Brainard. | The Baffler
- Children’s literacy, made possible by personal pan pizzas: Remembering Pizza Hut’s “Book It!” | The New York Times