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News, Notes, Talk

Did you know that Truman Capote discovered Ray Bradbury? (Well, sort of.)

I didn’t. But it’s true: in 1945 or 1946, Ray Bradbury (who was born 100 years ago tomorrow), then known mostly in the pulp fiction market, submitted one of his short stories, “The Homecoming,” to Mademoiselle, a fashion magazine known Read more >

By Emily Temple

A new fellowship will fund a year-long study of Octavia Butler's work.

The Huntington Library, part of a beautiful complex with an art museum and botanical garden in San Marino, California, turns 100 this year and they’ve found a great way to celebrate. The library announced a one-year fellowship that will fund Read more >

By Aaron Robertson

Jake Gyllenhaal will star in an adaptation of writer/editor/Solo cup urinator Dan Mallory's story.

If you can remember as far back as February 2019, surely you recall Ian Parker’s barn-burner of a New Yorker story about the trail of deception left by book editor turned novelist Dan Mallory, whose authorship of the best-selling thriller Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

What does it mean that Spotify is moving into audiobooks?

Apparently Spotify is looking for someone to run an audiobooks division, per this very thorough analysis by Mark Williams at The New Publishing Standard. With 299 million monthly users, that could actually be a pretty huge deal for a sector Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

Rachel Bloom, creator of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, is publishing a book.

Rachel Bloom, the ingenious creator and star of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, has written a book! Last night, she announced its November 17th publication on Instagram. (Shoutout to my dear friend who texted me at an odd hour of the evening to Read more >

By Katie Yee

Celebrate the centennial of Bradbury's birth this weekend with the Ray Bradbury Read-A-Thon.

This weekend, the Ray Bradbury Centennial team, in partnership with the Library of Congress, Los Angeles Public Library, and the Alliance for Young Artists & Writers, will present the first annual Ray Bradbury Read-A-Thon: a chorus of voices will read Read more >

By Emily Temple

Want to throw a wrench in your reading habit? Read the fantastical life of a saint.

Since 2014, I haven’t been able to convince myself that there is a literary genre as enigmatic, macabre, and folkloristically rich as a work of hagiography, the vita or “life” of a saint. Six years ago, I traveled to a handful of Read more >

By Aaron Robertson

NBCC members have released an open letter outlining how to make the organization more equitable.

An open letter published today and signed by 30 members of the National Book Critics Circle calls for sweeping changes to the organization’s structure and practices, with a specific set of recommendations meant to address inclusion, accessibility, and anti-racism. The Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Remember when famous writers used to shill for consumer products?

Ah, yes, the good old days: when novelists lent their faces and testimonials to advertisers hoping to sell tires, or a certain kind of beer, or fancy watches. It’s something you don’t see very much anymore, because we writers have Read more >

By Emily Temple

Watch the steamy first trailer for Kenneth Branagh's Death on the Nile.

Break out the mustache wax and pour yourself a stiff G&T, because the first trailer for Death on the Nile—the Kenneth Branagh-directed adaptation of Agatha Christie’s canonical 1937 crime novel in which Detective Hercule Poirot investigates the murder of a Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

What's the deal with this celebrity book club company?

Harnessing the power of extremely famous people to sell books is nothing new, but what about combining the influence of multiple famous people—from billionaire “philanthropist” Richard Branson to beloved journalist/Twitter lush Susan Orlean—to sell books combined with the vaporous concept of “access” Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

Bookseller, writer, and publisher organizations want congress to go after Amazon.

Organizations representing bookstores, writers, and publishers sent a joint letter to the House Antitrust Subcommittee yesterday asking them to put a stop to Amazon’s “unhealthy degree of control” over the the marketplace for books. Addressing Congressman David Cicilline (D-RI), the Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

Sick, scandalous, spectacular: Here are the very first reviews of Lolita.

Today marks the 62nd anniversary of the American publication of Vladimir Nabokov’s most controversial and iconic work. Lolita—the story of a verbose, middle-aged literature professor, sexually obsessed with pre-pubescent girls, and his perverse and destructive relationship with 12-year-old Dolores Haze—became Read more >

By Dan Sheehan

#1000blackgirlbooks founder Marley Dias was one of the best parts of last night's DNC.

The Democratic National Convention has begun, and this year, it’s refreshingly personal, with the majority of statements and speeches coming from inside people’s homes—or backgrounds of varying oddity. Among the highlights: Megan Rapinoe has utterly mastered both monochromatism and lighting; Read more >

By Corinne Segal

How long do you give a book you don't immediately love?

I used to be a steadfast book-finisher. At least when it came to books I picked up voluntarily, I was committed to gritting my teeth and cleaning my plate (unfortunately, this didn’t apply to the many assigned history texts I Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

Andrew Cuomo is writing a book about his pandemic leadership, because he's not busy right now.

Oh boy. Today, Crown, an imprint of Penguin Random House, announced that they would be publishing New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo’s American Crisis on October 13th. The publisher describes the book as “a revealing, behind-the-scenes account of his experience leading Read more >

By Emily Temple

19 new books to add to your summer reading list—hurry!

Ah, the days of summer are winding down. The days are getting shorter. The leaves are starting to brown. The air feels a little crisper. (Unless you’re in Death Valley. Global warming is real!!) Before we switch over to full-blown Read more >

By Katie Yee

Stop sending Hilary Mantel your ideas for historical novels—she's pivoting to plays.

Listen, guys: we may all love Hilary Mantel’s Thomas Cromwell series—lord knows the Booker Prize judges do—but Mantel has had enough of the genre for now (and after almost 2000 pages, who could blame her?). So stop bugging her about Read more >

By Emily Temple

Who are America's most talented but under-appreciated writers?

Every year, Longwood University’s John Dos Passos Prize sets out to celebrate one vital but under-appreciated writer. Previous recipients include Colson Whitehead, Tom Wolfe, and Annie Proulx. (Obviously, they were awarded the Dos Passos Prize before they won, say, two Pulitzer Read more >

By Katie Yee

Here are the best reviewed books of the week.

  Margot Livesey’s The Boy in the Field, Diane Cook’s The New Wilderness, Kathleen Rooney’s Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey, and Elisa Gabbert’s The Unreality of Memory all feature among the Best Reviewed Books of the Week.   Fiction 1. Read more >

By Book Marks