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Books
fromThe Atlantic
22 hours ago

Unconventional Novels About Conventional People

Aging revolutionaries and conformists share parallel narratives of disillusionment and the loss of youthful dreams in recent literature.
#emma-straub
fromEntrepreneur
4 days ago
Books

The Secret to Actually Finishing That Passion Project? Treat It Like You Work in a Coal Mine, Says This Best-Selling Author.

NYC music
fromBustle
23 hours ago

Emma Straub's New Novel Is For Grown Women Who Once Fangirled Over Boy Bands

Emma Straub's novel American Fantasy explores middle-aged women's nostalgia and joy through a fictional boy band cruise experience.
Books
fromEntrepreneur
4 days ago

The Secret to Actually Finishing That Passion Project? Treat It Like You Work in a Coal Mine, Says This Best-Selling Author.

Focus on ideas that can sustain long-term commitment rather than chasing every clever thought.
Healthcare
fromVulture
1 day ago

The Pitt's Irene Choi Wants to Borrow Joy's IDGAF Badge

Joy Kwon prioritizes her well-being over the pressures of the ER, highlighting the issue of burnout among medical professionals.
Women in technology
fromSlate Magazine
4 days ago

The Lindy West Controversy Is Obscuring Something Important

Millennial feminism faces criticism and perceived decline, highlighted by Lindy West's memoir reflecting personal and societal contradictions.
Renovation
fromItsnicethat
4 days ago

"Not too design-y": Third Place Zine is a playful publication about city life that's built for everyone

Third Place's second issue explores how third places foster mobilization and unity through joyous stories and a playful design.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Transcription by Ben Lerner review a stunning exploration of technology and storytelling

The novel explores themes of touch, familial inheritance, and the complexities of communication through a narrative involving a final interview with a mentor.
Women
fromThe Nation
1 week ago

What Its Like to Serve the Chinese Elite

Zhang Yueran's fiction explores complex relationships among women, intertwining themes of intimacy, malice, and class conflict.
#ben-lerner
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

The Ample Rewards of Ben Lerner's Slender New Novel

An interview with Ben Lerner reveals complexities of memory and influence in art and literature.
Books
fromDefector
1 day ago

The Gentle Parenting Of Ben Lerner's 'Transcription' | Defector

Ben Lerner's novels explore themes of youth, sexuality, and the complexities of adulthood through autofictional narratives.
Relationships
fromScary Mommy
2 weeks ago

Romance Duo "Christina Lauren" Talk About Romance Versus Reality & The Current Projects

Christina Lauren co-authors normalize intimate wellness discussions through romance writing and partnerships, emphasizing realistic female experiences in both fiction and real life.
Books
fromInsideHook
2 days ago

What to Read Right Now, According to Cool Men

Men are encouraged to read a variety of fiction, including classics, memoirs, and trending novels, especially as summer approaches.
Television
fromBustle
2 weeks ago

Kerry Washington's New Thriller May Have A Shocking Twist

Apple TV's Imperfect Women follows three women navigating an affair and murder, exemplifying the 'good for her' genre where morally gray female characters make questionable choices in response to difficult circumstances.
fromThe New Yorker
3 days ago

Valeria Luiselli Reads Julio Cortazar

Valeria Luiselli, an acclaimed author, discusses the intricacies of Julio Cortázar's 'The Night Face Up,' highlighting its themes and narrative structure that intertwine reality and dreams.
Books
Books
fromHarper's Magazine
6 days ago

Intimate Difference, by Jasmine Liu, Christine Smallwood

Siblinghood is portrayed in literature through various dynamics, influencing identity and relationships in works like Antigone and The Metamorphosis.
Women
fromThe New Yorker
3 weeks ago

The Feminist Visionary Who Lost the Plot

Elizabeth Cady Stanton's experience of discrimination at the 1840 World Anti-Slavery Convention catalyzed her feminist activism, though her sense of intellectual superiority later contributed to bigoted views.
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
4 weeks ago

Around Berkeley: Rebecca Solnit, Michael Pollan, Jeff Chang book talks; Louise Pearl show

