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News, Notes, Talk

The first wave of pandemic novels is beginning in earnest, with Gary Shteyngart at the helm.

Beware—there’s a new wave of COVID! It’s novels. The latest writer to be infected is Super Sad True Love Story author Gary Shteyngart, whose newly announced novel Our Country Friends follows the shifting relationships of a group of friends at Read more >

By Walker Caplan

An ode to Paul Bettany's mellifluous, magisterial turn as Chaucer in A Knight's Tale.

When we first meet Geoffrey Chaucer in the very fine medieval sports movie A Knight’s Tale (2001), he is naked. Butt-naked, I should say, considering the camera work. “Oi sir,” says Heath Ledger, aka William, aka Sir Ulrich. “What are you Read more >

By Emily Temple

Watch the stunning new trailer for The Underground Railroad.

At long last! Today, the first full trailer for the Amazon Original adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad was released. South African actress Thuso Mbedu plays Cora, a woman enslaved on a Georgia plantation, who decides to escape to Read more >

By Vanessa Willoughby

In praise of Edward Gorey, style icon.

Today marks 21 years since the death of Edward Gorey, known for his playfully macabre illustrated books. His crosshatched drawings warped Edwardian settings into worlds so distinctive they’re now described as “Goreyesque”—and today, we’re celebrating how he carried his heightened Read more >

By Walker Caplan

In which a drunk Jack Kerouac discusses hippies with William F. Buckley.

In this 1968 episode of William F. Buckley’s Firing Line, Jack Kerouac (who is clearly drunk) joins Ed Sanders (of The Fugs) and square sociologist Lewis Yablonsky (author of The Hippie Trip) to discuss a then-hot topic: hippies. When the Read more >

By Emily Temple

Here's the shortlist for the 2021 Helen & Kurt Wolff Translator’s Prize.

The Goethe-Institut, Germany’s cultural institute promoting the study of German culture and language, has announced the shortlist for the 2021 Helen & Kurt Wolff Translator’s Prize. Funded by the German government, the Translator’s Prize celebrates an outstanding literary translation from Read more >

By Walker Caplan

In honor of Tax Day, here are 6 inevitable deaths in literature.

They say that in this world nothing can be said to be certain—except death and taxes. Well, it’s Tax Day, friends! No, don’t have a heart attack. They pushed it back this year. (They did, right? I won’t go like Read more >

By Katie Yee

Announcing the winners of the 2021 Whiting Awards.

This evening, in a virtual ceremony, the Whiting Foundation announced the recipients of its 2021 Whiting Awards, which seek to “recognize excellence and promise in a spectrum of emerging talent.” These ten writers, working in fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and drama, Read more >

By Emily Temple

Gawker is coming back.

In a one-sentence aside in The New York Times, Ben Smith revealed that Bustle Media Group is rebooting controversial news and gossip site Gawker, three years after BMG bought Gawker for only $1.35 million at a bankruptcy auction. Bustle Media Read more >

By Walker Caplan

Hanya Yanagihara's next novel, To Paradise, is coming in January.

Prepare the discourse: Hanya Yanagihara’s next novel, To Paradise, will be released on January 11, 2022, by Doubleday in the US and Picador in the UK . This will be Yanagihara’s first book since her controversial 2015 novel A Little Read more >

By Walker Caplan

Check out these trippy new covers for eight modern classics.

In May, the UK’s Fourth Estate and William Collins will launch a new list of redesigned modern classics. The publishers describe Collins Modern Classics as “a paperback library of literature featuring some of the most significant books of recent times.” Read more >

By Emily Temple

A scammer just stole £30k of literary prize money—and is trying to steal more.

Since there has been monetized writing, there have been scams intended to profit off it—predatory editors, fake agents and the like. Henry Brooke once declared in rhyme that scamming is the oldest profession, and he’d be happy to know it’s Read more >

By Walker Caplan

A close reading of the cover of Hillary Clinton and Louise Penny's new novel.

COVER REVEAL REVEAL: Simon & Schuster and St. Martin’s Press have revealed the cover of Hillary Clinton and Louise Penny’s novel State of Terror, which they will publish jointly in October. If you need a refresher, here’s what the publishers Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

How Invisible Man paved the way for Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly.

On this day in 1952, Random House published Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man. The novel is narrated by a nameless Black man living in 1930s America. The narrator explains, “I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me.” Proper Read more >

By Vanessa Willoughby

This 1980 George Plimpton TV commercial for video games is a masterpiece.

Many of us lament the era when writers were famous enough to shill for major national advertising campaigns, a time when novelists had the kind of name recognition you could actually sell-out with—Mickey Spillane for Miller Lite, Frederick Forsyth for Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

Natalie Portman is your new Ferrante heroine.

Ferrante fanatics of the world, rejoice (or, you know, despair if you like. I don’t know your taste in actors): Natalie Portman—the Academy Award-winning star of Black Swan, Jackie, and, eh, Thor: The Dark World—is set to executive produce and play the Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

Soon you’ll be able to vacation at Jane Austen’s country estate . . . in a cowshed.

Feature photo by Paul Moore.  Fanny in Mansfield Park was right when she said that “to sit in the shade in a fine day and look upon verdure is the most perfect refreshment”—and Austen fans will soon be able to Read more >

By Walker Caplan

I'm obsessed with Liu Ye's gorgeous, photorealistic paintings of books.

The artist Liu Ye is probably most famous for his lovable creation Miffy, or possibly for his paintings inspired by Piet Mondrian, but I’ve recently discovered something I like even better: Ye’s Book Painting series, which is full of meticulous, almost Read more >

By Emily Temple

Eloghosa Osunde has won The Paris Review’s 2021 Plimpton Prize for Fiction.

The Paris Review has awarded Eloghosa Osunde the 2021 Plimpton Prize for Fiction, a $10,000 award celebrating an outstanding story by an emerging writer published in the magazine, for her story “Good Boy.” Osunde joins past winners Ottessa Moshfegh, Yiyun Read more >

By Walker Caplan

Of course Boris Johnson is a huge Tintin fan.

Full disclosure: I grew up reading all of Tintin and loved the comics very much, as did most of my large and unruly family. However, it is also plainly obvious that, at best, they’re written from an incredibly narrow and Read more >

By Jonny Diamond