Lit Hub Weekly: April 20 – 24, 2026

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

TODAY: In 2006,  journalist, author, and activist Jane Jacobs dies. 

Caroline Bicks unearths the word “clitter” and other wild discoveries while reading the first draft of Stephen King’s Pet Sematary. | Lit Hub Criticism
“Possibly the greatest lesson I got from the zine is that writing is about community.” How zines taught Jeff Miller to be a novelist. | Lit Hub Craft
Why do we hate the word moist? Science may actually have an answer. | Lit Hub History
Quinn Slobodian and Ben Tarnoff investigate how (and when) Elon Musk took his hard turn to the right. | Lit Hub Politics
“If we can’t have the nineties back, we can build a life of things that might feel transportative.” Hanif Abdurraqib considers our nostalgic longing for inconvenience. | The New Yorker
Tim Requarth dives into the AI writing panic—and wonders if it obscures a larger issue. | Slate
What happens when newsrooms get into the prediction market game. | The Verge
Research suggests that preschool can narrow reading achievement gaps. | JSTOR Daily
“As with any community, isolated to pursue their own purposes, there is trouble related to that isolation.” On Carlos Reygadas, Miriam Toews, and Mennonites in Mexico. | Dirt
“Oddly, from a writer who has been consistently ridiculed for TMI, I wanted to know more.” Kaitlyn Greenidge considers what Lena Dunham’s memoir leaves out. | Harper’s Bazaar
“The first storyteller of my life is losing her stories.” In her forthcoming book, Jesmyn Ward reflects on translating her early life on the page. | Vanity Fair
Hua Hsu considers Karen Tei Yamashita’s Questions 27 & 28. | The New Yorker
Noah Hawley reflects on his time at Jeff Bezos’ “Campfire retreat”: “When presented with the opportunity for empathy, even performative empathy, he chose escape.” | The Atlantic
Pankaj Mishra considers Wolfgang Koeppen’s The Hothouse, a novel informed by Koeppen’s prescient belief in the “insidious persistence of the ancien régime in Europe.” | The Nation 
On Molly Crabapple’s Here Where We Live Is Our Country and how the Jewish Labor Bund stood against Zionism. | Jacobin
The chronically online afterlives of Infinite Jest. | LARB
Justin Neuman makes the case for engaging deeply with the reality of AI, and making distinctions between its uses. | The Hedgehog Review
“The only divinity a novel can really accommodate is its author, and the closest thing to faith a novelist can convincingly evoke is doubt.” Max Norman considers Knausgaard’s Faustian bargain. | The Drift
On Seamus Heaney’s “deeply felt sense of obligation to the work of being a poet.” | NYRB

Also on Lit Hub:

How cannabis became the countercultural drug of choice • Novels of queer domesticityHow Arturo Schomburg built a library and made history • Healing after trauma through writing • When Mae West was sentenced to ten days in jail for obscenity • The history between The Beatles and Bob Dylan • In praise of writing in bed • Books about women with secret livesJayne Anne Phillips talks to Jane Ciabattari • How Lewis and Clark influenced American literature • Why 1963 established The Rolling Stones’ bad boy image • What happens to writers when they don’t write? • Placelessness, pop culture, and the panopticon of spectacleOn Shakespeare’s commas in translation • The history (and future) of prophetic predictionsWhat bumblebees can teach about writing • The perfect gift guide (for mothers who are writers) • Life in the Maine woods5 book reviews you need to read this week • The twelve-year struggle to write a political debut novel • How nature helps us tell time • This week’s Independent Press Top 40 Bestsellers for fiction and nonfiction • On early aughts “women’s fiction” • Why artists should embrace errors • The best reviewed books of the week • Trying to capture the history of reproductive rights • A short history of our drowned townsLibrary of America and the role of great American writers


Source:

lithub.com

Hot this week

At least 10 wounded in shooting at Mall of Louisiana

At least 10 people were wounded in a shooting...

UK condemns North Korean missile launches testing warheads containing cluster munitions

Britain's foreign office has condemned North Korea for launching...

Grateful for the elimination of Ali Larijani – opinion

As a South Azerbaijani dissident journalist, I am overjoyed...

The blade’s edge: How 4 Israeli teens fenced through politics and tradition to conquer Rio

In the world of international fencing, the “bout” is...

Israel must break free from the dangerous status quo – opinion

There is something deeply seductive about the status quo....

Lessons from the safe room: Navigating fear, routine, and family togetherness

It’s always interesting to see how various family members...

‘Silent Friend’ Director Ildikó Enyedi Leads Sloan Science Awards at SFFILM

SFFILM has announced today grants and awards totaling $115,000...

From canvas to country: Israeli artists turn landscape into ideology and memory

There has always been a tension in landscape representation...

Members of Israel's Right in talks to form new party as alternative to Likud

Senior figures on Israel’s political right are holding quiet...
Advertisementspot_img

Related Articles

Advertisementspot_imgspot_img