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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

Little Fires Everywhere is your 90s fashion fantasy">

Little Fires Everywhere is your 90s fashion fantasy">The first photo from Little Fires Everywhere is your 90s fashion fantasy

Today, Reese Witherspoon and Kerry Washington released the first photo from the set of Little Fires Everywhere, their adaptation of Celeste Ng’s 2017 bestselling novel, which will premiere on Hulu in 2020—and I have to say that the looks are Little Fires Everywhere is your 90s fashion fantasy">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

Natasha Tynes is suing Rare Bird Books for $13 million over dropped book deal

Natasha Tynes, whose book distribution deal was canceled after she posted, then quickly deleted, a tweet shaming a black D.C. metro employee for eating on the train, is suing her publisher for $13 million. The complaint states that Rare Bird Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Read stories from Lauren Beukes and Nalo Hopkinson in this new ocean-themed anthology

To coincide with World Oceans Day, XPRIZE—which is a nonprofit organization that manages competitions to encourage technological innovation and “radical breakthroughs for the benefit of humanity”—has published Current Futures: A Sci-Fi Ocean Anthology online. The anthology collects the work of Read more >

By Emily Temple

Your weekly book deal memo: Dwyane Wade, Madeleine L'Engle, Jeff VanderMeer & 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

The Edible Woman, to be adapted for television">

The Edible Woman, to be adapted for television">Margaret Atwood's debut novel, The Edible Woman, to be adapted for television

You may think we’ve reached Atwood market-saturation, but turns out Atwood market-saturation just doesn’t exist. Today, Variety reported that the rights to Margaret Atwood’s brilliant 1969 debut novel, The Edible Woman, have been picked up by Entertainment One. The adaptation will The Edible Woman, to be adapted for television">Read more >

By Emily Temple

Congratulations to the 2019 CLMP Firecracker Award Winners!

The Community of Literary Magazines and Presses is an essential nonprofit that tirelessly supports independent literary publishers. Last night at Poets House in New York City, CLMP announced the winners of the fifth annual Firecracker Awards, dedicated to honoring the Read more >

By Katie Yee

WWII historian James Holland selects the five best books about D-Day

To mark the 75th anniversary of of the Normandy landings, renowned British WWII historian James Holland (author of the forthcoming Normandy ’44: D-Day and the Epic 77-Day Battle for France) has compiled a list of the five best books about Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

UK literary darling Damian Barr gets a books TV show (now do America).

Beloved Scots saloniste* and writer Damian Barr (most recently of the novel You Will Be Safe Here) is taking his wildly successful Literary Salon series—which is both a podcast and a live event at London’s posh Savoy Hotel—to the little Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

Three takeaways from Ocean Vuong's wonderful conversation with Alexander Chee.

Having already been welcomed with acclaim from seemingly every corner of the literary world, Ocean Vuong’s novel On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous was officially released on Tuesday as a crowd gathered at Brooklyn’s Books Are Magic to hear him speak. Vuong talked Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Disoriental
 wins the 2019 Albertine Prize for best French novel published in the U.S.">

Disoriental
 wins the 2019 Albertine Prize for best French novel published in the U.S.">Négar Djavadi's Disoriental
 wins the 2019 Albertine Prize for best French novel published in the U.S.

Disoriental, Négar Djavadi’s novel that explores the epic journey of a family over three generations between Teheran and Paris; was named winner of the Albertine Prize 2019, co-presented by the Cultural Services of the French Embassy and Van Cleef & Disoriental
 wins the 2019 Albertine Prize for best French novel published in the U.S.">Read more >

By Kevin Chau

Future president Bill DiBlasio gets ratioed by book Twitter.

I’ll say this for Bill De Blasio mayor of New York City and the most confusing 2020 presidential candidate: his heart was in the right place when he tweeted that Joe Biden’s support of the Hyde Amendment, which would ban Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

Congratulations to Tayari Jones, who just won the Women's Prize for Fiction!

At a ceremony in central London earlier today, Tayari Jones (who beat out Pat Barker, Madeline Miller, Diana Evans, Oyinkan Braithwaite, Anna Burns) was presented with the £30,000 award (and a limited edition bronze figure, the “Bessie”) for her novel, Read more >

By Katie Yee

David Sedaris has 50 fake German notebooks from Japan

My favorite feature at The Strategist is the one where they ask celebrities what things they can’t live without, mostly because a) I’m nosy, and b) I’m always ready to go down an online shopping rabbit hole. Today, the celebrity in Read more >

By Emily Temple

This bookmobile is driving 1,800 miles from New York to Louisiana.

Rob Spillman can admit it: it was his crazy idea. Spillman, one of the founders of story exchange organization Narrative 4, wanted to launch a literary road trip to bring books to communities around the country. “I was going to Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Congratulations to the winners of the 2019 Lambda Literary awards!

Last night, at NYU’s Skirball Center, the winners of the 31st Lambda Literary Awards—the Lammys—were announced. In addition to the 25 book award winners, three other individuals were acknowledged for their work in bringing visibility to LGBTQ voices. Alexander Chee Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

The Idiot will be a film and I feel... nervous.">

The Idiot will be a film and I feel... nervous.">Elif Bautman's The Idiot will be a film and I feel... nervous.

Today, The Cut published a profile of filmmaker Sandi Tan, whose first film, Shirkers (a “cinematic memoir” about the theft of her actual first film by “her director and mentor, a mysterious American man named George”) premiered to great acclaim The Idiot will be a film and I feel... nervous.">Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

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

The Very Hungry Caterpillar almost never happened.">

The Very Hungry Caterpillar almost never happened.">Why The Very Hungry Caterpillar almost never happened.

Happy 50th birthday to The Very Hungry Caterpillar, the absurdly popular, 224-word tale of a caterpillar’s transformation into a butterfly that has sold more than 50 million copies in the U.S. since its publication in 1969. Author Eric Carle envisioned an interactive book The Very Hungry Caterpillar almost never happened.">Read more >

By Corinne Segal