TODAY: In 1940, John Steinbeck is awarded a Pulitzer Prize for The Grapes of Wrath.
- Juliet Faithfull remembers having “no frame of reference for free speech” while growing up in the 60s and 70s under Brazil’s military dictatorship. | Lit Hub Politics
- Ayana Elizabeth Johnson meditates on the necessity of hope in the fight against climate crisis. | Lit Hub Climate Change
- On musician Vera Brandes and why constraints encourage creativity, despite setting limitations. | Lit Hub Music
- James Romm unearths some ancient world wisdom by translating classical Greek poetry. | Lit Hub History
- How do you confront the infidelities of a father and a grandfather? “These were not secrets in our family. They were simply the weather. They were the condition of life.” | Lit Hub Memoir
- Ilona Bannister recommends books on the power of the stranger by Angie Cruz, Rumaan Alam, Laura Sims, and more. | Lit Hub Reading Lists
- Rachel F. Seidman considers what objects reveal about their owners while unraveling oral histories. | Lit Hub Biography
- Read “Mise en Abyme,” a poem by Lisa Russ Spaar from the collection Soul Cake: “Despite furnaced trees / translating heaven, always / it comes, kneeling to nothing.” | Lit Hub Poetry
- “Miriam Aiki prayed for the fruit of the womb for thirteen years.” Read from ’Pemi Aguda’s new novel, One Leg on Earth. | Lit Hub Fiction
- “I saw the man dismiss me not even as a stranger. He dismissed me as a part of the natural world.” Laurie Stone on resisting measurement. | Dirt
- Eileen Jobes considers the false promises of corporate thrillers. | Jacobin
- Claire Keegan talks to Dua Lipa about misogyny, relationships, and her book, So Late In The Day. | Service95
- Morley Musick reports on the murder of Silverio Villegas González by ICE and Operation Midway Blitz. | n+1
- Read this toolkit for journalists facing challenges to free speech. | The Dial
- “This essay is, thus, an essay of contradictions: I am using language to write about how I am alienated from my languages. But what other tool do I have?” How multiple languages fail in the face of war and oppression. | LARB
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