Brian Thill
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brianthill.bsky.social
Brian Thill
@brianthill.bsky.social
Author, WASTE (Bloomsbury) | PhD from UCI | Writer @ The Atlantic, Guardian, Salon &c. | Just finished a novel; now writing a better one
cannot recommend highly enough the recent issue of @bostonreview.bsky.social on “The Responsibility of Intellectuals in the Age of Fascism and Genocide.” Filled with wonderful and urgent work, but I’m particularly drawn to the interview with Cathy J. Cohen: page after page of clear-sighted wisdom.
November 19, 2025 at 4:54 PM
November 6, 2025 at 10:27 PM
children
November 1, 2025 at 12:26 AM
halloween
November 1, 2025 at 12:25 AM
happy
November 1, 2025 at 12:24 AM
October 31, 2025 at 4:12 PM
October 31, 2025 at 4:12 PM
October 31, 2025 at 4:11 PM
October 31, 2025 at 4:11 PM
it can be done
September 16, 2025 at 11:40 PM
Take a good look at the work that Ezra Klein’s “we” does in his thoughts and assumptions. Anyone in 2025 who can say with a straight face that “we are going to have to live here with one another” is either wholly ignorant or complicit. The fundamental question “We who?” never occurs to him. Useless!
September 16, 2025 at 3:55 PM
Book rec #74: THE GOLDEN STATE, by @lydiakiesling.bsky.social. One of the best novels I’ve read about motherhood; a primer on US anti-immigrant fervor and homespun authoritarianism; and the truest depiction yet of the real California of my youth: dust, God, poverty, reactionaries, and rural despair.
September 10, 2025 at 12:06 AM
Book rec #73: BABEL, by @rfkuang.bsky.social. What starts as a historical dark-academia fantasy slowly morphs into an ornate exploration of the relationships between language and empire; the global costs of colonial power; and the eternal debates over the forms that workers’ resistance should take.
August 27, 2025 at 8:31 PM
Book rec #72: LOSE YOUR MOTHER, by Saidiya Hartman. A bracing journey to Ghana in search of the vestiges of ancestral slavery; a meditation on how the present doesn’t obliterate the past but often overwhelms it; a conscious and desperate act of resurrection of vanished ghosts and forgotten lives.
August 21, 2025 at 10:01 PM
August 21, 2025 at 5:44 PM
Every single one of these clowns is the modern-day equivalent of Lady Catherine de Bourgh talking about how great she'd be at piano-playing if only she had ever bothered to learn how to play piano: "If I had ever learnt, I should have been a great proficient." Indeed!
July 15, 2025 at 11:45 PM
Book rec #70-71: TEHANU and THE OTHER WIND, by Ursula K. Le Guin. Le Guin returns us to Earthsea, writing two novels that deepen and enrich the trilogy, with even greater sharpness of prose and greater political and social nuance and subtlety. In place of its great heroes? Two remarkable heroines
July 15, 2025 at 5:48 PM
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July 7, 2025 at 3:59 PM
July 7, 2025 at 3:59 PM
July 7, 2025 at 3:58 PM
Right.

Book rec #69: TALES OF THE DYING EARTH, by Jack Vance. Of all writers of the dying-earth subgenre, Vance somehow managed to blend apocalyptic millennial eschatological angst with lyrical wit, verve, joy, and whimsy; like a cross between Pratchett, M. John Harrison, and Gene Wolfe, somehow.
June 18, 2025 at 11:30 PM