In 2019, Literary Hub launched their new blog, The Hub, alongside LitHub Radio, a "network of bookish podcasts featuring some established favorites of the genre along with a new show or two".[8] They also maintain a website for crime, mystery and thriller literature called CrimeReads.[9]
On October 22, 2019, Literary Hub announced a partnership with The Podglomerate, launching Storybound, a new podcast created and hosted by Jude Brewer, exploring "everything from family life to friendship, relationships to histories, and how everything in life can be impacted by the power of a good story."[10]
Book Marks is an American review-aggregation website for books, launched by Literary Hub in June 2016.[11][12][13] The service aggregates reviews from approximately 70 sources, including newspapers, magazines, and websites, and averages them into a score:[11][14] "rave", "positive", "mixed", or "pan".
CrimeReads
CrimeReads is a daily website dedicated to crime, mystery, and thrillers.[15] It launched in 2018 as a channel of Literary Hub,[16] with Dwyer Murphy and Molly Odintz as editors.[17]
CrimeReads publishes essays, lists, and other pieces about literature, film, television, radio/podcasts, and theater, as well as personal essays and original true crime research.
In 2024, Literary Hub came under criticism for publishing an open letter denouncing PEN America’s response to the Israel-Hamas war. The letter, signed by authors such as Naomi Klein and Michelle Alexander, accused PEN of failing to support Palestinian writers.[19] Former New York Times Book Review editor Pamela Paul described the site as “the de facto clearinghouse for pro-Palestinian literary-world sentiment,” in her op-ed Free Speech, PEN America.[20]Publishers Weekly reported that Literary Hub editors responded with humor, joking about printing tote bags with the “clearinghouse” label.[21]