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    C-SPAN is starting a (very “patriotic”) book club.

    Brittany Allen

    August 25, 2025, 12:36pm

    In this surging sea of celebrity book clubs, it’s nice to hear of an established brand wading into public letters. Shakes things up, anyway. Today, that brand is C-SPAN, the cable non-profit best known for bringing daytime television viewers straight into the high-octane halls of Congress.

    This fall, perhaps acting on the suspicion that most of us don’t want to hang out in the Senate these days, C-SPAN will be launching some counter-programming.

    America’s Book Club is “a dynamic new weekly primetime television series…designed to explore the ideas that shaped America’s past, challenge the nation’s present, and inspire our future.”

    Hosted by David M. Rubenstein—lawyer, impresario, and billionaire co-founder of the Carlyle Group—the show will take viewers in and around Washington’s choicest archival sites. About town, C-SPAN will provide “unrivaled access” to founding documents, rare treaties, and other curios from the halls of antiquity. The show itself will center around interviews with impressive literary guests.

    The initial episodes will find best-sellers on location at subject-suitable monuments. Skip Gates, John Grisham, José Andrés, Arthur Brooks, and—alas—Amy Coney Barrett are scheduled to chat around the proverbial fireside at the Library of Congress. Where Walter Isaacson and Stacy Schiff will converse at the National Archives.

    We find a lone reed in David Grann, author of Killers of the Flower Moon. His interview is the only one set to be taped so far at the Folger Shakespeare Library—for what I assume are theatrical reasons.

    Given its slate criss-crossing the political spectrum, we can infer that America’s Book Club is angling to appeal to a wide audience.

    That’s at least in part because the club is an open product of Trump-mandated “America 250” programming. C-SPAN’s “network-wide, multi-platform initiative dedicated to honoring, exploring and celebrating the 250th birthday of the nation” comes in response to the administration’s Orwellian cultural guidelines, as outlined earlier this year in that same spate of executive orders that would neuter the NEA.

    So this American book club has a Pyrrhic quality. After all, it is the beneficiary of a call for semiquincentennial content that comes at the direct expense of less openly patriotic arts programs.

    We may not have individual creative writing grants this year. But we will get a sit-down with some of the best-paid authors in the biz. Okay, okay—I’m being glib. But suffice to say, given the rank and file of the club, let’s hope those fancy guests really take the opportunity to challenge and inspire. Their hosts, and their viewers.

    We’ve at least some reason to hope: America’s Book Club will be produced by several pros, like C-SPAN veteran Peter Slen, and Marie Arana, former editor of The Washington Post Book World and inaugural literary director of the Library of Congress.

    Liked Weapons? Here are 7 books to read next.

    Literary Hub

    August 25, 2025, 9:23am

    We’ve been gushing about Zach Cregger’s new horror flick Weapons in the Lit Hub Slack (“Lit-lack”? “Lhlack”? “Slub”?) The movie, from a sketch comedian turned horror filmmaker, is scary and funny with just enough formal creativity and snappy writing to set it apart—and if you haven’t seen it yet, you should read nothing else and go in as blank as you can.

    But once you have seen it, you’re almost certainly going to want to keep the scary times going, so Drew, James, and McKayla pulled some books off their shelves to keep you in Weapons’s witchy, creepy, funny zone.


    Stephen King, ‘Salem’s Lot

    I’m a sucker for any kind of “A [blank] Comes To Town” horror story—a genre into which Weapons is a sterling entry, iykyk. There are a ton of variations on that theme to be found in literature, but I had to go with the big one of the bunch: ‘Salem’s Lot. It’s one of my all-time favorite King novels and it too features that gripping sense of menace as we watch things go from bad to worse in a small town beset by a recently-arrived supernatural evil. Also, I do wonder how Barlow and Gladys might get along. –Drew Broussard, Podcasts Editor

    Sam Rebelein, Galloway’s Gospel

    It’s not out for a couple more weeks, but Rebelein’s latest return to Renfield County (his fictional horrorscape in Upstate New York) is a treat for folks who love a laugh alongside their horror stories. Multiple timelines, spoooooky children, an early instability about the true extent of the supernatural, laugh-and-gasp-simultaneously horror-humor—Rebelein has a bit of that indie-horror-filmmaker, let’s-have-some-fun energy to his writing and if there’s any justice in the world, this book will be a comparable hit for Rebelein as Weapons has been for Cregger. –DB


    Fredrik Backman, Anxious People

    Weapons makes a strong structural choice in how the story is revealed, similar to Fredrik Backman’s book about a crime gone sideways told through different points of view and backstories. The book is sad and moving, but it’s also darkly funny, and Anxious People’s slapstick reminded me of how Cregger, true to his sketch comedy roots, will reach for a physical gag in unexpected moments. –James Folta, Staff Writer


    Charles Maclean, The Watcher

    This book was out of print for too long—a shame since it’s such a classic. An average suburban commuter commits an act of shocking violence on his wife’s birthday, which sends him to a psychiatrist for answers. The doctor takes him deep into the historical layers of his psychic past, told through session notes and transcripts. Are the protagonist’s past lives real, or just figments of his psychosis? A wild “descent into madness” book, this is a fun one to check out if you liked the shifting perspectives in Weapons. –JF


