The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day

TODAY: In 1886, Siegfried Sassoon is born.
- What should you read next? Our editors recommend 15 new novels for your fall TBR! | Lit Hub Reading Lists
- Joanne Harris reflects on writing a sequel to Chocolat after 25 years. | Lit Hub Craft
- “Novelty becomes the name of the game in lieu of our mundane daily bread.” On Eve Babitz, Carl Jung, and searching for synchronicity in life and literature. | Lit Hub Criticism
- Sarah Adler reads Blake Butler while considering how we tell the stories of other people’s suicides. | Lit Hub Craft
- Alice Vernon explores the rise of spiritualism after the First World War: “Séances ceased being a party game or stage act and instead became a beacon of hope for those who were left behind that their sons, brothers and husbands weren’t truly gone.” | Lit Hub History
- On titles by Leonard Cohen, John Williams, Alfred Doblin, and more books you didn’t know were first published by Viking. | Lit Hub Reading Lists
- “God’s many guises— / dervishes, darkened ballparks. / Artificial hearts.” Read an excerpt from Kevin Young’s poem “All Souls,” featured in the collection Night Watch. | Lit Hub Poetry
- “I’d been warned that it wouldn’t be easy to go digging up the dead.” Read from Mariana Travacio’s novel All That Dies in April, translated by Will Morningstar and Samantha Schnee. | Lit Hub Fiction
- “After all, it’s a book about finding yourself at the end of the world.” Carmen Maria Machado meditates on I Who Have Never Known Men and its recent TikTok resurgence. | The New Yorker
- Katherine Rundell considers what Hamlet can mean to children readers. | The New York Times
- Investigating the connections between publishing, the fossil fuel industry, and the genocide in Gaza. | Tribune Mag
- Mahfud Ikhwan on mangoes, bittersweet nostalgia, and a food culture that no longer exists. | Words Without Borders
- As it turns out, playing Tiny Bookshop is accurate to the bookselling experience. | Vulture
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