Domain | Rank | Visitors | Earning per month | Valuation |
bookriot.com | 25611 | 66,247 | 8,009$ | 240270$ |
bookshop.org | 17743 | 30,476 | 10,203$ | 306090$ |
lareviewofbooks.org | 170703 | 14,411 | 1,474$ | 44220$ |
theparisreview.org | 109940 | 16,751 | 2,181$ | 65430$ |
electricliterature.com | 178130 | 12,026 | 1,342$ | 40260$ |
bookbub.com | 21709 | 84,004 | 21,094$ | 632820$ |
readbrightly.com | 153503 | 10,469 | 1,558$ | 46740$ |
reedsy.com | 9058 | 41,471 | 10,221$ | 306630$ |
Moz Backlinks Count | 168075 |
Moz Page Rank | 5 |
Domain Authority (DA) | 68.0 |
Page Authority (PA) | 55.0 |
Country | Rank | Pct |
---|
Country Name | United States |
Country Rank | 9138 2544 |
Daily unique visits | 66,909 |
Daily Page Views | 86,982 |
Income Per Day | 8,089 USD |
Lithub.com valuation | 242670 |
No | Text |
1 | Lit hub Radio |
2 | to the Lithub Daily |
3 | Literary Hub |
No | Text |
1 | How Long Can the Heart Go On Breaking? Three Poems of Gun Violence in America |
2 | “Warnings Imply You Have a Choice.” Rebecca Solnit in Conversation with Margaret Atwood |
3 | The Creative Rebellion of Black Liberated Life: A Reading List for Juneteenth |
4 | The Ultimate Summer 2022 Reading List |
5 | Gothics, Whodunnits, Psychologicals, Historicals, and More: 19 Young Adult Reads for the Summer |
6 | All Tomorrow’s Fables: How Do We Write About This Vanishing World? |
7 | Our 15 Favorite Summery Novels for Summer Reading |
8 | 29 Works of Nonfiction You Need to Read This Summer |
9 | 9 Short Story Collections You Need to Read This Summer |
10 | 35 Novels You Need to Read This Summer |
11 | The Literary Film and TV You Need to Stream in June |
12 | Bill McKibben Reckons with the Glorified American History of His Boyhood |
13 | Frances Ha is All Grown Up |
14 | How (And Why) Primo Levi’s Work Was Once Rejected |
15 | Why Elif Batuman’s Been Thinking About “Compulsive Heterosexuality” |
16 | Dear American Gun Owner: When is Enough? |
17 | On the Ball: In Memory of Roger Angell, 1920-2022 |
18 | How Leonardo Da Vinci Became the Ultimate Renaissance Man |
19 | The Spirit of Ukrainian Resistance: Five Poems by Marjana Savka |
20 | What It Means to Anthologize the Literature of Abortion |
21 | A Shakespearean Study Guide for The Northman |
22 | The Literary Film and TV You Need to Stream in May |
23 | What Julia—HBO’s New Julia Child Series—Gets Terribly Wrong About Legendary Editor Judith Jones |
24 | “Spring’s begun dividing her storks and cranes among us.” New Poetry from Ukraine by Natalia Beltchenko |
25 | Corrupt Russian Oligarchs Trying to Destroy You? Better Call John Moscow |
26 | Hope for Planet Earth: The Citizen’s Guide to Climate Change |
27 | Edward Hirsch on Locating the Roots of the American Poetry Tradition |
28 | How Did Shakespeare Kill (And Heal) His Characters? |
29 | Samantha Hunt on the Wild Delirium of Loving Language |
30 | Putin’s Attack on Ukraine is an Attack on Its Language: Poetry by Kateryna Kalytko |
31 | Writer on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown: The Time Philip Roth Lied to Me |
32 | Douglas Stuart on the Defiant Spirit of Glasgow’s Doocots, Private Pigeon Lofts on Public Land |
33 | The Literary Film and TV You Need to Stream in April |
34 | “In Moderation and Without Worry.” On Jane Austen’s Use of Food As Character |
35 | For Megan Mayhew Bergman, When It Comes to Showing Love, It’s All About Southern Cooking |
36 | “War shortens the distance from person to person, from birth to death.” New Work by Ukrainian Poet Halyna Kruk |
37 | Why We Should Read About the Soviet Past In Order to Understand Ukraine Now |
38 | How Ukrainian Writers Are Contributing to the War Effort |
39 | “You’ve got to live somewhere you aren’t afraid to die.” Contemporary Ukrainian Poetry From Kharkiv |
40 | “When? Where? How?” Margaret Atwood Considers the Burning Questions of the Writing Life |
41 | Ilya Kaminsky on Ukrainian, Russian, and the Language of War |
42 | Ulysses Turns 100! |
43 | The Order of Things: Jennifer Croft on Translating Olga Tokarczuk |
44 | 20 Famous Writers on Being Rejected |
45 | News, Notes, Talk |
46 | Daily Fiction |
47 | "The Taker" |