Louise Pearl's one-woman show Pass the Nails and Shame The Devil recounts the experience of her family's ordeal building their own house amid Oakland's 1980s crack epidemic as her strong-willed, Louisiana-born mother and gather a motley crew of men to make this dream home into a reality.
East Bay (California)
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
3 weeks ago

Raymond Chandler and the Case of the Split Infinitive

Raymond Chandler clashed with The Atlantic's copy editor Margaret Mutch over her correction of a split infinitive, arguing that deliberate rule-breaking in language creates authentic, living prose.
fromConde Nast Traveler
4 days ago

9 Books Our Editors Couldn't Put Down This Season

New biographies and freshly issued retrospectives reexamine the lives and legacies of fashion's biggest names, from archetypical It girl Jane Birkin to the eternally ahead of his time Issey Miyake.
Books
Books
fromwww.newyorker.com
6 days ago

Cassandra Neyenesch Reads Enough for Now

Cassandra Neyenesch is a Brooklyn-based writer and curator with a debut novel titled A Little Bit Bad, set to be published in May.
Mission District
fromMission Local
1 month ago

New book 'Unsung Heroines' celebrates 35 Bay Area women you need to know

Louise Lawrence pioneered transgender activism in 1940s San Francisco, educating medical professionals and founding Transvestia newspaper before later prominent activists emerged.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Maya C. Popa Reads Brenda Shaughnessy

Maya C. Popa reads poems and discusses her work, including upcoming publications and her role as a poetry editor.
Books
fromJezebel
1 week ago

'Maybe a New Audience Will Tell Me What They Think,' Lindy West Joked a Week Before Her Memoir Release

Lindy West's memoir, Adult Braces, has sparked intense reactions, particularly regarding its themes of polyamory and personal vulnerability.
Writing
fromBusiness Matters
1 month ago

Mara Naaman: A Literary Voice Shaping Culture

Building a life around ideas means prioritizing process and learning over outcomes and external validation, enabling deeper intellectual and creative growth.
Books
fromBustle
1 week ago

The 10 Best New Books About Women Breaking The Mold

Successful women often defy expectations, and quieter forms of rebellion deserve recognition alongside visible rule-breakers.
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Katie da Cunha Lewin's 'The Writer's Room' examines the spaces where authors work

She wrote 10 books while she was here, and that includes children's books, you know, volumes of poetry. It was a busy and bustling place back then. Lucille and her husband, Fred Clifton, had six kids running around. Neighbors were in and out. Artist friends were over constantly. But Lucille Clifton managed to carve out time and space to write.
Writing
fromPinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news
1 week ago

Heated Rivalry's Rachel Reid on Shane and Ilya and their group chat

At first, I think in the early drafts of Heated Rivalry, Ilya was much more of a jerk. I think he was much meaner. The things he said to Shane were more, I don't know, just meaner. And I think he was maybe more of a stereotypical bad boy, I guess. And then I softened him a bit as I went back and wrote more.
Books
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Yiyun Li on Stories That Happen Twice

Retrospective narrative reveals how stories gain completeness through the knowledge of future events, transforming present moments into layered reflections on fate and identity.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
3 weeks ago

Author Luke Kennard talks about his novel, 'Black Bag'

Luke Kennard's novel 'Black Bag' fictionalizes a 1967 psychology experiment where a silent, bagged actor in a classroom gradually becomes liked by students through repeated exposure, exploring how familiarity transforms perception.
#literary-fiction
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Yiyun Li Reads "Calm Sea and Hard Faring"

Yiyun Li reads her short story 'Calm Sea and Hard Faring' from The New Yorker's March 9, 2026 issue, showcasing work from an acclaimed author of eight fiction books.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Yiyun Li Reads "Calm Sea and Hard Faring"

Yiyun Li reads her short story 'Calm Sea and Hard Faring' from The New Yorker's March 9, 2026 issue, showcasing work from an acclaimed author of eight fiction books.
fromKqed
2 weeks ago

There's Room for Everyone in Epic American Western, 'Now I Surrender'

In the self-conscious hallucinatory tradition of historical novelists like E.L. Doctorow and Don DeLillo, Enrigue keeps intrusively reminding us that this overpacked tale of the past is something he's constructing, as much as resurrecting. And, like his predecessors, Enrigue subscribes to a paranoid reading of history.
Books
Books
fromThe Atlantic
3 weeks ago

