• The Hub

    News, Notes, Talk

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

    Literary Hub

    September 9, 2024, 10:00am

    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 French culture.”

    The American Library in Paris was established in 1920 with a core collection of books and periodicals donated by American libraries to United States armed forces personnel serving their allies in World War I. The Library has grown since then into the largest English-language lending library on the European continent.

    The 2024 winner of the Book Award, which comes with a purse of $5,000, will be selected by an independent jury (Andrew Sean Greer (chair), Jonas Hassen Khemiri, and Ayelet Waldman) and announced on November 7.

    In the meantime, here are the five finalists:

    Robert Darnton, The Revolutionary Temper: Paris 1748–1789
    (W. W. Norton US / Allen Lane UK)

    “Well-written and well-shaped, this history gives a rich and interesting cultural perspective on the half century leading up to the social explosion of the French Revolution.”

    Justine Firnhaber-Baker, House of Lilies: The Dynasty That Made Medieval France
    (Allen Lane UK / Basic Books US)

    “This is a fully immersive, wonderfully fluid and engaging popular history of the medieval Capetian dynasty in France.”

    Claire Messud, This Strange Eventful History
    (W. W. Norton US / Fleet UK)

    “A beautifully written journey of a family through the 20th century, from the Second World War and the Algerian independence to today, the book evokes the difficult relationship one can have with one’s country of origin.”

    Adam Shatz, The Rebel’s Clinic: The Revolutionary Life of Frantz Fanon
    (Farrar, Straus and Giroux US / Head of Zeus UK)

    “This is a significant, readable, well-researched biography of Fanon and a brilliant, nuanced exploration of his ideas.”

    Jackie Wullschläger, Monet: The Restless Vision
    (Allen Lane)

    “Finely executed, authentic and heartfelt, this solidly captured story conveys the essence of the time and place that forged his artistry while lovingly building a narrative of Monet’s evolution as a man and artist.”

    Was Françoise Sagan the original brat?

    Brittany Allen

    September 6, 2024, 11:00am

    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 present one last candidate for admission to the brat pantheon.

    The late French author and femme about town, Françoise Sagan.

    Sagan was a teenager when she started writing her runaway hit, Bonjour Tristesse. A brazen, stylish confessional novel about a young woman plotting to break up her father’s relationship, this book is nothing if not brat. It’s compact, punchy, and frank about youthful desires. Naturally, several people in the French press called it “immoral” on publication.

    And this isn’t to address the author herself. Paris Match called Sagan an “18-year old Colette.” And friends pegged her for much younger, on account of her confidence. (‘Cause I get what I want when I snap…) As a Catholic school rogue who loved parties and fast cars about as much as Proust and Stendhal, one can picture the lady holding court at Lucien…today?

    (Though maybe we shouldn’t.)

    As Elizabeth Winder described in Airmail,

    Speeding down the Rue de Rivoli in her Jaguar, gambling away her advance in the casinos of Deauville, losing herself in the sensual rhythms of Left Bank nightlife, [Sagan] represented a new kind of woman, a gamine Beatnik who danced the cha-cha barefoot, took male and female lovers, and counted singer Juliette Gréco and film director Florence Malraux as friends.

    I mean!?

    Sagan went on to be a wildly prolific star in the French literary firmament. She wrote novels, non-fiction, plays, and short stories. She gave us one of the spikier Art of Fiction interviews. And her work was adapted for the screen.

    Otto Preminger directed a version of Bonjour Tristesse in 1955. Starring the all-American gamine, Jean Seberg. Opinion stays split on whether the un-French cast adequately captured the novel’s drollness. But luckily, us Sagan fans are getting another shot.

    This week at the Toronto International Film Festival, a new adaptation of Bonjour Tristesse premieres. And this remakes arrives with appropriately literary bona fides. The essayist and author Durga Chew-Bose is spearheading, making her directorial debut. And the cast includes the brattiest brat of them all, Chloë Sevigny.

