The Best Literary Facts from the Twitterverse

Last Wednesday, we issued our 50,000 followers on Twitter with a challenge: to tweet us with the best literary fact they know. The reason for this was simple: since last December, the modestly sized research team here atย Interesting Literature has been tweeting (as @InterestingLit) little facts, quotations, and links based on all aspects of literature, … Read more

Guest Blog: Sport and Spirituality in the Golf Novel The Legend of Bagger Vance

By Lisa Beckelhimer, University of Cincinnati Sport is frequently elevated to some higher meaning in American culture. Traditional sports writing, memoirs, and historical accounts can inspire readers. But so can several works of fiction, including Steven Pressfieldโ€™s mystical golf novel The Legend of Bagger Vanceย (1995). An athlete/tortured soul in need of salvation, his angelic or … Read more

Brave New Worlds before Huxley and Orwell

In this guest blog post written for the excellentย Great Writers Inspire blog, run by the University of Oxford, our founder-editor Dr Oliver Tearle explores the complex history of dystopian fiction. Click on the link below to visit theย Great Writers Inspireย site and read the blog post, which includes details of the science fiction novel written by … Read more

Guest Blog: Literature’s Top Ten Sleepers

By Dr Michael Greaney, Lancaster University Imagine a reader โ€“ say, a Martian with a library card — whose sole acquaintance with human experience was from books. What picture of human life would this well-read alien carry around in its imagination? And what would be missing from that picture? One area of our creaturely existence … Read more

Five Reasons Everyone Should Know George Meredith

One of the things we like to do atย Interesting Literature is find authors who aren’t as celebrated as they perhaps should be, and find some reasons why they should be better known, if not more widely read. A perfect case in point is George Meredith (1828-1909), the Victorian poet and novelist. Although he was popular … Read more