Atlanta's Edith Wharton

Tayari Jones employs early-20th-century literary styles and conventions to explore contemporary social issues, creating richly layered narratives that blend timeless emotional depth with modern subject matter.
Philosophy
fromAnOther
2 months ago

A Reading List by Ocean Vuong: Part Two

Post-success disillusionment reveals pride, a false vocation to teach without knowledge, and pervasive self-deception among artists.
Europe politics
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

The Country That Made Its Own Canon

Sweden released a national culture canon, sparking controversy over national identity as immigration rises and the nationalist Sweden Democrats gain political influence.
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

True crime, teen moms and global tragedy in cinemas this week

On February 8, 1977, Indianapolis businessman Tony Kiritzis (Bill Skarsgard) kidnapped Richard Hall, a mortgage company president (Stranger Things' Dacre Montgomery), claiming that Hall's company had sabotaged his real estate investment. Kiritzis rigged a 12-gauge shotgun with a hair-trigger "dead man's wire" around Hall's neck, ensuring that Hall would die if police sharpshooters tried to kill him. He held Hall for three days as police, family members, a charismatic local radio DJ (Colman Domingo) and TV reporters were drawn into the standoff.
Arts
Books
fromThe New Yorker
3 weeks ago

Patricia Cornwell on Crime and Creativity

Fear is the primary obstacle to creativity; overcoming it and persisting through rejection enables successful creative work.
Relationships
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

"Deal-Breaker," by Allegra Goodman

Pam hides her relationship with John from family because of anticipated judgment, despite finding warmth, companionship, and mutual interests with him.
fromQueerty
2 months ago

Heated Rivalry author Rachel Reid shares the text message that changed her life - Queerty

Reid, who lives in Nova Scotia, published her first Game Changer book in 2018. It followed a romance between fictional professional hockey player Scott Hunter and barista Kip Grady. A sequel, Heated Rivalry, which centered on hockey rivals Shane Hollander and Ilya Rozanov, followed in 2018. Further novels have appeared since. In a new Instagram post, Reid posted her initial exchange with the TV producer and director.
Television
Books
fromwww.7x7.com
3 weeks ago

Locals We Love: Author Kristina Voegele's 'Annie in Retrospect' is a Love Letter to Our City and Ourselves.

A novel follows a woman who slips into her 25-year-old body with midlife knowledge, exploring identity loss, memory, and San Francisco's transformation through disorientation, grief, and acceptance.
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
1 month ago

Remembering Martha Hudson, whose literary salon inspired UC Berkeley's women's studies program

Marsha eventually brought her salon to campus and founded the Comparative Literature Women's Caucus, an activist collective that established the first women's literature classes in Comparative Literature, conceived and taught by graduate student women. Caucus members helped produce the first major translation anthologies of women's world-wide poetry, encouraged women to write feminist dissertations on women authors, and researched discrimination against women in the department.
Women
Television
fromIndieWire
2 months ago

'I Summer I Turned Pretty' Creator Jenny Han Shares Takeaways from Her Summer of Success

Jenny Han turned her novel trilogy into a global streaming blockbuster, directing Season 3 and preparing a cinematic conclusion she co-wrote.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
4 weeks ago

Something Strange Is Happening With Books. It Could Reshape Literary Culture.

BookTok readers increasingly prefer first-person narrative perspective in romance and fantasy novels, viewing third-person narration as unnecessarily complex and off-putting.
Books
fromHarvard Gazette
4 weeks ago

That's a book? - Harvard Gazette

Italo Calvino used tarot card decks as a computational system to generate interconnected narratives, predating modern AI by decades and demonstrating how structured systems can create complex literary works.
Books
fromInsideHook
1 month ago

What to Read Right Now, According to Cool Men

Men discuss fiction books they recommend others read, including Pulitzer Prize winners, memoirs, and fantasy novels to combat reading disengagement.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley audiobook review a topical time-hopping romance

A British civil servant is hired to manage time travelers displaced from history into the present day, navigating sci-fi, romance, and contemporary social issues.
fromKqed
1 month ago

A Novel Tracks the Fallout of Free Love, and the Girls Who 'Went Away'

In 1968, a "good girl" is squeaky clean. She studies hard, follows the rules, gets into college and doesn't embarrass her parents. She doesn't lie or drink or do drugs. She doesn't participate in the Summer of Love or experiment with any of its alternative ways of living. She definitely doesn't have premarital sex, get pregnant and upend everyone's meticulously laid plans for her future.
Books
Books
fromVulture
1 month ago

How Should a White Woman Writer Be?

