Litblog

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Litblog (alternate: lit-blog or literary blog) is a blog that focuses primarily on the topic of literature. There is a community of litblogs in the blogosphere whose authors cover a variety of literary topics. Litbloggers may write about fiction, nonfiction, poetry, the publishing industry, literary journals, literary criticism, and more. They may focus on special genres of literature, including science fiction and mystery. Some litbloggers prefer an objective or formal tone, while others are more conversational.

Many litblogs feature reviews of books which may or may not be featured in the mainstream press. Some litblogs feature critiques of reviews in the mainstream press. Interviews with authors are another common feature. Litblogs can also be used as virtual reading groups for focused discussion on a specific piece or pieces of literature, with some litblogs following a particular piece of literature through an entire reading, and others reprinting diaries or letters from authors. Some litblogs are resources for information about the publishing industry, publicity, or writing craft.

Many litblogs have one author, but collaborative blogs have many authors, one of whom may serve as the primary author overseeing contributors.


Bookslut, Laila Lalami, The Literary Saloon, and Maud Newton and are the oldest known surviving literary blogs. Moby Lives is now apparently defunct. Other popular litblogs include The Elegant Variation (US), Bookninja (Canada), Return of the Reluctant (US), Galleycat (US), The Millions (US), Chekhov's Mistress (US),The Reading Experience (US), Rake's Progress (US), Ready Steady Book (UK), The Old Hag (US), The Midnight Bell (UK), Tingle Alley (US), Scribbling Woman (Canada), Grumpy Old Bookman, 2 Blowhards(US), (UK), John Baker's Blog (UK), Conversational Reading (US), Buzzwords, The Book Mine Set (Canada), LitMinds (US), Beatrice (US), Condalmo (US), The Mumpsimus (US), Thumb Drives & Oven Clocks (US), Shaken & Stirred (US), This Space (UK), and Waggish (UK).

Some litblogs are profitable businesses while others are not run for profit. Some authors of litblogs are professional writers, academics, literature enthusiasts or industry professionals. Others are simply people who enjoy writing about books. In the democratic forum of the blogosphere, these groups can interact by reading and commenting on one another's posts.

Increasingly newspapers and magazines are also creating litblogs. Dwight Garner of the New York Times Book Review writes a litblog called Paper Cuts that is hosted by the newspaper. The Guardian allows authors to chime in on books and current publishing gossip at a feature called Comment is Free. Litblogs can also serve as adjuncts to literary journals or organizations, such as Verse magazine, 3:AM Magazine, Spike Magazine, Virginia Quarterly Review, and Poetry Foundation.

Professional critics have litblogs at House of Mirth, About Last Night (blog), Inside Higher Ed, The Dizzies, and more. In addition, the litbloggers from The Elegant Variation, Laila Lalami, The Old Hag, Maud Newton, Return of the Reluctant, Bookslut, Ready Steady Book, The Reading Experience, and Sarah Weinman are a few of the bloggers writing book reviews and criticism for major newspapers and magazines. The National Book Critics Circle has its own litblog called Critical Mass that posts commentary that is very critical of nonprofessional litbloggers.

Some litbloggers, including Laila Lalami of the blog formerly known as Moorish Girl, and Mark Sarvas of The Elegant Variation, are also literary fiction authors. Many published authors have also started blogs. Some of these bloggers are Neil Gaiman, Alison Bechdel, and of course Cory Doctorow of the popular blog Boing Boing. Writers of YA fiction increasingly are blogging as well. Some of these bloggers are Neil Gaiman, Holly Black, Justine Larbalestier, and Scott Westerfeld.

Group litblogs continue to diversify. A group of academics runs a litblog called The Valve. The Litblog Co-op is a group of 20 litbloggers who vote to collectively recommend a book every three months. In the UK, six leading litblogs joined forces to create Britlitblogs.com. There have been blogs devoted to one book, like William T. Vollman's Rising Up and Rising Down, and blogs that have reprinted the entire contents of Samuel Pepys' Diary and Franz Kafka's diary. Today in Letters provided letters and diary entries from each day in literary history.

Edward Champion from Return of the Reluctant has an author interview podcast series called The Bat Segundo Show.

Making Light, John Scalzi, and Miss Snark are written by professionals in the industry who have insights for writers. Flogging the Quill is a litblog about the craft of writing. Book Tour is a litblog creation of Virtual Book Tour founder Kevin Smokler, and Chris Anderson (author of The Long Tail. Buzz, Balls & Hype is devoted to the creation of buzz for writers.

Recently children's literary bloggers have organized together and brought about an entity best known as the Kidlitosphere. These bloggers include professional reviewers, booksellers, librarians, parents, homeschoolers, authors, illustrators, and anyone else concerned in the field. Some blog professionally for the online editions of print journals, like A Fuse #8 Production on School Library Journal and ShelfTalker on Publisher's Weekly. Others do a regular series of interviews and reviews, including Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast, Big A little a, and bookshelves of doom.

The Kidlitosphere has its own literary award it hands out once a year called The Cybils Award. They also meet once a year in October for a yearly conference.

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