Renee Nicole Good, murdered by ICE, was a prize-winning poet. Here’s that poem.
JONNY DIAMOND, Literary Hub
January 7, 2026

Renee Nicole Good, 37, mother to a six-year-old boy, was murdered earlier today by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, a few blocks from her home.

Note: She was known as Renée Nicole Macklin when the poem was published.

#RenéeNicoleGood #LitHub #Poem #Poetry
https://lithub.com/renee-nicole-good-murdered-by-ice-was-a-prize-winning-poet-heres-that-poem/

Renee Nicole Good, murdered by ICE, was a prize-winning poet. Here’s that poem.

Renee Nicole Good, 37, mother to a six-year-old boy, was murdered earlier today by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, a few blocks from her home. According to the Minnesota Star Tribune: [An ICE agent] s


Literary Hub

I have never understood why so many apps exist for websites but Cory Doctorow explains that the reason is to avoid regulation:

https://lithub.com/how-american-tech-cartels-use-apps-to-break-the-law/

#lithub #literaryhub #corydoctorow #tech #technology #regulation #monopoly #trust #antitrust #smartphones #cartels #oligarchy #scams

How American Tech Cartels Use Apps to Break the Law

The death of competition spells doom for regulation. Competition is an essential component of effective regulation, for two reasons: First, competition keeps the companies within a sector from all 


Literary Hub
What to read next? Lit Hub’s roundup spotlights this week’s best reviewed books—from Pynchon’s Shadow Ticket to Francesca Wade’s Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife, plus Banville, Dunn, Sands, and Macy. Full list: https://lithub.com/what-should-you-read-next-here-are-the-best-reviewed-books-of-the-week-10-10-2025/ #BookRecommendations #LitHub
What Should You Read Next? Here Are the Best Reviewed Books of the Week

Thomas Pynchon’s Shadow Ticket, Francesca Wade’s Gertrude Stein: An Afterlife, and John Banville’s Venetian Vespersall feature among the best reviewed books of the week. Brought to you by Book Mark


Literary Hub
📚 Ah, another #groundbreaking revelation: #trauma and #drugs are linked! Who would've thought? đŸ€Ż Lit Hub has achieved the impossible—turning a basic #psychology fact into a #pretentious novella full of words that say a lot but mean nothing. 🚀
https://lithub.com/the-link-between-trauma-drug-use-and-our-search-to-feel-better/ #LitHub #revelation #HackerNews #ngated
The Link Between Trauma, Drug Use, and Our Search to Feel Better

As long as humans have experienced emotional crisis (which is to say: for all of human history), they’ve attempted to ease their pain with drugs—plant-based psychoactives like marijuana in preindus


Literary Hub

How To Raise a Reader in an Age of Digital Distraction

Via Literati

How To Raise a Reader in an Age of Digital Distraction

Jessica Ewing on the Ways Parents Can Promote Thoughtful Technology Use and Sustainable Reading Habits

By Jessica Ewing, September 15, 2025

From article


People make certain assumptions about you when you’re the CEO of a children’s book company. Some assume I must have spent my childhood summers in a hammock reading Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, or winters taking turns reading Little Women by the ïŹre with my sisters. The reality is far more complicated, quite a bit less wholesome, and probably more familiar to most parents reading this.

The truth is I spent a good chunk of my childhood rotating between three game consoles—a Sega Genesis, a Gameboy, and a multitude of PC games, some featuring nudity and/or violence. During the school year, I had the entire TGIF television lineup memorized (and still do). My idea of a middle grade novel was Carrie, which I conveniently “borrowed” from my brother’s vast Stephen King collection.

That isn’t to say I didn’t grow up with books and even age-appropriate ones—just that I don’t recall my parents being particularly concerned about screen time. There was no cultural panic about technology rotting my brain. We weren’t unusual in this regard. Screens were alive and well in my childhood, just as they are today.

The real challenge isn’t technology itself, but how technology has evolved to actively compete with the very cognitive processes that reading requires.

The difference wasn’t the presence of technology in our lives; it was the nature of our relationship with it.

When I ïŹred up Kings Quest VI, I committed. I guided Alexander through the Land of Green Isles, memorized the magic map, and worked my ass off to solve the puzzles at the Cliffs of Logic. The game didn’t ping me with notiïŹcations every few minutes. It didn’t track my behavior to sell me anything. It didn’t fragment my attention into bite-sized dopamine hits designed by teams of psychologists to maximize engagement. It was, in its own way, long-form content that demanded sustained focus—not so different from the mental muscles required for reading.

This distinction matters more than we might think, especially for those of us trying to raise readers in 2025. It’s easy to blame screens wholesale for declining literacy rates, but I ïŹnd that both reductive and unhelpful. The real challenge isn’t technology itself, but how technology has evolved to actively compete with the very cognitive processes that reading requires.

The Unnatural Act of Reading
Here’s something that might surprise you: reading isn’t natural. Unlike speaking, which humans develop organically, reading is an acquired skill that literally rewires the brain. Neuroscientist Maryanne Wolf, whose research has fundamentally shaped my understanding of how children develop as readers, describes reading as “an unnatural act” that requires us to connect disparate neural pathways in ways evolution never intended.

