Literary Hub presented a selection of eight memoirs focused on medicine, illness, and healing.
The list highlights personal accounts from the medical field. It was published on May 14, 2026. Readers can explore stories of recovery and care through these works.
Literary Hub has published a series of 13 reviews highlighting books by trans and queer authors that received no coverage in the New York Times Book Review from 2013 to 2022. The project, titled 'What Was Lost: A Queer Accounting of the NY Times Book Review, 2013-2022,' responds to the editorial tenure of Pamela Paul, who led the section during that period and later wrote an anti-trans essay. Organized by Sandy E. Allen and Maris Kreizman, the initiative aims to address gaps in literary criticism and foster discussion on representation.
Literary Hub has published a list of ten great nonfiction books recommended for reading in May. The selection highlights standout titles in the genre for the month. It appeared online on April 30.
Literary Hub has released an article exploring Ukrainian literature as a lens for understanding the ongoing war. Titled 'Writing While the Alphabet Burns: Ukrainian Literature to Help Understand the Ongoing War,' it appeared on the site recently.
A new article explores how researching and writing a book about diaries altered the author's approach to their own diary entries. Published on Literary Hub, the piece reflects on this personal transformation in writing habits.
Paperback editions of five nonfiction books are scheduled for release in spring 2026, covering topics from homelessness and literary criticism to personal grief and China's one-child policy. These works include memoirs and essays by acclaimed authors. The releases highlight diverse stories often overshadowed by hardcover buzz.