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The best-dressed writers at the Met Gala.

Over the past twenty years or so, the Costume Institute’s annual Met Ball has exploded from in-crowd cause célèbre to the Oscars of fashion. The benefit began in 1948 as a slightly cheeky fundraiser popular among the Capote’s Swans set. But decades of careful marketing from the gala’s co-sponsor (Vogue, via Diana Vreeland and Anna Wintour) have grown...

Mon May 6, 2024 22:58
Here are this year’s Pulitzer Prize winners.

The winners and nominated finalists of the 2024 Pulitzer Prizes were announced today by administrator Marjorie Miller via remote video stream. The winners each take home $15,000 dollars and serious bragging rights, not to mention a ticket into a very illustrious club. The full list of winners and nominated finalists from the arts & letters categories...

Mon May 6, 2024 22:58
What the hell happened at Readers Take Denver, the “Fyre Festival of Books?”

Social media has been in an uproar after last month’s Readers Take Denver, when thousands of authors and readers arrived in Denver, Colorado for what was billed as a weekend of events, signings, and meet-and-greets with authors. But RTD (not to be confused with “Regional Transportation District,” Denver’s public transit system) was instead a disaster....

Mon May 6, 2024 20:59
One great short story to read today: J.G. Ballard’s “The Garden of Time”

According to the powers that be (er, apparently according to Dan Wickett of the Emerging Writers Network), May is Short Story Month. To celebrate, for the second year in a row, the Literary Hub staff will be recommending a single short story, free* to read online, every (work) day of the month. Why not read along with us? Today, we recommend: “The...

Mon May 6, 2024 18:02
Lit Hub Daily: May 6, 2024

TODAY: In 1862, Henry David Thoreau dies.  “If there’s any metaphor I would use for the act of writing, it would have to be listening.” Jon Fosse on how writing plays transformed his craft. | Lit Hub Craft Rebecca Kormos on the changing face of nature and climate narratives: “In truth, I hunger for books about nature and science by women.” | Lit...

Mon May 6, 2024 13:59
What Latin American Literature Can Teach the Current Leaders of Latin America

Daniel Noboa, the president of Ecuador, might have saved himself a lot of trouble, if he had only read more Latin American literature. Perhaps he would not have ordered the police to storm the Mexican embassy to arrest former Vice President Jorge Glas, who had been granted asylum there. That unprecedented action—breaching long standing treaties that...

Mon May 6, 2024 13:00

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