Today in Bookish and Literary History, July 19
1994 Empress by Evelyn McCune | United States | 500 |
2005 No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy | United States | 309 | πππππ
2011 BioShock: Rapture by John Shirley | United States / United Kingdom | 444 |
2012 Before I Met You by Lisa Jewell | United Kingdom | 458 |
2022 The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia | MX/CA | 306 | ππππ
2022 After We Were Stolen by Brooke Beyfuss | United States | 388 |
2022 Things We Do in the Dark by Jennifer Hillier | Canada / United States | 352 | ππ
2022 This Place of Wonder by Barbara O'Neal | United States | 316 |
π‘ Did you know?
⭕ Cormac McCarthy originally drafted No Country for Old Men as a screenplay before reshaping it into his stark, instantly iconic neo-Western masterpiece that explores destiny, morality, and systemic violence along the Texas-Mexico border. His characteristically sparse, unpunctuated prose stripped the traditional American Western myth down to a raw, philosophical investigation into human malice and inevitability.
⭕ Silvia Moreno-Garcia in The Daughter of Doctor Moreau meticulously incorporated the historical context of the Caste War of YucatΓ‘n (H.G. Wells) to give the speculative elements of her science fiction remix a grounded, historical depth.
“Today in History (July),” on Fable.
https://fable.co/list/e57c57be-7d9f-49bc-bf34-ba6cab34f191/share

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