    Carissa Orlando, The September House

    If you liked Weapons as much for the humor as the horror, you’ll love The September House. This book will have you giggling even as you’re chilled to the bone. The September House is about a woman who moves into her dream home, only to discover that it’s extremely haunted. But this is her dream home, after all, and she’s determined to stay no matter how dark and malicious the ghosts become. It’s witty, it’s spooky, and it goes out in a wild blaze of glory that Weapons fans are sure to appreciate. –McKayla Coyle, Publishing Coordinator


    Mona Awad, Rouge

    File under: books Gladys would love (if she had time to read. God knows the woman’s busy). Rouge deals heavily in weird, witchy shit, complicated parent/child dynamics, and an obsession with youth—all things that the Weapons antagonist is very into. Mona Awad’s Southern California-gothic novel follows a young woman getting indoctrinated into a supernatural skincare cult. It’s a twisty hall of mirrors and totally unputdownable, and it’s got huge microbangs vibes. What are microbangs vibes? Don’t worry about it. Gladys understands. She gets it. –MC


    Tana French, The Secret Place

    One thing about Tana French: she’s going to put some kids in danger. Most of the Dublin Murder Squad books deal with murdered and/or missing children to some extent. So, you know, feel free to just pick up a different Tana French book if The Secret Place isn’t your vibe but you definitely want to read about kids having a bad time. The Secret Place is set at an all-girls school and is about kids dealing with the fallout of a traumatic event, much like Alex Lilly. Although there is less soup in this book, and few-to-no fork incidents. Might be witchy shit though! Or is there… –MC

    This week’s news in Venn diagrams.

    James Folta

    August 22, 2025, 2:06pm

    Another busy week winds down. I spent most of it thinking about bugs, but there was a lot going on outside of my little insect zone. Things feel very dour, to put it very mildly, so I tried to surface some good news with this week’s Venns.

    Hope you’ve got some nice weekend plans (I’ve got some shoes that need replacing and some bread that needs baking), and I’ll see you back here Monday.

     

    Here’s what’s making us happy this week.

    Brittany Allen

    August 22, 2025, 12:22pm

    This week, we’re calling all flâneurs. We’re striding—sometimes jumping—into new worlds, or finding fresh gold in the familiar. We’re probing pole ends of the AM dial, and trawling the archive. It’s an August for discovery. 

    Last week, Calvin Kasulke got an amateur radio license. Now he highly recommends taking up a niche hobby and developing a skill for its own sake. This week our resident deejay is enjoying this map of all the Pirate Radio stations in Brooklyn.

    Speaking of maps, James Folta has also been exploring. In the 1940s, the WPA and NYC’s Tax Department sent photographers out to document most of the city’s buildings. These images were digitized a few years back, but recently a whole site of outtakes went live.

    In addition to making great fodder for urban spelunkers, the photos carry their own curious history. “A lot of them are hole-punched,” notes James. Which was a fun mid-century technique to render a pic unpublishable.

    When it comes to walking, Jonny Diamond’s toddler is done with small steps. A certain two year old just learned to jump. “Seriously, both feet off the ground is a big deal for first timers,” says our editor. And for the witness? “It’s a delight.”

    Drew Broussard is exploring an old familiar. This week he’s celebrating the 25th anniversary of “one of the inarguably top-ten-best-ever websites,” Homestarrunner.com. They say you can’t step in the same river twice, but you can in fact go back to a website.

    This week I, Brittany Allen, am also in the back catalog. I recently discovered that many choice episodes of MTV’s Unplugged are available for streaming on Paramount Plus. With thanks to the anonymous family member whose login facilitated this discovery, I am here to tell a thousand acquaintances—some 33 years late—that I’m sorry for my belligerence before, at that party, re: that playlist. I think I finally get R.E.M. now.

    In the 2001 episode shot above Times Square, the poet Michael Stipe sits regal in a Victorian skirt and peppers Automatic for the People and Reveal songs with a rant about George Bush’s nuclear energy policy. (This one was shot before September.) It’s quietly transporting, and the songs bop.

    Really, this whole series is just a nice reminder that live music can be captured onscreen. The gauzy, dark concerts from (famously) Nirvana, Sinéad O’Connor, and Alicia Keys render the operatic intimate, and highlight good tunes in a way stadium polish just can’t. I wish unplugged life was still common practice. But in the meantime we have NPR’s Tiny Desk Concerts, and plenty to revisit.

    Wishing you a weekend of big leaps and bounds, scavenger hunting, and found treasure.

    The Black Cauldron turns 40 this year. Here’s why the famous flop is worth a second look.

    Brittany Allen

    August 22, 2025, 10:53am

    Literary adaptations are usually a dubious prospect. Yet we readers stay hopeful. Maybe this time, we pray, in the face of fresh announcements. Maybe this time, Hollywood will remember to include that non-essential minor character I loved so on the page. Or capture the themes/foes/feelings that the book did. It almost never happens. But we keep the faith.

