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News, Notes, Talk

Judy Blume's Summer Sisters—the sexiest book I read in seventh grade—will be a series.

Judy Blume’s Summer Sisters, a coming-of-age novel about best friends who spend the summers together on Martha’s Vineyard, will be a limited series on Hulu, with Liz Tigelaar, the writer and showrunner of the upcoming Little Fires Everywhere adaptation, as its Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

The Supreme Court won't hear Jon Krakauer's case over records from the University of Montana.

For years, Jon Krakauer has been trying to find out exactly how a Montana education official was involved in the case of a college student who avoided expulsion after being accused of rape. On Monday, the Supreme Court said it Read more >

By Corinne Segal

10 shiny new books you should pick up this week.

Every week, the TBR pile grows a little bit more. It’s getting precarious. It’s taking up your whole nightstand. It’s threatening to crush you in your sleep. Well, what are you waiting for? Get cracking. What are you reading this Read more >

By Katie Yee

Toni Morrison, Margaret Wilkerson Sexton, and Lupita Nyong'o won NAACP Image Awards.

This past Saturday, the 51st NAACP Image Award winners were announced at a ceremony in California. The annual event celebrates the achievements of people of color in the arts (hello, Lizzo, Entertainer of the Year, I love you), and highlights Read more >

By Katie Yee

Jane Goodall is writing a new book, and it sounds very . . . optimistic.

With any kind of environment-related hope in increasingly short supply, the title and press language for Jane Goodall’s new book seem both refreshing and a little bit like literary time travel. The Book of Hope, which will be published in Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Elon Musk learns all the wrong lessons from Isaac Asimov’s Foundation Trilogy.

Elon Musk made a tweet about a book. Specifically, a lukewarm recommendation of Isaac Asimov’s seminal sci-fi trilogy Foundation, which, according to a 2017 Rolling Stone interview, taught Musk that “you should try to take the set of actions that Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

If you have £2.5 million, you can buy one of Charles Dickens' "favourite lodging houses."

Today in literary real estate: would you like to buy Bleak House, the Broadstairs, Kent summer home where Charles Dickens wrote “the greater part” of David Copperfield? (Despite its name, Bleak House had nothing to do with the writing of Bleak Read more >

By Jessie Gaynor

Here are the finalists for the NYPL's Helen Bernstein Award, which celebrates working journalists.

Since 1988, the New York Public Library’s Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism has been shining a light on journalists who call attention to vital current events or societal issues. The titles up for consideration this year tackle Read more >

By Katie Yee

Watch the dramatic trailer for the second season of HBO's My Brilliant Friend.

Is your temperature starting to rise? Been feeling achy lately? Could be a return of Ferrante Fever. The second season of HBO’s gorgeous, luxuriously slow adaptation of Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Quartet will be premiering on March 16th—and in the meantime, Read more >

By Emily Temple

Elizabethan playwright Ben Jonson once beat a murder charge by translating some Latin.

Never meet your heroes, kids. I’ve got sad news for you. Turns out, Ben Jonson, the renowned Elizabethan playwright and the first poet laureate of England, was a murderer. On September 22nd, 1598, when he was an (angry) young man Read more >

By Olivia Rutigliano

Confuse and alarm your misbehaving kids with this 15th century guide to good behavior!

Are you the parent of a child with an unfortunate predilection for picking their nose or robbing other people’s orchards? If so, help has arrived in the form of some centuries-old, recently digitized books, now available on the British Library’s Read more >

By Corinne Segal

Not a Cult, a new bookstore in Los Angeles, puts authors of color at the forefront.

The door of Los Angeles’ newest bookstore is propped open on a quiet section of Hollywood Boulevard, the front window displaying books on a handmade wooden bookshelf. Inside the front room, you’ll find more books and merchandise below a neon Read more >

By Melissa Ximena Golebiowski

Podcast industry is pivoting to… books?

Finally, the one true pivot we’ve all been waiting for… to books! Flatiron announced yesterday that they’ll be launching an imprint called Stuff You Should Read: An iHeart Book, which will turn popular iHeart Radio podcasts into books (which will Read more >

By Jonny Diamond

It's a bird! It's a plane! It's the Nebula Award finalists!

Congratulations to the finalists for the annual Nebula Awards! Presented by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, these awards have been celebrating writers working in the genres for the past fifty-five years. (Past recipients include N. K. Jemisin Read more >

By Katie Yee

Book toilets are so 18th-century France.

Books are very, very useful, and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise I’ve heard of people using them as purses and safes, doorstoppers and vases, wallpaper and even, uh, a bit of kindling. In addition to interior edification, books have Read more >

By Aaron Robertson

This author wrote a book based on a Florence and the Machine album.

Have you ever listened to one of your favorite albums on repeat, gotten lost in the sweeping, cinematic feel of it, knew it so well that you began picturing it as a narrative, filled in the details missing from the Read more >

By Julia Hass