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The Hub

News, Notes, Talk

What to do about that embarrassing Deathly Hallows tattoo.

A meme’s going around. I saw it first on FKA Twitter: đź’€ pic.twitter.com/B5PrCZMml9 — THE lusty argonian maid (@lindawg) September 1, 2024 Though there’s no data to support this “discovery,” the internet was quick to take it on its face. Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Here’s the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Poetry.

Today, the National Book Foundation announced the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Poetry. The ten titles were selected from a pool of 299 books submitted for consideration by their publishers. This year’s judges for Poetry are Richard Blanco Read more >

By Literary Hub

A hip-hop syllabus—for fans, by fans.

Questlove, best known as one of the more famous drummers to ever live and co-founder of The Roots, released a memoir this month called Hip-Hop is History. Co-written with his regular collaborator, Ben Greenman, this personal narrative builds on a Read more >

By Brittany Allen

There was no better reader than James Earl Jones.

Photo by Howard Smith-Imagn Images, from SI.com James Earl Jones died on Monday at the age of 93, after a career filled with iconic performances, including in Star Wars, The Lion King, Roots, The Great White Hope, and a movie Read more >

By James Folta

Here’s the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Translated Literature.

Today, the National Book Foundation announced the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Translated Literature. The ten titles were selected from a pool of 141 books submitted for consideration by their publishers. This year’s judges for Translated Literature are Read more >

By Literary Hub

The Giller Prize has dropped the Scotiabank name but not the money.

Last week, amid ongoing controversy over its primary sponsor’s links to Israeli arms manufacturer Elbit Systems, the embattled Giller Foundation quietly dropped ‘Scotiabank’ from the title of its flagship literary award. From here on out, the Scotiabank Giller Prize (Canada’s Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

Here’s the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature.

Today, the National Book Foundation announced the longlist for the 2024 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature. The ten titles were selected from a pool of 333 books submitted for consideration by their publishers. This year’s judges for Young People’s Read more >

By Literary Hub

Elizabeth Strout! Jerald Walker! Seamus Heaney’s letters! 28 new books out today.

It’s another Tuesday in September, and the wheel of the year continues to turn quickly, so quickly that I am still vaguely expecting it to be the end of August. When time seems to move too fast, it might be Read more >

By Gabrielle Bellot

Here's the shortlist for the 2024 British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding.

Today, the British Academy announced the 2024 shortlist for the British Academy Book Prize for Global Cultural Understanding. The international prize, now in its 12th year, celebrates “groundbreaking works of non-fiction that have made an outstanding contribution to the public Read more >

By Literary Hub

American universities continue to punish pro-Palestinian speech.

This back-to-school season brings bad tidings for dissent. Here in the U.S., academic institutions continue to restrict, thwart, and punish pro-Palestinian speech from students, employees, and teachers alike. After coming under fire for their treatment of campus protesters last term, Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Here's the shortlist for the 2024 American Library in Paris Book Award.

Literary Hub is pleased to announce the shortlist for the 12th annual American Library in Paris Award, which recognizes titles originally published in English “that best realizes new and intellectually significant ideas about France, the French people, or encounters with Read more >

By Literary Hub

Was Françoise Sagan the original brat?

I know, I know. Leaves are turning. Charli’s called it. It’s been fun, but it would seem we’re just about done with this nebulous wink of an aesthetic category. But before we shift wholeheartedly into Demure Autumn, I’d like to Read more >

By Brittany Allen

The Internet Archive lost their latest appeal. Here's what that means for you.

As Publishers Weekly reported this week, the Internet Archive, nonprofit home to a robust digital library, has lost its latest appeal in a case brought by publishers. A panel from New York’s Second Circuit “has unanimously affirmed a March 2023 Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Little Free Library has a new map to help places hit hardest by book bans.

Little Free Library has debuted a new interactive map on its website that charts the locations of Little Free Libraries across the United States, alongside the number of book bans that are in place in each state. The organization built Read more >

By James Folta

Here’s the shortlist for the 2024 Cundill History Prize.

Today, McGill University announced the shortlist for the 2024 Cundill History Prize, honoring books that “speak to major issues in the present day.” The winner, judged on “historical scholarship, originality, literary quality and diverse appeal,” will be announced next month, Read more >

By Literary Hub

Spammy political fundraising texts from fictional characters.

Election season is in full swing, and if your phone is anything like mine, you’re constantly getting robotic, automated text messages from candidates. No matter how many times you reply “stop” or throw your phone across the room, they just Read more >

By James Folta

Beetlejuice (Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice...).">

Beetlejuice (Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice...).">On the weird literary origins of Beetlejuice (Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice...).

Beetlejuice was one of the weirder things to happen to 1988, an already weird year. Who but the mad king Tim Burton could have foreseen that throwing Harry Belafonte’s “Banana Boat,” Louise Bourgeois-derivative sculpture, peak Goth Winona, and a roided Beetlejuice (Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice...).">Read more >

By Brittany Allen

NaNoWriMo defends writing with AI and pisses off the whole internet.

NaNoWriMo, the tongue-twister acronym for National Novel Writing Month, was in the hot seat on social media this weekend for their support of AI writing. The organization facilitates a community of people who sprint to finish a manuscript over the Read more >

By James Folta

Nightbitch trailer is here, and it's even more deranged than you expected.">

Nightbitch trailer is here, and it's even more deranged than you expected.">The Nightbitch trailer is here, and it's even more deranged than you expected.

There’s mud, there’s blood, there’s a woman being impolite in public: the first trailer for Nightbitch is live. And hungry. Marielle Heller (Can You Ever Forgive Me?), who directs the Annapurna Pictures adaptation of Rachel Yoder’s hit 2021 novel Nightbitch—in which, Nightbitch trailer is here, and it's even more deranged than you expected.">Read more >

By Emily Temple

The seven kinds of friendships you find in literature: a taxonomy.

In a 2016 review of Dana Spiotta’s Innocents and Others, the novelist Joshua Cohen boldly declared, “There is no such thing as the Friendship Plot, because while friendship, like marriage, is at least presumably a voluntary estate, it has no Read more >

By Brittany Allen