White women writers from the Dimes Square literary scene are receiving major book launches and media attention, sparking both acclaim and online criticism about nepotism and industry favoritism.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Literary Theory

Words carry multiple meanings; 'swallow' embodies both bird and ingestion, showing language's power to alter perception and emotional states.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Literature Has a Stay-at-Home-Dad Problem

Stay-at-home fathers are consistently portrayed as incompetent buffoons in literature, rarely depicted as skilled, engaged parents despite their growing real-world presence.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Daniyal Mueenuddin Reads Peter Taylor

Daniyal Mueenuddin joins Deborah Treisman to discuss 'Two Pilgrims,' by Peter Taylor, which was published in The New Yorker in 1963.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Ben Markovits: I used to think any book concerned with people falling in love can't be very good'

Reading shaped formative years through detective stories, fantasy epics, and memoirs that provided companionship and escape during frequent moves and family transitions.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

When Did Literature Get Less Dirty?

Philip Roth's Zuckerman Unbound functioned as a response to the controversial reception of Portnoy's Complaint, with Roth's protagonist expressing regret over writing sexually explicit material that drew accusations of anti-Semitism and misogyny.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Mary Gaitskill Reads "Something Familiar"

Mary Gaitskill performs "Something Familiar" from the March 2, 2026 issue and has published eight fiction books, including Veronica and the essay collection Oppositions.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Valeria Luiselli on Sound, Memory, and New Beginnings

Field recordings and attentive listening are integral to narrative creation, shaping the writing process and immersive listening experiences.
fromPublishersWeekly.com
1 month ago

WI2026: PW Talks with Xochitl Gonzalez

In addition to writing fiction, you're a staff writer for the and a screenwriter. How do you think of your career? I think of myself as a storyteller. I'm nosy, so once I'm telling a story, I want to know what happens. I do find, with fiction, I can't toggle in and out of it. It's like acting, where you have to stay with that character, in that world.
Books
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

"Predictions and Presentiments"

Mother and daughter arrive on an island to begin again, observe a yawning sky, local winds, Etna's ash, and read the Levante as an omen.
Books
fromHarper's Magazine
1 month ago

Juvenile Impulse, by Becky Zhang

A retrospective narrative examines adolescent identity, desire, power dynamics, and authorial agency at a rigorous, hierarchical all-girls Southern California school.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

The Women Who Made George Saunders A Wife Guy

George Saunders' childhood praise and confidence, plus transformative experiences and setbacks, ultimately propelled him to achieve his dream of becoming a successful novelist.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

The Gospel According to Emily Henry

Emily Henry channels rom-com sensibility and religious upbringing to create a fresh, cinematic-influenced romance novel blending humor, nostalgia, and emotional depth.
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

"This Is How It Happens," by Molly Aitken

You are leaving work, your suit still damp from the morning's downpour, the skin on your palms peeling. You are clutching two supermarket bags, tins of cream soup and tuna knocking against one another. The rain is hard and your anorak is cheap. You are on your way to Stockbridge, to your parents' house, which only your father inhabits now that your mother is gone.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Helen of Nowhere by Makenna Goodman review a perfect fairytale for our times

A dislocated professor abandons institutional life and retreats toward neo‑transcendental solitude in nature after losing job, spouse, and social standing.
Books
fromBustle
2 months ago

How A Job At Jack In The Box Trained Madeline Cash To Write Fiction

Madeline Cash's Lost Lambs uses ad-copy discipline, pun-based constraints, and mapped geography to structure a tense, constraint-driven family novel.
fromVulture
2 months ago