    This year marks the 40th anniversary of one of the sketchiest film adaptations to ever do it, in this reporter’s opinion. That same property also happens to be one of Disney Animation’s biggest flops: The Black Cauldron, adapted from Lloyd Alexander’s Chronicles of Prydain series.

    For its birthday, I propose a return to that doomed fantasy-world. Why was Prydain, such a terrific series on paper, so hard to celebrate onscreen? And what can future book-to-film adaptors learn from its catastrophic example?

    *

    As Barry Levitt reported this month in the BBC, at the time of its 1985 release, The Black Cauldron “was the most expensive animated film ever made.” It was also an instant disaster, netting only half of its budget over a whole theatrical run. Conor Holt at Remind magazine notes that The Black Cauldron was “the biggest monetary misfire in Disney history until 2004’s Treasure Planet.” 

    So, what happened?

    First, there was the audience trouble. Neil O’Brien, author of After Disney: Toil, Trouble, and the Transformation of America’s Favorite Media Company, speculated that attempts to position The Black Cauldron as “teen-friendly” may have sealed its fate. The film was song-less, and PG—Disney’s first. And though the animation spiritually echoes docket sisters like The Fox and the Hound, the big kid rating was well-earned. Consider this objectively horrifying sequence.

    Then there were the brewing conditions. The film was assembled in a cauldron of bad timing. Its final frames were drawn during major regime change at Paramount/Disney. And the new guys to assume the corporate reins, Michael Eisner and and Jeffrey Katzenberg, were not fans of the inherited project.

    After “disastrous test screenings that reportedly had children running out of the theatre crying,” Katzenberg instructed creatives to cut fifteen minutes from the feature. And when this didn’t satisfy, he took over editing himself.

    To begin with the demographic trouble, we should consider Alexander’s intended audience.

    On paper, the Prydain series centers around a scrappy Assistant Pig-Keeper, Taran, who—much like Bilbo Baggins—is sucked into a world-historical adventure at the bequest of an ancient wizard mentor.

    Like others before him, Taran has greatness thrust upon him. Over the five book series, he wanders, he grows, he learns to fight. He befriends a bard and a princess. This is, firstly, a lot of ground to cover in a project that was ultimately forced to be 82 minutes. Then there’s the fact of T’s enemies.

    Queen Achren, Taran’s first foe, is no joke. Neither is her dethroner, the Prince Arawn, who takes the Iron Crown and rules over the Land of the Dead. And that reanimated corpse army—a cousin militia to Tolkien’s Dead Men of Dunharrow—is freaky as hell. When I first met them in family read-aloud hour, the cauldron-born gave me nightmares—even without the aid of illustrations. So one can see how Disney had a hard time interpreting and marketing this material. The story is capacious, and genuinely scary at times.

    There’s also the sophisticated source material. Like Tolkien, Alexander served in a World War, and mapped what he saw of combat onto some fairly dense Welsh mythology. This accounts for Prydain’s unique appeal as much as its hard-to-translate-ness. Between the pig pal and the dead army, it’s a bridge series. Sitting, in my personal mythology, precisely between Narnia and Middle Earth.

    It’s easy to imagine, in hindsight, how a complex story struggled to find a foothold—artistically and economically—between Disney’s pre-established Great Mouse Detective fans, and the teens it was then hoping to seduce. Which gets us back to making a case for keeping the series on paper. Maybe some properties just can’t make it on the big screen.

    Then again. Dan Kois at Slate pointed out in 2010 that some of the age panic around Cauldron may have been overstated. After all, animators at United Artists brought us The Secret of NIMH in 1982, and that’s another property–book and film—that I associate with both nightmares and excellence.

    Unlike Cauldron, NIMH was a critical and cult darling on its release. In 1982 it lost the Saturn Award to Jim Henson’s The Dark Crystal, which, if you want to talk about terrifying child fare, don’t get me started.

    Here, finally, it’s useful to recall something we may have forgotten in the last twenty years of animation, thanks to the rise of psychological, parent-geared programming at Pixar. That being the fact that most fairy tales are dark.

    Disney’s biggest 90s successes, Beauty and the Beast and The Little Mermaid, may have inaugurated a golden age at the studio, and saved the animation department from trouble Cauldron wrought. But these films did not honor their source material. In Hans Christian Anderson’s OG version, Ariel and Eric don’t get together at the end. She jumps into the sea in an act of suicidal sacrifice.

    Since we started telling them, children’s stories have been riddled with cautions. The best of them name the fact that the world is scary; it is. Especially for kids. But the greatest also show that given grit and teamwork, sometimes we can triumph over the biggest armies. (Or it’s a good story, anyway.)

    In a world where dark mage Guillermo Del Toro is remixing Pinocchio for all ages/nightmares, maybe we’re finally ready for another filmic crack at Prydain. As of 2016, Disney had re-acquired the rights to the series. Variety reports a fresh adaptation is in development.

    But like a ghost army, I’ll believe it when I see it.

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