Lit Hub Daily: April 17, 2026

THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

TODAY: In 1397, Chaucer tells the Canterbury Tales for the first time at the court of Richard II.  

Four films remain in our Best Literary Adaptations bracket! Want to push your favorites to the finals? Get voting. | Lit Hub
Was Rasputin a fraud? A mystic? A womanizer? A prophet. Whatever he was, he changed history. | Lit Hub History
Luke Goebel reflects on marriage, L.A., and writing dangerously. | Lit Hub Memoir
“Many lay Catholics were very interested in contraception, and many parish priests—and even some high-level theologians—supported their desires.” On the Catholic father of oral contraception. | Lit Hub Religion
Maria Semple’s Go Gentle, Gwendoline Riley’s The Palm House, and Lena Dunham’s Famesick all feature among the best reviewed books of the week. | Book Marks
Rachel Khong’s TBR includes books by Anne Truitt, Simon Critchley, James Hillman, and more. | Lit Hub Criticism
Leise Hook on what her American and Chinese names reveal about herself. | Lit Hub Memoir
Ramona Ausubel recommends an exercise for getting unstuck and considers the power of “what if.” | Lit Hub Craft
For the next installment of our National Poetry Month series, we recommend reading Robert Hayden’s “Those Winter Sundays.” | Lit Hub Poetry
“Route 11 was at a standstill. For the last five minutes I’d been keeping pace with a telephone pole.”  Read from Christopher Hebert’s new novel, Delivery. | Lit Hub Fiction
“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
Oliver Whang considers the problem with AI’s opacity. | The New York Times Magazine
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
How Larry McMurtry offered an alternative legend to the myth of the cowboy. | The Nation
Was Nietzsche actually…a mystic? | Aeon

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