    Okay, I’m done now. Brat is dead, long live brat. But maybe make like Sagan this weekend, as we say goodbye to summer and salut to demure. Speed down a highway, break up a couple. Dance yourself clean.

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

    Brittany Allen

    September 6, 2024, 9:00am

    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 lower court decision finding the Internet Archive’s program to scan and lend print library books is copyright infringement.”

    The publishers in question are all big-wigs you know, organized by the Association of American Publishers.

    Founded in 1996—which makes it nearly as old as the internet itself—the Internet Archive (IA) is one part researcher’s paradise and another part nostalgist hub. 1.5 million people visit the site every day.

    Its creator, Brewster Kahle, dreamed of providing “Universal Access to All Knowledge” for a general public. The site’s popular Wayback Machine safeguards years of now-defunct web sites, and the archive itself is home to millions of web pages, audio recordings, videos, images, software programs, and…books.

    For many years, IA operated an Open Library, which included scanned books that readers could “check out” online.

    In 2020 during the peak days of the pandemic, IA released those books in a “National Emergency Library,” lifting checks on the amount of materials users could check out at a given times. Though this move was allegedly designed to support teachers and scholars in need of resources, it made many writers angry. And that attracted the ire of their publishers.

    *

    The rumblings of litigation began in 2020, just a few months after the Emergency Library launched. Nonplussed publishers, including John Wiley, Hachette, HarperCollins and Penguin Random House, condemned the term-less lending program as tantamount to book theft.

    In response, IA cited extenuating (pandy) circumstances. Creators noted the library’s librariness (i.e., digital lending system), and the fact that no profit was being made. Ipso facto, fair use. Public benefit.

    But IA lost their case.

    The writing community itself was and remains split on the public benefit point. At the time the Emergency Library was announced, high profile writers like Jill Lepore of The New Yorker voiced support for the archive and its mission. But at the same time, many authors you know and love came out against the unrestricted loaning of their books.

    That split seemed to follow genre lines.

    Academic authors, like many of those standing with the Authors Alliance, were quick to support IA. While literary writers—who are more beholden to sales, usually—stayed mad. Some in the latter camp have recanted their support over the past two years/since publishers won their bid. Crucially, during those years it became apparent that writers could petition to have their works removed from the library. (Which was a short-term measure to begin with.)

    Also germane: there is still no hard data available on the impact the library program had or might have for authors, sales-wise. Especially given the fact that while the program was running, book sales were surging.

    Which all just goes to show that case is a hard one to get around. The stakes are abstract and existential. Should the publishers hold the keys to the copy machine, or can a library get a by?

    *

    So what happens now?

    After yesterday’s news, IA’s only path to appeal is the Supreme Court. And in the meantime, the non-profit faces more litigation. Another suit has been filed by major record labels over its “Great 78” program,” which makes vintage records available to the public. As copyright law is intricately medium-specific in this country, things could play out differently at that rodeo. But the drain on IA’s resources will likely be huge.

    As Nitish Pahwa and Emma Wallenbrock wrote in an excellent piece for Slate two years ago, the end of the Archive itself—as opposed to the book-centric lending library, on which this appeal and its originating case rests—would be a huge blow to archivists and readers of all kinds.

    Many note that IA is the only keeper of the internet’s first days, via the Wayback Machine. It also houses “many older books and media [that] have never been digitized because the copyright hasn’t expired.” The archive is a huge source for Wikipedia citations, and makes a stand against publisher monopolies. Most of all? If it’s destroyed, millions and millions of cultural items could be lost to history.

    And if the music industry is any kind of bellwether, the Open Use ethos of “the techno-optimistic, quasi-libertarian” creators that “governed the web’s early years” (to borrow Pahwa and Wallenbrock’s language) may be doomed, fullstop.

