Lit Hub Daily September 9, 2021
TODAY: In 1976, the Royal Shakespeare Company opens a production of Shakespeare’s Macbeth, with Ian McKellen and Judi Dench in the lead roles.
“We are the chosen black artists, taking up temporary residency in places where white people can afford to slow down, breathe, stay for good.” Jill Louise Busby on the problem(s) of the writing residency industrial complex. | Lit Hub
Annabel Abbs considers the legacy of women hikers who blazed their own trails, and the landscapes that shaped them. | Lit Hub Nature
On the young Indigenous basketball players who challenged colonial hegemony in Montana—and became world champions. | Lit Hub Sports
How Amanita Muscaria, the real-life mushroom we know from Disney movies, earned its fame. | Lit Hub Nature
Jemma Wadham recounts an expedition across the “mysterious, inhospitable white void” of Antarctica. | Lit Hub Travel
“The higher one evinces traits stereotypically associated with femininity, the greater one’s chances of ending up with a personality disorder.” Jonathan Foiles on what we get wrong about BPD. | Lit Hub Health
Brandon Taylor on Sally Rooney, Dale Peck on Andrew Sullivan, Frank Guan on Jonathan Franzen, and more of the Reviews You Need to Read This Week. | Book Marks
“It was accepted wisdom back then that nothing could kill book sales quicker than stringing together the words Northern and Ireland.” Stuart Neville on regionalism, publishing, and standing up to censorship. | CrimeReads
WATCH: Christopher Sorrentino on loving and losing a difficult parent • Philip Stephens on Britain’s struggle to reconcile its waning power with its past glory. | Lit Hub Virtual Book Channel “The deeper you go you start to wonder if he’s actually gaslighting himself.” Dale Peck considers Andrew Sullivan’s body of work. | The Baffler
“It will hate bunk.” Read The New Yorker’s original prospectus. | Gothamist
“It’s easier to talk about a difficult topic if you talk about it in the context of a book.” Beloved librarian Nancy Pearl has received the National Book Foundation’s Literarian Award. | Library Journal
Joy Harjo discusses her new memoir, Native history, and her childhood reading habits. | NPR
Why are news reporters so skilled at writing crime novels? | Inside Hook
As the 20th anniversary of 9/11 approaches, new books are taking stock of geopolitical events since then. | Christian Science Monitor
These ten books take on long-distance relationships. | The Guardian
NEW ON LIT HUB RADIO
Morgan Parker on why The Faculty is the perfect allegory for life * Maggie Nelson on criticism, intentionality, and pain, * Brigid Hughes and Yiyun Li talk about retweeting a Russian classic, * Leigh Stein on archiving the cultural moments we shared during the (ongoing) pandemic, on Otherppl. * Anna Sebba recounts the early days of Ethel Rosenberg, * On Book Dreams, Bryan Christy on exposing corruption through journalism—and spy thrillers. * James and Al delve into the Second Sino-Japanese War,
ALSO ON LITERARY HUB
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