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May 10, 2024

A short story by Rod Sterling, creator and host of the original TV show the Twilight Zone, has been published for the first time in the Strand, a magazine that releases previously unpublished work by classic authors and new fiction by contemporary best-selling writers. The story, based on Sterling’s experience fighting in World War II, is called “First Squad, First Platoon,” and it “was discovered in a collection of Serling’s writings at the University of Wisconsin,” reports NPR.

May 10, 2024

On Literary Hub Brittany Allen critiques the “objectification of books,” citing as an example the rise of “super readers” who have made book consumption into a kind of sport. “What strikes meis the profound incompatibility between the object of the book and the ethos of productivity,” Allen writes.

May 10, 2024

A spreadsheet identifying authors’ political stances toward Israel has gone viral on social media. Beside each author name—including Emily St. John Mandel, Salman Rushdie, Zadie Smith, and others—columns mark them as “Zionist” or not and provide reasoning for the designation. “Many responses accuse the spreadsheet of antisemitism, calling it a list of Jews and comparing it to Nazi lists; the majority of the authors listed are not Jewish. Others thanked the creator for doing research to guide their purchasing and reading,” writes the Forward.

May 10, 2024

The New York Times interviews Lauren Groff about her new bookstore in Florida, The Lynx.

May 9, 2024

In the Paris Review Palestinian author Adania Shibli reflects on the practice of book banning. Last year Shibli’s novel Minor Detail had received a major literary award in Germany, the ceremony for which was cancelled after Hamas’s attack on Israel on October 7 and criticism that the novel could be deemed anti-Semitic. “Writers often write fiction in order to leave behind the oppressiveness of the lived world. To force a link between fiction and the real is an act of violence against the imagination,” Sibli writes.

May 9, 2024

W. Ralph Eubanks has been named interim president of the Authors Guild, the nation’s largest professional organization that advocates on behalf of published writers. An essayist, journalist, professor, and public speaker, Eubanks succeeds Maya Shanbhag Lang, who resigned as president on Friday.

May 8, 2024

For Esquire, Jonathan Russell Clark considers “Why We Love Time Travel Stories” and reads into Kaliane Bradley’s debut novel, The Ministry of Time, and Ted Chiang’s novella “Story of Your Life,” among other titles, looking for answers.

May 8, 2024

Publishers Weekly reports on Freedom to Write for Palestine, an event held last night at the Judson Memorial Church in New York City that featured writers who withdrew from PEN America’s World Voices Festival and Literary Awards, both of which were canceled last month.

May 8, 2024

New Literary Project announced that Ben Fountain, whose most recent novel is Devil Makes Three (Flatiron, 2023), has won the 2024 Joyce Carol Oates Prize. The $50,000 prize is given annually to a midcareer author of fiction. Fountain was chosen from a shortlist that included Jamel Brinkley, Patricia Engel, Idra Novey, and Bennett Sims.

May 7, 2024

In the Millions Mexican novelist Nicolás Medina Mora offers a critique of Latin American literature as a category: “What I’m trying to say is that, if one thinks about it for a moment, it becomes clear that ‘Latin America’ does not exist as a material reality. Much like the utopia of transnational friendship envisioned by the Mexican architects of the North American Free Trade Agreement, the region exists only in the imagination—even if this imaginary existence (like those of God, race, and currency) makes it ‘real’ enough to alter the course of history and shape individual lives.” 

May 7, 2024

The Guardian profiles Argentinian author César Aira, reportedly a favorite to win the next Nobel Prize in Literature. “He has published more than one hundred novels, gives his work away, and his surrealist books have a massive cult following.”

May 7, 2024

Fast Company considers how efforts to ban books are ultimately backfiring on conservative activists, particularly those who target books that deal with race and racism: “Indeed, over the last five years, there has been a steady increase in books by and about people of color. And people are finding creative ways to make sure these books get out into the world.”

May 6, 2024

The winners of the 2024 Pulitzer Prizes have been announced, including Jayne Anne Phillips’s Night Watch for fiction, Cristina Rivera Garza’s Liliana’s Invincible Summer: A Sister’s Search for Justice for memoir or autobiography, and Brandon Som’s Tripas for poetry.

May 6, 2024

Simon & Schuster has acquired the Netherlands’ largest book publisher, Veen Bosch & Keuning, reports Publishers Weekly. “The move marks the first major instance of a promised international expansion of S&S, which CEO Jonathan Karp alluded to last year following the acquisition of S&S by private equity firm KKR.”

May 6, 2024

University of Washington Magazine reflects on the legacy of Aiiieeeee! An Anthology of Asian-American Writers fifty years after its first publication: “Aiiieeeee!  became a foundational text in Asian American Literature, and its editors were credited for both rescuing stories out of time and opening readers to a diversity of voices and experiences from the Asian American community.”

May 6, 2024

“Garden of Time,” the theme of this year’s annual Met Gala—set to take place this evening—apparently derives from the 1962 short story by English author J. G. Ballard, “The Garden of Time.” The BBC considers the “delicious irony” of the ultra-exclusive fundraiser for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute alluding to a tale in which “the super-rich hide themselves in Arcadian splendour while the ‘great unwashed’ riot.”

May 3, 2024

The Asian American Literature Festival will return this September without the involvement of the Smithsonian Institution, which last year cancelled it with little warning. “And instead of only being in Washington, D.C., the in-person and virtual events will be spread out nationwide,” reports ABC News.

May 3, 2024

Authors who withdrew from PEN America’s World Voices Festival and Literary Awards in protest of the free speech organization’s response to the war in Gaza will be reading at an event called Freedom to Write for Palestine in New York City on Tuesday. The event will also raise funds for We Are Not Numbers, “a youth-led Palestinian nonprofit project in Gaza that provides the world with direct access to Palestinian narratives.”

May 3, 2024

On JSTOR Daily Matthew Wills explores the origin of the penguin in the logo of Penguin Random House, previously Penguin Books, which launched in 1935.

May 3, 2024

Copper Canyon Press today announced that Ryo Yamaguchi is its new publisher. Yamaguchi was previously the publicist of Copper Canyon, an independent poetry press based in Port Townsend, Washington. Michael Wiegers will assume the role of the press’s artistic director in addition to his current position as executive editor, which he will continue.

Literary Events Calendar

Readings & Workshops

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Alla Abdulla-Matta presents her work at the Ninth Annual Connecting Cultures Reading. The event took place at the Center for Book Arts in New York, New York on May 15, 2018. (Credit: Margarita Corporan)
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Poet Juan Delgado at the Cholla Needles Monthly Reading. The event took place at Space Cowboy Books in Joshua Tree, California on October 7, 2018. (Credit: Bob DeLoyd)
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Marty Carrera at the Seventeenth Annual Intergenerational Reading. The event took place at Barnes & Noble Union Square in New York, New York on June 23, 2018. (Credit: Margarita Corporan)

Poets & Writers Theater

“These are notes on encountering the daily, the literary, the visual, violent, the arbitrary, the ordinary, and the beautiful…. They are always concerned with what I think of as the ordinary, extraordinary matter of Black life.” In this Virginia... more

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