    Many on FKA-Twitter are noting the irony that a digital library’s fate should be sealed even as many prominent media companies’ make deals with the devil (i.e., AI).  It stands to reason. After all, what kind of literary ethics emerges when your publisher can sell your work to train robots, but refuses to let those same materials be lent out to an independent researcher?

    All this said, there’s no need to storm any castle just yet. The Internet Archive itself likely isn’t going away anytime soon. Yesterday’s ruling simply seals a lid on the book lending program. Unless, Lord-willing-and-the-creek-don’t-rise, several members of the high court are visited by three ghosts in the night.

    500,000+ titles have been removed from the Internet Archive.

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

    James Folta

    September 5, 2024, 2:27pm

    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 the tool as a way to quickly find the nearest free library — those outdoor, bird-box-sized, give-a-book-take-a-book libraries — especially in the parts of the country most affected by Republican attempts to ban books and censure libraries and schools.

    The map uses data from PEN America and ALA studies that have been tracking book bans and challenged titles across the US at the state and county levels. According to this map, Florida and Texas have the most book bans in public schools and libraries, with 2647 and 1,469 respectively. Thankfully the number of Little Free Libraries is higher in both states: Florida has 2886, and Texas has 2373. And congratulations to Vermont and Delaware for their clean bill of health: each have zero reported bans on books!

    The map is part of Little Free Library’s clear-eyed condemnation of book bans:

    Expanding access to books is at the heart of our mission, and the rise of book bans in America goes against our organization’s core values — especially when the bans overwhelmingly target BIPOC and LGBTQ+ authors.

    It’s worth scrolling around the map to find the little libraries near you — they’d make a great home for that stack of books you’ve been meaning to donate!

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

    Literary Hub

    September 5, 2024, 3:00am

    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, and will take home a prize of $75,000.

    “One element that stands out among the brilliant books on this shortlist is their timeliness,” said Rana Mitter, this year’s jury chair, in a press release. “Although all are products of years of deep research, they touch on topics—the balance between freedom and responsibility, the need to account for and atone for war, the continuing rise of the Global South—that speak to major issues in the present day.”

    “All eight books on the shortlist radically rethink and reinterpret topics that appear familiar but that are in fact either misunderstood or partially understood,” added juror Moses Ochonu. “In that sense, they demonstrate that great history is not only defined by topical novelty but also by analytical creativity—by the historian’s ability to reintroduce us to a seemingly familiar subject through a fresh new look and the exploration of an unfamiliar angle.”

    Here’s the shortlist:

    Gary J. Bass, Judgement at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern Asia
    (Picador, Pan Macmillan)

    Lauren Benton, They Called It Peace: Worlds of Imperial Violence
    (Princeton University Press)

    Joya Chatterji, Shadows at Noon: The South Asian Twentieth Century
    (The Bodley Head, VINTAGE / Yale University Press)

    Kathleen DuVal, Native Nations: A Millennium in North America
    (Penguin Random House)

    Andrew C. McKevitt, Gun Country: Gun Capitalism, Culture, and Control in Cold War America
    (University of North Carolina Press)

    Dylan C. Penningroth, Before the Movement: The Hidden History of Black Civil Rights
    (Liveright Publishing)

    Stuart A. Reid, The Lumumba Plot: The Secret History of the CIA and a Cold War Assassination
    (Alfred A. Knopf)

    David Van Reybrouck, translated by David Colmer and David McKay, Revolusi: Indonesia and the Birth of the Modern World
    (The Bodley Head, VINTAGE / W. W. Norton)

  • Become a Lit Hub Supporting Member: Because Books Matter

    For the past decade, Literary Hub has brought you the best of the book world for free—no paywall. But our future relies on you. In return for a donation, you’ll get an ad-free reading experience, exclusive editors’ picks, book giveaways, and our coveted Joan Didion Lit Hub tote bag. Most importantly, you’ll keep independent book coverage alive and thriving on the internet.

    x