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News, Notes, Talk

See you (and Marlon James and Susan Choi) at the Brooklyn Book Festival.

If you’re going to be in Brooklyn on September 22nd, I highly recommend you make your way to the Brooklyn Book Festival. If you’re not going to be in Brooklyn on September 22nd, I highly recommend you change your plans. Read more >

By Katie Yee

PEN calls on Australia to resettle Behrouz Boochani

On International Refugee Day, PEN International is issuing a call for action in the case of Behrouz Boochani, a Kurdish Iranian journalist currently detained on Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island. Boochani fled his native country of Iran in 2013 after Read more >

By Corinne Segal

What Is the Grass: Walt Whitman in My Life">

What Is the Grass: Walt Whitman in My Life">EXCLUSIVE COVER REVEAL: Mark Doty's What Is the Grass: Walt Whitman in My Life

Best-selling memoirist, and National Book Award-winning poet Mark Doty has a new book forthcoming on April 14th, 2020, from W. W. Norton—a blend of biography, criticism, and memoir that explores Doty’s personal relationship to Walt Whitman. Here’s the cover, designed What Is the Grass: Walt Whitman in My Life">Read more >

By Emily Temple

Congratulations to Joy Harjo, the first Native American U.S. Poet Laureate!

Joy Harjo has been named the 23rd U.S. Poet Laureate, becoming the first Native American, and the first Oklahoman, to hold the position. Harjo is a member of the Muscogee Creek Nation, and lives in Tulsa. She is the author Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

Congratulations to Elizabeth Acevedo, the first writer of color to win the Carnegie medal!

Since 1936, the Carnegie medal has celebrated excellence in children’s literature. Past recipients include the likes of C.S. Lewis and Neil Gaiman. And now, for the first time in 83 years, a writer of color has won the UK’s most Read more >

By Katie Yee

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

Everyone on Book Twitter is recommending their favorite short story collections

Do you love short stories? Reading ’em, writing ’em, defending ’em against those who would dare dismiss them as a lesser literary form. You do? Well, good news! It would appear that you are very much not alone. It’s been Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

Rob Spillman with greetings from an 1,800-mile, poetry-fueled road trip.

The 1,800-mile Poetry to the People Tour is off to a rollicking start, giving out books to underserved communities between Brooklyn and New Orleans via House of SpeakEasy‘s mobile book truck. After a late-night packing party at Pioneer Works on Read more >

By Rob Spillman

The Hunger Games next year">

The Hunger Games next year">Suzanne Collins is publishing a prequel to The Hunger Games next year

You may have thought the games were over—and well, they are. But today, Scholastic announced that next year, they will publish a prequel to Suzanne Collins’ mega-bestselling Hunger Games series, set 64 years before the events of the first book The Hunger Games next year">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

Ling Ma Wins the 2019 Young Lions Fiction Award (aka the Ethan Hawke one)

Congratulations to Ling Ma, whose 2018 dystopian novel, Severance, took home the 2019 Young Lions Fiction Award at a ceremony at the New York Public Library last night. Established in 2001, the award is a $10,000 prize given each spring to Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

Naomi Wolf's book release is postponed over errors and "new questions"

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt is postponing the publication of Naomi Wolf’s book Outrages: Sex, Censorship and the Criminalization of Love, several weeks after Wolf discovered during an interview with the BBC’s Matthew Sweet that she had misinterpreted some of the foundational Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Lolita">

Lolita">Your weekly deal memo: Melissa Broder, exciting debuts & writers on Lolita

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, Lolita">Read more >

By Emily Temple

Why Neil Gaiman keeps a rubber ball and a Groucho Marx statue in his writing room

Over at Variety, Neil Gaiman has opened the door to his office, which he uses as one of his two main writing spaces (the other is a gazebo in the middle of the woods, naturally). He goes there when he Read more >

By Emily Temple

Nicholas Sparks tried to prevent a "gay club" at the Christian school he founded.

Nicholas Sparks, the bestselling author of a lot of books about white women falling in love with white men, apparently tried to ban an LGBT club (or, in his words, “gay club”) at the Epiphany School, a Christian academy he Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

Five things you should know about the ongoing investigation into Biggie Smalls' murder.

On March 9, 1997, Christopher Wallace—aka Biggie Smalls, The Notorious B.I.G., a man who still holds a claim on the title of greatest rapper of all-time—was shot and killed on the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and South Fairfax Avenue, in Read more >

By Dwyer Murphy

Chelsea Girls was the documentary I wanted to make.">

Chelsea Girls was the documentary I wanted to make.">Eileen Myles: Chelsea Girls was the documentary I wanted to make.

Apart from the fact of trying to figure out if Chelsea Girls is a novel or a memoir or a collection of stories (or whether it’s really even a book at all) I think I mainly want to tell you Chelsea Girls was the documentary I wanted to make.">Read more >

By Eileen Myles

New York Times to bring back political cartoons.">

New York Times to bring back political cartoons.">PEN America calls for the New York Times to bring back political cartoons.

For all the good that it’s done, the New York Times sometimes makes decisions that stoke the anger or disappointment of its readers. The announcement on Monday that the Times‘s international edition will no longer publish daily political cartoons, thus cutting ties with New York Times to bring back political cartoons.">Read more >

By Aaron Robertson

Idaho, nominated by a single library in Bruges, wins €100,000 prize">

Idaho, nominated by a single library in Bruges, wins €100,000 prize">Emily Ruskovich's Idaho, nominated by a single library in Bruges, wins €100,000 prize

Emily Ruskovich has won the 2019 International Dublin Literary Award (formerly known as the IMPAC) for her novel Idaho. The award comes with €100,000, making it world’s largest prize for a single novel published in English. The books on the longlist Idaho, nominated by a single library in Bruges, wins €100,000 prize">Read more >

By Emily Temple

Twitter apparently suspended a journalist's social media account over this book cover.

Journalist David Neiwert said Tuesday that Twitter has suspended his account for displaying a cover image from his book Alt-America: The Rise of the Radical Right in the Age of Trump, which Verso Books published in 2017. Here’s the image: Read more >

By Corinne Segal