Lit Hub Weekly: June 8 – 12, 2020

TODAY: In 1888, Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa is born.

Also on Lit Hub:

A brief history of feminist bike-riding • Nina Lakhani on the late Berta Cáceres, Indigenous land activist • Emeka Joseph Nwankwo explores how women are changing the face of African publishing • Marina Endicott on the forced schooling of Indigenous Canadians, and other racist acts of “white benevolence” • Lessons for 2020 from the films of Studio Ghibli • Reverend Dr. William J. Barber II on the Poor People’s Campaign, and the politics of rejecting those living in poverty • The radical afterlives of William WordsworthTen short story collections you may have missed last month • Stan Cox how we can build a more humane way of putting food on the table • Matt Ortile on Calvin Klein, race, and stereotypes of masculinity • In celebration of bookstores reopening, Monika Zgustova reflects on reading and resistance • On Larry Kramer’s anger, activism, and great expectations • Liam Pieper rereads Nevil Shute’s resolutely nihilist On the Beach, a true end-times classic • Sharon Harrigan recommends eight books told from the collective perspective • Stephanie Danler and Francesca Pellas in conversation • Rachel Moss on illustrating the song lyrics of Peter Tosh, and the role of children’s books in helping parents talk about race

Best of Book Marks:

Fever DreamTHICKThe Boxcar Children, and more rapid-fire book recs from Catherine House author Elisabeth Thomas • John Freeman recommends five poets who center nature in their work, from Alice Oswald to Juana de Ibarbourou • The Catcher in the RyeWuthering HeightsWide Sargasso Sea, and more rapid-fire book recs from Practical Magic author Alice Hoffman • Stacey Abrams’ Our Times is Now, Joyce Carol Oates’ Night. Sleep. Death. The Stars., and Lauren Ho’s Last Tang Standing all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

New on CrimeReads:

Olivia Rutigliano analyzes Mr. Bucket, Charles Dickens’ devious, hypocritical, “nice guy” cop • Paul French asks, is Sydney Australia’s next capital of noir? • Molly Odintz on television’s problem with white suburban criminality • Missing persons, gilded age swindles, and murder at sea: all the true crime you need to read this June • Heather Young reckons with her small Nevada hometown • Angela Marsons debates the merits of real versus fictional settings • Kimberly Belle dives deep into the still waters of the lakeside crime novel • Congrats to the 2020 Anthony Award nominees, announced this week • Catherine McKenzie recommends 7 thrillers about identity and reinvention • Aspen Mattis remembers the first days after her husband’s disappearance


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