Wolf’s work reveals something remarkable about the reading brain. When we read, we’re essentially performing a complex neural symphony. Our brains must coordinate visual processing, language comprehension, memory systems, and abstract thinking—all in milliseconds. This isn’t something that happens automatically. It’s built through practice, repetition, and what Wolf calls “deep reading circuits.”

Children who become strong readers develop these circuits through thousands of hours of focused attention on text. Their brains learn to process written language with increasing ïŹ‚uency until the act becomes as natural as breathing. But here’s the crucial part: these circuits are fragile, especially in the early years. They require sustained, focused attention to develop properly.

This is where our modern digital landscape becomes genuinely problematic. Not because screens are inherently evil, but because many of today’s digital experiences are speciïŹcally designed to prevent such sustained attention.

When Screens Turned Predatory
The screens of my childhood were fundamentally different than what our children encounter today. When I played Where In The World Is Carmen Sandiego, the game wanted me to stay engaged, certainly, but it didn’t have access to sophisticated behavioral data about what kept me playing. It couldn’t A/B test different reward schedules or generate feedback loops from my friends with every action I took. Carmen didn’t appear suddenly with a sponsored post that preyed on my insecurities and tried to sell me teeth whitening gel.

Today’s digital experiences are built on what tech insiders call “persuasive design”—interfaces deliberately crafted to maximize time on screen through intermittent variable rewards, social validation loops, and carefully calibrated frustration. These aren’t accidents. They’re the result of millions of dollars in research into human psychology and memory, designed speciïŹcally to capture (and fragment) attention.

The average child now receives their ïŹrst smartphone around age 10 and spends over seven hours a day on screens. But far more troubling than the raw hours is how this time is spent: in short bursts, rapidly switching between apps, constantly responding to notiïŹcations and alerts.

This creates what researchers call “continuous partial attention”—a state where we’re always monitoring multiple streams of information but never fully focused on any single task. It’s the cognitive equivalent of trying to build muscles by switching between machines every few seconds before we can get in a single quality set.

And yet, here’s what gives me hope in the data: not all children are struggling. While average reading scores have indeed declined, the top-performing readers are actually doing better than ever before. This suggests that the challenge isn’t insurmountable—some families and schools are successfully navigating this landscape. The question is: what are they doing differently?

Continue/Read Original Article: https://lithub.com/how-to-raise-a-reader-in-an-age-of-digital-distraction/

#2025 #America #Books #Children #DigitalAge #Education #Games #Health #History #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #LitHub #Opinion #Parents #Reader #Reading #Science #Technology #UnitedStates

"Ours is a dark and chaotic world. We are all in need of lights to follow. On that island I felt I had met someone who had made a life on her own terms."

No small thing to achieve in life. No small thing. A beautiful read about one of my favourite places in the world.

https://lithub.com/last-outposts-rediscovering-hope-for-humanity-on-norways-remote-northern-coast/

#LongReads #Norway #LitHub

@emilymbender @alex

Just spotted it on #Lithub and their list of new books which are out today.

https://lithub.com/rebecca-solnit-ocean-vuong-axe-murders-27-new-books-out-today/

Great to see your work on there.

Rebecca Solnit! Ocean Vuong! Axe murders! 27 new books out today.

It’s just about the middle of May, and the world continues to be a phantasmagoric horror show unfolding at once too quickly and too slowly. But, through it all, and despite governmental attem


Literary Hub

"The idea that the need for language and translation will be eradicated with immediate machine equivalencies is as ridiculous as the idea that our differences as a species will be similarly eradicated. Language is just the symptom, not the cause, it is our differences made manifest. In the end, these differences cannot be eradicated, they cannot be killed, or flattened, or simplified, or ignored, or hacked, only translated. And lucky for you, we are still here to do that."

https://lithub.com/the-future-will-be-translated-a-manifesto-in-three-lies/

#LitHub #Translation #LiteratureInTranslation #TranslatorLife

The Future Will be Translated: A Manifesto in Three Lies

In my early twenties, I worked one summer as domestic help in a private residence for rich male university students in New York City. As part of our training, we women were taught to close all the 


Literary Hub

@Nonilex

From yesterday's #LitHub article about the banning of EricCarle's Draw Me A Star.

“Hitler dictated not only politics and everything, he also dictated art,” he told NPR in 2011.

https://lithub.com/draw-me-a-controversy-on-the-banning-of-beloved-childrens-book-author-eric-carle/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Lit%20Hub%20Daily:%20March%2010%2C%202025&utm_term=lithub_master_list

Draw Me a Controversy: On the Banning of Beloved Children’s Book Author Eric Carle

Spend any time scanning a list of banned books and you’ll find some head-scratchers: picture books challenged for including seemingly gay characters in the background, or describing a difficult mom


Literary Hub

@GottaLaff

From yesterday's #LitHub article about the banning of EricCarle's Draw Me A Star.

“Hitler dictated not only politics and everything, he also dictated art,” he told NPR in 2011.

https://lithub.com/draw-me-a-controversy-on-the-banning-of-beloved-childrens-book-author-eric-carle/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Lit%20Hub%20Daily:%20March%2010%2C%202025&utm_term=lithub_master_list

Draw Me a Controversy: On the Banning of Beloved Children’s Book Author Eric Carle

Spend any time scanning a list of banned books and you’ll find some head-scratchers: picture books challenged for including seemingly gay characters in the background, or describing a difficult mom


Literary Hub