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The Hub

News, Notes, Talk

Edwidge Danticat! Rachel Kushner! Danzy Senna! 27 new books out today.

What a start to September! It’s a new month and new season alike, and to usher it in, you’ll find a veritable cornucopia of new books to consider adding to your lists. Below, you’ll find no less than twenty-seven options Read more >

By Gabrielle Bellot

Stanford’s writing program is firing their lecturers and gutting the department.

There have been some grim and abrupt firings at Stanford’s creative writing program recently, threatening to upend the writing institution founded in 1946 by Wallace Stegner. The firings are a blow not just to the individuals who have been reshuffled Read more >

By James Folta

Seven literary(ish) Substacks you should subscribe to, stat.

Have you heard the news? Critics and culture writers who miss The People’s Twitter (TM) have been flocking to Substack in search of communal pastures. Jami Attenberg’s popular #1000wordsofsummer project first appeared on the platform, as an offshoot of her Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Zadie Smith! Jesmyn Ward! Ben Lerner! Naomi Klein! 26 books out in paperback this September.

September is here! It’s still a surprise to me that the fall is here already. But what should come as no surprise is that with a new month before us, there’s a veritable bounty of new books to look forward Read more >

By Gabrielle Bellot

Here are the finalists for the 2024 Kirkus Prize.

The Kirkus Prize, one of the richest annual literary awards in the world, has announced its list of finalists for 2024. The award is given to three titles that received a starred review from Kirkus on publication. A panel of Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Vanity Fair Diaries. ">

Vanity Fair Diaries. ">The spiciest takeaways from Tina Brown’s Vanity Fair Diaries.

Tina Brown’s The Vanity Fair Diaries is catnip for a certain kind of reader. This gossipy chronicle describes the infamous editor’s rise to power during the mid-80s glory days of Condé Nast. There are Manhattan power lunches and cocktails with  Vanity Fair Diaries. ">Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Isherwood! Wrestling! Librarians vs. book-banners! 13 new books out today.

It’s nearing the end of August, and, with it, the end of summer. It’s a little hard to believe, at least for me; it feels like it all breezed by so quickly. Nevertheless, as we prepare to move from one Read more >

By Gabrielle Bellot

An Italian robbery was averted thanks to a good book.

This piece has been updated to include a note from a helpful, Italian-speaking reader. Thanks for writing in! I have been distracted by books before. I’ve missed plenty of subway stops because I’ve been reading, I’ve been left behind at Read more >

By James Folta

J.D. Salinger designed his iconic rainbow corner cover himself.

Image from The J.D. Salinger Literary Trust, photographed by Vincent Tullo for The New York Times. I hadn’t considered the famously spare J.D. Salinger rainbow cover in a long time, but this post by writer Austin Adams came across my Read more >

By James Folta

Roberto Bolaño’s bank heist plan involves five poets.

If you were putting together a heist crew, how many poets would you include? If you’re Roberto Bolaño, it’s all poets; no getaway drivers, no safecrackers, no wisecracking tech experts. Just poets. The writer and poet Alina Stefanescu shared a Read more >

By James Folta

Here’s the winner of the 2024 Helen & Kurt Wolff Translator’s Prize.

Today, the Goethe-Institut announced the winner of this year’s Helen & Kurt Wolff Translator’s Prize, which every year celebrates “an outstanding literary translation” from German to English. The 2024 recipient is Jon Cho-Polizzi, translator of Max Czollek’s De-Integrate: A Jewish Read more >

By Literary Hub

Feast your eyes on these beautiful bygone magazine covers.

Print is dead, long live print. We’re either eulogizing the industry or trying to reboot it. Either way, many in the literary establishment still seem to be obsessed with pages, rustling softly between our fingers. Say what you will about the Read more >

By Brittany Allen

The pros and cons of dating a writer.

Archaeologists estimate that humans invented writing around 3200 B.C.E. Archaeologists also estimate that soon after, around 3190 B.C.E., humans began wondering if it’s a bad idea to date a writer. “Should I ask out Ninimma? Even though she’s a cuneiform Read more >

By James Folta

Never get stranded without a novel again with this map of 6,000 bookstores.

I’m happy to report that the internet has been redeemed for another day. I recently came across this very impressive and carefully curated map of bookstores on www.iheartbookstores.com, a simple and very useful site: a searchable, scrollable, and sortable map Read more >

By James Folta

A new literary start-up wants reading to be sexier.

Though the big houses keep a-mergin’, the publishing wheel keeps on turnin’. In this case, that wheel is a romance media company. Romancelandia, meet 831 stories. Erica Cerulo and Claire Mazur are the minds behind the new company, whose title Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Danez Smith! Audre Lorde! Kwame Dawes! 27 new books out today.

It’s another Tuesday in August, and I come bearing tidings of new things to come. Below, you’ll find no less than twenty-seven now books to consider in fiction, poetry, and nonfiction, with a remarkable range of material. There’s new poetry Read more >

By Gabrielle Bellot

Can the literary festival survive without corporate sponsorship?

It’s been a rough year for the literary festival. Sparked by a campaign from Fossil Free Books (FFB), nine festivals that previously relied on support from the Baillie Gifford Foundation dropped or lost that company’s sponsorship after the firm failed Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Good media news! The Onion is back in print.

Beloved comedy publication The Onion has started back up with a paper-and-ink print edition for the first time in over ten years. As announced on the comedy institution’s website and in a story in The New York Times, The Onion Read more >

By James Folta

The coolest bookstore bars in America.

The bookstore bar aspires to combine two beloved things: wine and stacks. Though people have been pairing vittles and pages as long as either have existed, the retail trend has taken off in recent years. As Melissa Kravitz Hoeffner reported Read more >

By Brittany Allen

A Florida college shamefully tossed hundreds of LGBTQ+ books in a dumpster.

Photo by Steven Walker One of the few places where you don’t want to see a huge stack of books is in a dumpster, but this is exactly what Floridians found yesterday on the campus of New College of Florida Read more >

By James Folta