Rita Dove on the Future of Literature
The Pulitzer-Prize winning poet discusses how new technologies will affect the creative process
Tom Swift is turning 100—and he still doesn’t look a day over 18
Harper Lee’s Novel Achievement
With To Kill a Mockingbird, published 50 years ago, Lee gave America a story for the ages. Just don’t ask her about it
Allen Ginsberg’s Beat Family Album
The famous beat poet’s photographs reveal an American counterculture at work and play
A chance encounter on a New Orleans dock in 1858 haunted the writer for the rest of his life
Mark Twain’s “My Platonic Sweetheart”
In an essay published posthumously in 1912, Mark Twain recounts his dreams of a long-lost love
Lewis Carroll’s Shifting Reputation
Why has popular opinion of the author of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland undergone such a dramatic reversal?
How the Paperback Novel Changed Popular Literature
Classic writers reached the masses when Penguin paperbacks began publishing great novels for the cost of a pack of cigarettes
Smithsonian Notable Books for Children 2009
Our annual list of children’s books highlights the most fascinating titles published in the past year
The British countryside is home to the real sites behind Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights and other works by the literary sisters
Great Road Trips in American Literature
From Twain to Kerouac to Bryson, writers have found inspiration in hitting the road and traveling the United States
A New Taste of Hemingway’s Moveable Feast
The re-edited version of Ernest Hemingway’s Paris-based memoir sheds new light on the heartbreaking breakup of his first marriage
Forget Edgar Allan Poe? Nevermore!
Cities up and down the East Coast claim author Edgar Allan Poe as their own and and celebrate his 200th birthday
Amanda McKittrick Ros predicted she would achieve lasting fame as a novelist. Unfortunately, she did
Photographs by Pulitzer-Prize winning novelist Eudora Welty display the empathy that would later infuse her fiction
Andrew Lawler on “Isfahan: Iran’s Hidden Jewel”
The author of the magazine piece talks about his reporting
The British Library’s Spoken Word albums of recordings by British and American writers shed new light on the authors’ work
Literary Landmarks: A History of American Women Writers
Author Elaine Showalter discusses the lasting influence of Harriet Beecher Stowe and why Gertrude Stein is overrated
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