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News, Notes, Talk

This week's news in Venn diagrams.

One week before Halloween folks, so it’s getting to be crunch time for sorting out your costume. I tend to default to wearing a ye-olden-tymes powdered wig and my old rocker vest and going as “Old School Punk,” but I’ve Read more >

By James Folta

Jane Schoenbrun is adapting Charles Burns’ Black Hole for TV.

Netflix will be releasing a series from Jane Schoenbrun based on Charles Burns’ comic Black Hole, according to Deadline. The series doesn’t have a release date yet, but it’s hard to think of anyone better able to translate Burns’ vision Read more >

By James Folta

The Booker Foundation is adding a children's prize.

The Booker Prize Foundation is adding to its roster of rarefied literary recognitions. A new prize will recognize excellent fiction written for young readers—specifically, children ages eight to 12. As The Guardian reported this morning, the baby Booker will launch Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Fall of Freedom, “a nationwide wave of creative resistance,” starts next month.

Artists around the country are organizing events, making zines, and planning performances for next month’s Fall of Freedom, a “wave of creative resistance” in defiance of authoritarianism. And you’re invited to participate. The “decentralized, open-source initiative” is envisioned as a Read more >

By James Folta

Rooting for the Louvre thieves? Here are seven books to read if you love art crime.

Heists are in the air. Paris is in a tizzy over recent smash and grabs at the Louvre and elsewhere. Stateside, Kelly Reichardt’s The Mastermind, featuring the people’s boyfriend Josh O’Connor as a bumbling local art thief, is hitting theaters. Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Here's the shortlist for the 2025 John Dos Passos prize.

The annual John Dos Passos Prize for Literature honors the country’s most talented fiction writers for career-long contributions to the genre. First launched in 1980, the prize is the oldest literary award given by a Virginia college or university. And Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Vajra Chandrasekera has won the 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction.

Today, the Ursula K. Le Guin Foundation announced Vajra Chandrasekera’s Rakesfall as the winner of the 2025 Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction, which seeks to reward books that represent the legendary writer’s literary, moral, and aesthetic ideals: “realists Read more >

By Literary Hub

A federal judge just dismissed an Ohio teacher’s fight against book bans.

In (more) bad civil rights news, an Ohio third grade teacher lost a battle with the state last week when a district court dismissed her book ban lawsuit. Karen Cahall, who’s taught in the New Richmond Exempted Village School District Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Claire-Louise Bennett, Erin Somers, John Grisham, and more: 23 new books out today!

Another Tuesday, another great haul. Today we have a ton of hotly anticipated titles, such as Big Kiss, Bye-Bye by Claire-Louise Bennett, as well as The Ten Year Affair by Erin Somers (check out the epic back cover of that Read more >

By Julia Hass

How Oscar Wilde finally got his library card back.

This weekend, the British Library issued a century-late apology to Oscar Wilde in the form of a brand new library card. The Irish poet-novelist-playwright was the toast of 19th-century Anglo letters. But in 1895, a ruthless public smear campaign hinging Read more >

By Brittany Allen

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

Spooky season is upon us again. (At least if you’re in the Northeast corridor.) So this week, Lit Hubbers enjoyed autumnal fare. I’m talking leaf-peeping, and freaky Fridays. We’ve got reflection and hibernation on the brain. Whether that means hunkering Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Everything you need to know about Axl Rose's graphic novel.

What a time to be alive, for starters! Axl Rose, the notorious Guns N’ Roses frontman, is turning his talents to the graphic novel. In a new collaboration with Sumerian Comics, a Tennessee publisher with Simon & Schuster distribution, Mr. Read more >

By Brittany Allen

The Body Keeps The Score sequel just got an eight figure deal.

I’ll save you the counting on your fingers: that’s a minimum of $10 million. It’s a boggling amount of money, enough to make you crack a filling. This mondo deal was announced yesterday, and includes a new book by Bessel Read more >

By James Folta

The dentist should let you read instead of watch TV.

It’s become the default to have a screen on in every room of a dentist’s office. When I was a kid, the TV was perched in a ceiling corner, like a stuffed owl in a Hitchcock movie, but over the Read more >

By James Folta

Where to start with the writing of Jamaica Kincaid.

This summer, the novelist and essayist Jamaica Kincaid released a career-spanning collection. Covering forty years—from her early days as a precocious New Yorker staff writer to her present perch as a “fiery postcolonial critic”—the work in Putting Myself Together describes Read more >

By Brittany Allen

Brandon Taylor, Megha Majumdar, Susan Orlean, and more: 27 new books out today!

Literary fiction-heads (as LH devotees usually are) must celebrate: new Brandon Taylor AND Megha Majumdar in one week?! Not to mention exciting, unputdownable novels by Quan Barry, Anna North, Adam Johnson, and a selection of compelling and masterful stories by Read more >

By Julia Hass

This week's news in Venn diagrams.

Fittingly for the news of a new Moomin movie this week, today is Finnish Literature Day. Maybe break out some Tove Jansson, Frans Eemil Sillanpää, or Väinö Linna this weekend to celebrate? Or go all the way back and read Read more >

By James Folta

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

Get in, Lit Hubbers. We’re going…everywhere. The whole staff is skipping into fall with an eye to adventure. We’re picking apples and pumpkins. We’re bringing abroad stateside, and the Deep Sea to the surface. I, Brittany Allen, have been really Read more >

By Brittany Allen

New York’s largest ICE detention camp is blocking book deliveries.

ICE is depraved, and every day they seem to find new ways to lash out. Their incompetence—from out-of-shape squadristi getting embarrassed in Chicago to the poorly written snivelings of racist pencil eraser Stephen Miller—hasn’t hampered their ability to hurt our Read more >

By James Folta

László Krasznahorkai has won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Literature.

Today, the Swedish Academy awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in Literature to Hungarian author László Krasznahorkai, for “for his compelling and visionary oeuvre that, in the midst of apocalyptic terror, reaffirms the power of art.” Krasznahorkai is one of international Read more >

By Emily Temple

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