Lit Hub Weekly: April 13 – 17, 2026

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

TODAY: In 1896, Na Hye-Sok, Korean poet, writer, feminist, painter, educator, and journalist, is born. 

Rosa Campbell on how men responded to The Hite Report (and why we’re wrong about men and feminism). | Lit Hub Politics
“For farmers, it costs real dollars—and not just rivers of sweat and tears—to care for what they love: the land, their animals, their families.” Jennifer Acker on writing rural life. | Lit Hub Craft
Polly Barton considers Ryūnosuke Akutagawa’s Hell of Solitude: “The question then is, what does matter? What do we have when we do not have a story?” | Lit Hub Criticism
It’s getting harder to spot AI in contemporary publishing. And that’s very, very bad. | Lit Hub Technology
Tim Requarth explores the phenomenon of AI-generated phantom memories. | Longreads
Rhoda Feng considers modern Antigones. | The Paris Review
Where does publishing’s AI problem leave authors and readers? “We’re reaching this era of distrust, with no easy way to prove the veracity of your own writing.” | The New York Times
Matthew Wills considers the significance of Oscar Wilde’s hair evolution. | JSTOR Daily
“Ondaatje’s whole career has tended toward this condition of late collection, of a memory that lacks a story, and sustains itself only on sensoria and images.” Ben Libman on Michael Ondaatje’s poetry. | Poetry
Scott W. Stern on Trevor Jackson’s The Insatiable Machine and imagining alternatives to capitalism. | The New Republic
Hermione Lee considers The Uncollected Letters of Virginia Woolf, and “the astonishing range of connections and commitments that pour through this book and through her life.” | NYRB
Perry Zurn and Dani S. Bassett imagine the possibilities of a communal curiosity. | The MIT Press Reader
“These characters don’t exactly ‘die’ when memed, but their innocence does, because that’s the whole point of the meme.” What the internet did to Snoopy. | Dirt
The similarities (and differences) between two new books that revisit the Bernie Goetz shooting. | The Baffler
“AI writing tools’ tendency to suck up to their human users has a spillover effect, making the overall tenor of online writing more saccharine.” Kate Knibbs explores a strange side-effect of AI slop. | Wired
Amelia Soth considers the golden age of the American soapbox. | JSTOR Daily
“Therapy changed me as a writer. I began noticing patterns in Lewis’s thinking, probably because once a week I was noticing different patterns in my own.” Craig Fehrman on looking for the human side of history. | Defector
Why is a right-wing press reissuing The Hardy Boys? | NYRB
“By embracing experimental language and exploring taboo subjects, she had posed a challenge to literary conventions in Turkey, one that still feels urgent and contemporary.”  Kaya Genç on learning to write like Leylâ Erbil. | The Point

Also on Lit Hub:

James K. Chandler revisits Norman Maclean’s A River Runs Through It • Novels of queer domesticity • This week in literary history • Aja Gabel meditates on love and grief • The timelessness of Philip Owens’ Picture of Nobody • The winners of the 2026 O. Henry Prize for Short FictionJhumpa Lahiri and Chiara Barzini discuss interim language • How an animator’s strike led to Disney’s Song of the South • The similarities between knitting and writing • Authors answer our questions about literary lifeWhat Petrarch can teach us about envy • Amazon, Achillia, and other women gladiators • Books on It Girls and celebrity •  Family legacy though the lens of Colombia’s recent history • Learning to write again after incredible tragedyThe inequality of parental labor • Stephanie Sy-Quia on writing about her grandparents • How Parks and Recreation visualized a better America •  The impact of scholasticide on a young generation of Palestinians • 5 book reviews you need to read this week • Independent Press Top 40 Bestsellers for fiction and nonfiction • Suchitra Ramachandran on translating The AbyssWas Rasputin a fraud? • Luke Goebel on writing dangerouslyThe Catholic father of oral contraception • The best reviewed books of the week • Rachel Khong’s TBR • Leise Hook on her American and Chinese names • An exercise for getting unstuck


Source:

lithub.com

Hot this week

Jerusalem highlights: April 17-23

Editor’s note: Due to the ongoing security situation, events...

Israeli defense tech roadmap to the US market – opinion

Israel’s defense tech industry has been growing exponentially over...

Finland announces 100-year study to uncover why Finns are so happy

Finland is launching a century-long scientific project, “Future Finland,”...

Delivery

“A guy in Philly has the record,” Lena said....

Immigration by choice: Why do most olim from America choose Jerusalem? – opinion

While immigration from the former Soviet Union and Europe...

Kamala Harris accuses Netanyahu of pulling Trump into Iran war

Former vice president Kamala Harris claimed that US President...

Over a thousand entertainment leaders sign letter supporting Israel’s Eurovision participation

More than one thousand leading entertainment industry figures have...

School system to fully reopen across Israel starting Sunday, Education Ministry confirms

The educational system will fully reopen nationwide from Sunday...

North Korea fires suspected ballistic missiles, Japan says

North Korea fired suspected ballistic missiles, Japan said on...

Scammers are becoming ever more sophisticated – this is what the fightback looks like

As governments across the world restricted the movements of...
Advertisementspot_img

Related Articles

Advertisementspot_imgspot_img