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News, Notes, Talk

Chicago's only black woman-owned bookstore is open for business.

Semicolon—a vibrant new bookstore, community space, and gallery for Chicago’s street art scene—opened its doors on Tuesday with a party and mural unveiling. The store is “just one of a handful of woman-owned bookstores in Chicago and currently its only Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

Your weekly book deal memo: Daisy Johnson, Brandon Hobson, Scaachi Koul & more

My personal form of astrology is to anxiously trawl Publishers Marketplace every week. No, wait, hear me out: it’s how I can tell the only future that matters: which books I will be reading a year and a half from now. Also, Read more >

By Emily Temple

Your favorite reads: this week's most clicked-on books at Book Marks.

Hello from Book Marks, Lit Hub’s “rotten tomatoes for books!” How It Works: Every day, our staff scours the most important and active outlets of literary journalism—from established national broadsheets to regional weeklies and alternative litblogs—and logs their book reviews. Each Read more >

By Katie Yee

Olivet Nazarene University fires new teacher for including curse words and a lesbian in his novel

T. J. Martinson’s love of academia and literature came from watching his father teach in the communications department at Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais, Illinois; like everyone else in his family, he went to college there. This spring, when ONU Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Epiphany">

Epiphany">Novelist Rachel Lyon will be the next Editor in Chief of Epiphany

Today, in a press release, the Board of Directors of Epiphany announced that Rachel Lyon, author of Self-Portrait With Boy, founder of the Ditmas Lit Literary Series, and Literary Hub contributor, will be taking over the role of Editor in Chief. Epiphany">Read more >

By Emily Temple

20 young booksellers have just won some of James Patterson's money.

The most prolific man in letters, James Patterson, has bestowed upon 20 UK booksellers the Young Bookseller Special Achievement Award in recognition of their “talent and extraordinary contribution to the bookselling industry.” Bestselling author/philanthropist Patterson (whose has sold somewhere north Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

The dad-rock book tie-in we’ve all been waiting for: a Metallica children’s book.

God, Metallica is getting dangerously close to grandad-rock* (Lars Ulrich is 55), but it’s obviously a very rock and roll thing to keep fathering kids until you die (what’s up Rod Stewart). And look, everyone knows that parenthood does weird Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

Wonder Boys">

Wonder Boys">Remembering Rip Torn's "I . . . am a writer" speech from Wonder Boys

Beloved stage and screen actor, geriatric bank robber, and Norman Mailer hammerer Rip Torn passed away on Tuesday, after a long battle with genteel society. He was 88. There have been many wonderful Torn performances down through the years, from Wonder Boys">Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

Like you, James Patterson thinks Jeffrey Epstein's arrest is "terrific."

James Patterson, a very rich author, is among those glad that billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein has been charged with sex trafficking. Patterson wrote a book about Epstein in 2016 called Filthy Rich: A Powerful Billionaire, the Sex Scandal that Undid Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

You can now bid on Philip Roth's old typewriters and baseball cards (and they're surprisingly cheap)

This summer, Litchfield County Auctions will be auctioning off hundreds of items from the estate of Philip Roth, including furniture, fixtures, loads of Chinese art and artifacts, and rather more sterling silver than you might expect, as found in his Read more >

By Emily Temple

What if you could suddenly understand stories read in seven different languages?

For three nights in Manchester (July 12-14), as many as 300 people will file into a theatre space littered with cables and sound equipment. Seven islands will be placed throughout the audience, hosting seven of the world’s most celebrated authors: Read more >

By Marcia Lynx Qualey

In memory of Michael Seidenberg, owner of Brazenhead Books.

For years, I had been hearing about a secret bookstore on the Upper East Side, run by the owner out of his apartment. I thought that you could show up only in the company of a regular attendee. (I would Read more >

By David Burr Gerrard

Here are some good facts about Barbara Cartland, who wrote 723 novels.

On this day in 1901, Dame Barbara Cartland was born. She lived to 98, and in that time wrote 723 novels (mostly romance), which sold more than 750 million copies combined. She is the Guinness World Record-holder for most books Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

Naomi Wolf responds to continued criticism of her delayed book.

After her book Outrages was indefinitely delayed by its publisher, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, over factual mistakes, Naomi Wolf is moving forward on damage control while responding sharply to some critics. In a May interview with the BBC’s Matthew Sweet, Wolf Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Are there any actual guilty pleasures on this Politico reading list from DC “heavy hitters”?  

Noted politics-as-sport website Politico has put together a collection of bedside-table reading recommendations from 40 “political heavy hitters,” asking them for serious reads and guilty pleasures. First of all, are there any actual guilty pleasures on this list of books Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

Lesley Nneka Arimah has won the 2019 Caine Prize—read her prizewinning story, "Skinned."

Nigerian writer Lesley Nneka Arimah, author of What It Means When a Man Falls from the Sky, has won the massively prestigious 2019 Caine Prize for African Writing for her short story “Skinned,” which was originally published in McSweeney’s Quarterly Read more >

By Emily Temple

New Books Tuesday: Your weekly guide to what’s publishing today, fiction and nonfiction.

Every week, a new crop of great new books hit the shelves. If we could read them all, we would, but since time is finite and so is the human capacity for page-turning, here are a few of the ones Read more >

By Emily Temple

Heat novel is just around the corner...">

Heat novel is just around the corner...">Finally! Michael Mann's Heat novel is just around the corner...

Have you ever sat down on the couch, alone, at 2AM on a Tuesday to re-watch Heat—Michael Mann’s critically-aclaimed cat-and-mouse crime flick about a grizzled LA detective (Al Pacino) on the trail of a crew of bank robbers led by Heat novel is just around the corner...">Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

How many books should you bring on your summer vacation?

This is a question as timeless as it is vexing, particularly if your work life is book-adjacent. Book critic extraordinaire Kate Tuttle claims to have finally pulled it off, citing a 6-to-5 books-to-days ratio (to the shock and admiration of Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

After 4,000 miles and 5,000 book giveaways, Poetry to the People is back home.

On June 28, the Poetry to the People tour wrapped up its 4,000 mile round-trip journey from Brooklyn to New Orleans and back. It was exhausting and exhilarating. There’s nothing like putting a free book into the hands of someone Read more >

By Rob Spillman