48 | After the Lights Go Out |
49 | Driving Lessons |
No | Text |
1 | Words of Hope, and a Defense of John Muir: Kim Stanley Robinson on His Love of the Sierra Nevadas |
2 | They Say It Only Takes One: My Year of Trying to Get an Agent, and Get Pregnant |
3 | Why Films Around the World Are Turning to Time Travel to Explore Mothers and Daughters |
4 | How Myth and Poetry Helped Us Unlock the Mysteries of Photosynthesis |
5 | Of Wazhazhe Land and Language: The Ongoing Project of Ancestral Work |
6 | The Oddest of Organs: A Brief History of the Tongue |
7 | A story by Caitlin Macy |
8 | From John Vercher's new novel |
9 | New from Deep Vellum |
10 | Rave |
11 | Positive |
12 | Mixed |
13 | Pan |
14 | The Pervasive Problem—and Far-Reaching Impact—of Tree Poaching |
15 | What It Was Like on a Cruise Ship the Night Before COVID Shut the World Down |
16 | Not Great at Comebacks? Write a Picture Book |
17 | “Your Character Has to Fail in Telling Their Story.” A Conversation with William Pei Shih |
18 | Aria Song Reads William Pei Shih’s “Happy Family,” a Story of a Chinatown Childhood |
19 | The Best Reviewed Books of the Week |
20 | 5 Reviews You Need to Read This Week |
21 | The Month's Best Debut Crime Novels: June 2022 |
22 | In Defense of Unsympathetic Protagonists |
No | Text |
1 | Poetry by Alissa Quart and Rodrigo Toscano |
2 | Celebrating 40 Years of Orion Magazine |
3 | Kris Manjapra on Ross Gay, Alice Walker, Ralph Ellison, and More |
4 | Math + Books = ??? |
5 | Daegan Miller on The World As We Knew It and New Kinds of Nature Writing |
6 | This Year and Every Year, As Recommended by Lit Hub Staff |
7 | Part Three of Lit Hub's Summer Preview |
8 | Part Two of Lit Hub’s Summer Preview |
9 | Part One of Lit Hub's Summer Preview |
10 | Featuring George Saunders, a Queer Pride and Prejudice, and More |
11 | On the Myths and Truths of the American Revolution |
12 | Olivia Rutigliano on the Greta Gerwig Coming-of-Age Comedy Ten Years Later |
13 | Marco Belpoliti on Collective Memory and Publishing in Post-War Italy |
14 | In Conversation with Maris Kreizman on The Maris Review Podcast |
15 | Brenda Hillman on the Work of Keeping Rage and Sorrow Alive |
16 | Michael Lindgren on One of the All-Time Greats |
17 | Eden Collinsworth on the Intellectual and Artistic Development of One of History’s Greatest Geniuses |
18 | “As if god’s optics weren’t aiming straight for your heart.” |
19 | Annie Finch, Editor of Choice Words: Writers on Abortion, in Conversation with Some Contributors |
20 | Saxo and Shakespeare, Masculine Fantasies, and Racist Fictions in Robert Eggers’s New Blockbuster |
21 | From True Crime to Giant Snakes, Something for Everyone |
22 | Sara Franklin on the Stark Boundaries Between Myth and Reality |
23 | Translated by Amelia Glaser and Yuliya Ilchuk |
24 | Bill Browder on What Happens When You Name and Shame the Bad Guys |
25 | Because the Case for Hope—and the Need for Change—Has Never Been More Urgent |
26 | Poetry as Protest, Lament, and Call to Hope |
27 | Kathryn Harkup on the Many Ways To Live and Die on the Elizabethan Stage |
28 | “Being a human is extraordinary.” |
29 | “Defend yourself to your last breath—and whatever you do / don’t let them near you.” |
30 | Barbara Shulgasser-Parker Illuminates the Perverse Side to the Famed Writer |
31 | Seeking Unclaimed Space on the Edges of the City's Council Housing |
32 | It's a Gritty Month on the Small Screen |
33 | Robert Tuesday Anderson Recommends a Little “Chawton Cottage Plum Pudding” While You Read |
34 | The Author of How Strange a Season Shares Her Great-Grandmother’s Cake Recipe |
35 | Sofi Oksanen Recommends Books With an Eastern European Perspective |
36 | Kate Tsurkan Reports from Chernivtsi |
37 | Read Four Poems by Serhiy Zhadan, Newly Translated by Amelia Glaser and Yuliya Ilchuk |
38 | “Failed again to find recipe box. Used this as an excuse for not working on overdue bird piece.” |
39 | “How can one speak about, write about, war?” |
40 | Celebrating a Modernist Classic |
41 | What It Took to Render The Books of Jacob Into English |
42 | "The blizzard doesn't last forever; it just seems so." |