The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day

TODAY: In 1877, Renée Vivien is born. A British poet who wrote in French, she is considered one of the 20th century’s first notable lesbian poets.
- Kyra Davis Lurie on Sugar Hill, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s racism, and reimagining The Great Gatsby as a Black American story. | Lit Hub Craft
- “Our Western inheritance, then: the concept of the deep underground as wasteland, dump, terminus of the unredeemable.” Justin Hocking examines the legacy of Project Plowshare and American nuclear testing. | Lit Hub Nature
- Zaakir Tameez explores the early days of the Civil War and how Charles Sumner convinced Abraham Lincoln to take a stand against slavery. | Lit Hub Biography
- Arianne Edmonds explains the importance of preserving the memory of Black communities in Los Angeles and beyond while remembering the legacy of her great-great-grandfather, Jefferson Lewis Edmonds. | Lit Hub History
- “Books about cancer don’t have to be depressing.” Jonathan Gluck on writing a very different kind of cancer story. | Lit Hub In Conversation
- A’Lelia Bundles on telling Black women’s stories and writing about her great-grandmother A’Lelia Walker, Harlem’s “Black Cinderella.” | Lit Hub History
- John Seabrook chronicles the wilting of a family spinach dynasty: “Charles Franklin Seabrook, my grandfather, was the principal dreamer…and autocratic ruler of this industrial farming empire—and ultimately its destroyer.” | Lit Hub Food
- Alec Nevala-Lee explores how Nobel Prize-winning physicist Luis W. Alvarez pursued theory through practice. | Lit Hub Biography
- “It was his favorite recurring dream, always returning unprompted, always startling and delighting, leaving him a little wistful as he woke.” Read from Christopher Tradowsky’s new novel, Midnight at the Cinema Palace. | Lit Hub Fiction
- David Beer wonders what the fear of being mistaken for AI will mean for our writing styles. | 3 Quarks Daily
- Amanda Guinzberg asked ChatGPT to help her choose some essays to send to an agent. The result was “the closest thing to a personal episode of Black Mirror I hope to experience in this lifetime.” | Everything Is a Wave
- “Out with the auto-performance; in with the anti-performance.” Alexandra Tanner on Nathan Fielder’s oeuvre, Katie Kitamura’s Audition, and what it means to perform. | The Point
- Sandra Cisneros considers class and gender in Sense and Sensibility. | The Paris Review
- Writer and photographer Jamie Lee Taete shares scenes from the Los Angeles protests. | The Cut
- Emanuel Moss looks at three books on AI and considers the politics of the AI arms race. | Public Books
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