📚 The UnAmericans, by Molly Antopol
📚 “Wants,” by Grace Paley
A new way of looking at To Kill a Mockingbird
“I realized that Atticus, as the protagonist [of the stage version of the] story, has to … have a flaw … It turned out that Harper Lee had [already] given him one; it’s just that when we all learned the book, it was taught as a virtue.”
📚 To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
🎭 To Kill a Mockingbird, by Aaron Sorkin
What Richard Pryor’s stand-up can teach writers
“When you take an empathetic perspective on the world, and step into things that don’t have human consciousness, you’re allowed access into moments in a way you never would be otherwise.”
📚 Love and Death in the Sunshine State, by Cutter Wood
🎭 Live on the Sunset Strip, by Richard Pryor
Personal identity is (mostly) performance
“The objects with which we fill our homes play a vital role in how we construct our sense of self.”
📚 An excerpt from Me, Myself, and Why: Searching for the Science of Self, by Jennifer Ouellette
What Zadie Smith taught Roxane Gay: Identity is drag
“I was trying to figure out who I was and what might be possible for me. I was trying to write toward a space where I could reveal my most authentic self to the people who knew me but did not.”
📚 NW, by Zadie Smith
📚 An Untamed State, by Roxane Gay
The Reference Desk
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About us: This week’s newsletter is written by Rosa Inocencio Smith. She’s currently rereading The Princess Bride, by William Goldman.
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