Colleen Hoover Insists Her New Book Isn't About Herself

Out today, Woman Down centers on writer Petra Rose, an author who has writer's block and checks into a remote cabin to finish her next book. Petra, who took a hiatus after fans blamed her for a producer's decision to cut a fan-favorite character out of the film adaptation of her book A Terrible Thing, has "learned the hard way what happens when the internet turns on you," a synopsis states.
Books
Books
fromAnOther
2 months ago

Makenna Goodman's New Book Is a Gripping Portrait of a Disgraced Professor

Explores who gets to live the 'good life', interrogating rural idylls, identity, empathy, cancel culture, obsession, and the complexities of love.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

Author Ellie Levenson talks about her novel, 'Room 706'

A London hotel hostage forces Kate Bright to confront her marriage, longtime affair, and complicated identity as mother and woman.
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

A Biography Without 'The Boring Bits'

Sophia Stewart poses a choice that many biographers struggle with: "what to do with the boring bits."
Books
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

She Shook Up the Literary World, Then Renounced It

Many editors languish in the margins of history, their contributions largely invisible despite how much they shape whom and how we read. But in recent years, amid a wave of books unearthing overlooked figures, biographers have turned their sights to pioneering book and magazine editors-including Malcolm Cowley of Viking, Judith Jones of Knopf, Bennett Cerf of Random House, and Katharine S. White of The New Yorker -anointing them as the unsung architects of the American literary canon.
Books
Books
fromSlate Magazine
2 months ago

One of 2025's Biggest Books Came Out of Nowhere. After Reading It, I Think I Understand Why.

The Correspondent is an epistolary novel that became a surprise bestseller through its letter-driven, old‑school storytelling, emotional resonance, and prominent endorsements.
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Less 'Lolita,' More Late-Stage Capitalism

Whatever you might think you're going to get from the familiar setup of Jennette McCurdy's Half His Age (a lonely high-school girl in Anchorage begins an extremely questionable sexual relationship with her teacher), any presumptions are dispelled from the very first page. When Waldo, the teenage narrator of the novel, observes her boyfriend's "slimy tongue that loop-de-loops over and over like a carnival ride, mechanical and passionless," she's setting a tone: irreverent, graphic, bilious.
Books
fromwww.newyorker.com
2 months ago

Allegra Goodman Reads Deal-Breaker

Listen and subscribe: Apple | Spotify | Google | Wherever You Listen Sign up to receive our weekly Books & Fiction newsletter. Allegra Goodman reads her story Deal-Breaker, from the January 12, 2026, issue of the magazine. Goodman is the author of ten books of fiction, including the novels Kaaterskill Falls, which was a National Book Award finalist, Sam, and Isola,
Books
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 months ago

LitWatch February: Langston Hughes, historian Keisha Blain, Colum McCann * Oregon ArtsWatch

Langston Hughes’s poetry fuses jazz and blues rhythms to express Black American experience, inspiring centennial events and community celebrations.
Books
fromKqed
2 months ago

In Carolina Ixta's New Novel, Teens Fight Against Pollution for a 'Few Blue Skies'

A YA novel portrays environmental and labor injustices affecting a Latinx community, intertwining family struggles, romance, and youth activism against industrial encroachment.
Books
fromDefector
1 month ago

They Publish Books By "Women And Weirdos" In Their Free Time | Defector

Mandylion Press reissues lost nineteenth-century works by women and eccentric authors with redesigned covers, forewords, visual glossaries, and protective packaging.
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Bring Back Moral Fiction

It was once commonly understood that fiction was in the wisdom business, that it offered not only aesthetic pleasure but also moral improvement. This function of literature was not tough to spot. One of the first English novels was Samuel Richardson's 1740 work, Pamela: Or, Virtue Rewarded-a title not meant ironically. Through the 19th century, many authors turned directly to the reader with philosophical and social (if sometimes ironic) commentary: "It is a truth universally acknowledged"; "It was the best of times"; "All happy families are alike." For readers not up to the challenge of full George Eliot novels, her enterprising publisher compiled a volume of Eliot's many Wise, Witty, and Tender Sayings, in order to more broadly distribute "a morality as pure as it is impassioned."
Books
Books
fromKqed
3 months ago

Encore: LA's Former Poet Laureate on Storytelling and Survival | KQED

Luis Rodriguez credits reading and writing with sustaining his resilience throughout his life.
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