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November 3 – 7, 2025


THE BEST OF THE LITERARY INTERNET

TODAY: In 1847, Bram Stoker is born. 

Also on Lit Hub:

Why maybe you shouldn’t talk to the New York Times about Zohran MamdaniJennifer Acker talks to Teju Cole about genre-bending • 10 new children’s books • New November poetry collectionsRead “Sixty Days,” a poem by Layla Faraj • How the 1956 Israeli occupation of Gaza informs the present and future • New fall sci-fi and fantasy readsThe “close friendship” between Sor Juana Inés and Vicereine María Luisa • What’s the most accurate way to write about time travel?Why Thomas Beller saw The Bad News Bears ten times • Three audio narratives to reshape your imagination • Claire Dederer talks to Jodi-Ann Burey • The case for birdwatching in the winter and fall • Amber McBride recommends 10 novels in verse •  Why “technology is not fate” • Why carbon offsetting (and big business) will not save the planet • Georgi Gospodinov on writing about deathHow Trump’s isolationist policies challenge the liberal international order • Maris Kreizman on AI, the future, and the ongoing devaluation of the arts • What’s on Dorothea Lasky’s TBR? • Abel Ferrara remembers the mob-backed porno he shot5 book reviews you need to read this week • How Brian Schaefer learned to embrace idealism • Finding freedom by writing in English • How Fleetwood Mac inspired Daisy Jones & the Six • Elena Sheppard on connecting with her Cuban grandfatherWhy fact-based historical fiction must negotiate with the truth • Political and personal upheavals at the center of the 1938 FIFA World Cup • The best reviewed books of the week • Breaking the law to create art • What you might miss by listening to podcasts on 1.5x speed • Was the American Revolution actually a world war?Read two poems by MaKshya Tolbert from the collection, Shade is a place



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