LibraryAmerica Profile Banner
Library of America Profile
Library of America

@LibraryAmerica

Followers
14K
Following
3K
Media
2K
Statuses
10K

Nonprofit publisher dedicated to preserving America's best and most significant writing. Follow us: https://t.co/jtoOIqxBKM

New York, NY
Joined July 2009
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
Follow LOA at these links: https://t.co/fafrYyuPm7
4
0
7
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
In this excerpt from Black Writers of the Founding Era, out this week from LOA, read Belinda Sutton’s petition to the Massachusetts legislature requesting a portion of the estate of the exiled Loyalist who had enslaved her for fifty years. https://t.co/l4HhtpVxlE
0
2
7
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
Playwright George S. Kaufman, who wrote musicals for the Marx Brothers, won two Pulitzers and a Tony, and served as the (visual) inspiration for the title character of the Coen Brother’s film Barton Fink, was born #OTD in 1889. Read his Broadway comedies: https://t.co/QO5sxQ6lkP
1
3
16
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
On our website, @nicolerudick discusses SF visionary Joanna Russ’s political awakening. “[I]n science fiction, she found a means to express the gap between the reality of the world around her and a desire to change that reality.”
Tweet card summary image
loa.org
By Nicole Rudick In January 1969, thirty-two-year-old Joanna Russ attended a four-day conference on “Women Today,” held at Cornell University’s College of Human Ecology. The meeting was organized by...
0
1
6
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
In “Chasing Bright Medusas,” a new biography of Willa Cather out this week, Benjamin Taylor offers a “crisp sketch of Cather’s life—a portrait, as she described her vision for one of her own novels, ‘like a thin miniature painted on ivory.’” Via @nytimes:
Tweet card summary image
nytimes.com
“Chasing Bright Medusas,” a new biography by Benjamin Taylor, aims not to uncover new facts but to provide a concise introduction to the novelist.
0
0
5
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, the nation’s first frame of government, was finalized by the Second Continental Congress #OTD in 1777. Not included: a president, executive agencies, a judiciary, or a tax base. Original parchment pages:
Tweet card summary image
archives.gov
EnlargeDownload Link Citation: Articles of Confederation; 3/1/1781; Miscellaneous Papers of the Continental Congress, 1774 - 1789; Records of the Continental and Confederation Congresses and the
0
2
4
@Gilder_Lehrman
The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
2 years
"Black Writers of the Founding Era" is now on sale everywhere! Explore this new anthology edited by James G. Basker, President & CEO of @Gilder_Lehrman, and Nicole Seary, Senior Editor & Director of Fellowship Programs at @Gilder_Lehrman. https://t.co/1uTIiJTj9F @LibraryAmerica
0
5
10
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
In this @guardian interview, @TheBookerPrizes shortlisted author @J_Escoffery cites the influence of Langston Hughes, Nella Larsen, and James Baldwin. Just don’t ask him to read Flannery O’Connor’s A Good Man Is Hard to Find again.
Tweet card summary image
theguardian.com
The Booker-shortlisted US author on a life-changing vampire epic and inspiring writing about race
0
0
3
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
Collected works, complete fiction, essential anthologies: immerse yourself in American literature during our annual boxed set sale! Visit https://t.co/Nf2cmKHTLd to browse the full catalog. 2-book sets: $48.00 3-book sets: $68.00 4-book sets: $88.00
2
2
3
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
Black Writers of the Founding Era—the most expansive anthology of its kind ever assembled—is on sale today! Explore Black experience in the decades of the American Revolution in more than 120 pieces, from poems to petitions. https://t.co/JyZ6LqmhAP @agordonreed @JamesGBasker
0
2
10
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
In @theadvocatebr, @Danny_Heitman on the second life of Charles Portis’s “The Dog of the South.” “Sales were slow when the book came out in 1979, but five years later, the staff and management of Madison Avenue bookshop in New York went crazy for it.”
Tweet card summary image
theadvocate.com
You might recall that I offered a few words here recently about Charles Portis, who’s best known for writing “True Grit,” a 1968 novel about a precocious girl in the
0
1
8
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
On our website, documentarian Arwen Curry (@worldsofukl) discusses her decade-long filmmaking voyage with @ursulakleguin and her new series of shorts, The Journey That Matters, which debuted on @lithub his fall. “She’s a moral and an intellectual giant.”
0
16
47
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
Vera Caspary, whose noir classic Laura appears in LOA’s Women Crime Writers volume (edited by @sarahw) and was adapted into a great movie starring Gene Tierney, was born #OTD in 1899. Learn more about the film that made her famous:
0
2
1
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
This #VeteransDay, LOA invites you to read articles by and about veterans on our website: “Language as a weapon against the seemingly incomprehensible”: https://t.co/zJenE318BD Recommended books by veterans: https://t.co/jyGxqoHfut WWII reporting:
Tweet card summary image
loa.org
Launched this fall, with funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Library of America’s World War I and America program is a two-year initiative that aims, in part, to bring U.S....
0
0
2
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
“I will come to a time in my backwards trip when November eleventh, accidentally my birthday, was a sacred day called Armistice Day.” Kurt Vonnegut was born #OTD in 1922. Read his reflections on Veterans Days and his own wartime experience:
Tweet card summary image
loa.org
This post was originally published on 11/11/2010. A post on Daily Kos cites the Veterans for Peace Armistice Day Message and recalls the shift in focus that occurred in 1954, when Armistice Day was...
0
0
4
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
William Faulkner won the 1949 Nobel Prize #OTD for “his powerful and artistically unique contribution to the modern American novel.” In his acceptance speech, he said the award was not made to him as a man but rather to “a life’s work in the agony and sweat of the human spirit.”
1
8
24
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
How to Come Alive with Norman Mailer, a new documentary on the towering and polarizing author directed by @JZimbalist, premieres today as part of @DOCNYCfest at @IFC. See details and get tickets here:
Tweet card summary image
docnyc.net
WORLD PREMIERE Norman Mailer, a towering figure in American literature, had a life that was certainly stranger than fiction. From his formative years
0
0
0
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
Joanna Russ: Novels & Stories, edited by @nicolerudick, is an @nytimes recommendation! “A new collection showcases the essential works of Russ, a pioneer of feminist science fiction whose bold female characters swashbuckled across the multiverse.”
Tweet card summary image
nytimes.com
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
0
0
4
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
John A. Williams’s explosive novel linking the Black literary expat scene, Cold War paranoia, and the insidiousness of racism is the focus of last night’s LOA LIVE talk with Merve Emre, Adam Bradley, and William Maxwell. Rediscover The Man Who Cried I Am:
Tweet card summary image
loa.org
LOA LIVE Wednesday, November 8—The expatriate literary scene in Paris that flourished around Richard Wright and James Baldwin produced brilliant writing, intellectual ferment, and bitter rivalries—...
0
1
3
@LibraryAmerica
Library of America
2 years
In @The_Rumpus, @_michaelbarron on DeLillo’s literary winning streak. “It is unusual for the best-known works of a writer’s oeuvre to be contained entirely in an unbroken run, but DeLillo was an autodidact, learning how to be a novelist while on the job.”
Tweet card summary image
therumpus.net
In 1979, at the age of forty-two, the distinctly American writer Don DeLillo made a change that would have a profound impact on his work: he left the
0
1
8