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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 hour ago

Susan Choi: For so long I associated Dickens with unbearable Christmas TV specials'

Early reading included Roald Dahl; favorite books featured miniatures like Stuart Little and The Borrowers; Barthelme and Nunez revealed literary playfulness and racial diversity.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
35 minutes ago

What we're reading: George Saunders, Erin Somers and Guardian readers on the books they enjoyed in January

Re-reading classics and contemporary novels reveals diverse literary powers: playful zaniness, dense language, sweeping ambition, humane realism, and restorative small-scale storytelling.
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fromThe Nation
1 hour ago

Ishmael Reed on His Diverse Inspirations

A 1960s artist navigated and bridged Black cultural nationalism and the white counterculture while collaborating with multicultural avant-garde artists.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 hours ago

Wise by Frank Tallis review how to turn your midlife crisis into a hero's journey

Following some of the arguments in Ernest Becker's 1973 study The Denial of Death, he proposes that such crises are at least partly the result of the western reluctance to face mortality. In Britain, we eschew open coffins, for instance. When our relatives die, as my mother did two years ago, they die in a hospital rather than at home. We can hardly even bring ourselves to say die, preferring euphemisms such as pass away.
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fromSan Francisco Bay Times
9 hours ago

Jacob Anthony Rose: Practicing Love in the Aftermath of Silence - San Francisco Bay Times

Reclaiming voice through drag and daily practice transforms silence into self-compassion, sustained joy, and non-linear healing.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash review clever comedy for our conspiracy theory age

Tenderness combined with sharp satire provides a successful comic response to contemporary apocalyptic anxiety.
fromwww.npr.org
17 hours ago

George Saunders' 'Vigil' is a brief and bumpy return to the Bardo

If Heaven, according to Talking Heads, is the place where nothing ever happens, the Bardo, according to George Saunders, is as jam-packed and frantic as Costco on Black Friday. We Saunders fans have been to the Bardo before that suspended state between life and death where, according to Tibetan Buddhism, a person's self-awareness helps determine what kind of existence they'll enter next.
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fromBrooklyn Eagle
23 hours ago

New Carnegie Medal winners Megha Majumdar and Yiyun Li love libraries

Megha Majumdar won the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Fiction; Yiyun Li won the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Nonfiction.
#epistolary-fiction
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
20 hours ago

Virgin by Hollie McNish audiobook review myth-shattering poetry about purity and sex

Collection confronts myths of purity, reclaims bodily autonomy, condemns shaming for shared images, exposes gendered double standards and historical property-based origins of virginity.
Books
fromAnOther
23 hours ago

Makenna Goodman's New Book Is a Gripping Portrait of a Disgraced Professor

Explores who gets to live the 'good life', interrogating rural idylls, identity, empathy, cancel culture, obsession, and the complexities of love.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

From incel culture to the White House: American Psycho's dark hold on modern masculinity

Patrick Bateman persists as a cultural figure embodying capitalist excess, inspiring films, musicals, memes, and theatrical revivals decades after American Psycho's debut.
fromVulture
23 hours ago

Agents Are Looking for the Next Heated Rivalry on Fanfic Sites

You may know the story by now: Rachel Reid began posting what would become Heated Rivalryon the fan-fiction site Archive of Our Own, one chapter at a time. Eventually, the Halifax-based author reportedly removed the posts, reworked the book, submitted it to publishers, and sold it in 2019 to Carina Press, a digital-first imprint at Harlequin. While the first book in her "Game Changers" series found a solid fan base among romance readers, no one expected just how many more would join them.
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fromInverse
16 hours ago

21 Years Later, Apple TV Is Finally Bringing The Modern Tolkien To TV And Film

Perhaps best known for taking over The Wheel of Time, Sanderson made his electric debut 21 years ago with. Now, more than two decades later, Sanderson's complex fantasy books, including the Mistborn series and The Stormlight Archive, are finally getting adapted for film and TV. As revealed by The Hollywood Reporter, Sanderson's Mistborn books will be adapted into a series of films, while The Stormlight Archive will become a TV series.
Books
fromUntapped New York
1 year ago

How Museum Artifacts in NYC Inspired a Novel About a Medieval Witch - Untapped New York

While working on a graduate school paper on the mystical powers of coral, gemologist Anna Rasche ventured deep into the archives of the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum's library. Coral is the most powerful material to ward off the evil eye-a belief Italians have held since ancient times. Romans often gifted newborns coral amulets to prevent sickness and bad luck.
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Books
fromThe Walrus
1 day ago

Speakerphone | The Walrus

Prayer as keeping an open line fosters mutual, attentive silence and faint shared speech amid everyday noises and distance.
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

What We're Reading

In this collection of essays, reported pieces, and criticism dating back to the nineteen-seventies, Frazier's sharp eye for finding the complex in the quotidian is on full display. From tales about monster trucks and the Maraschino-cherry empire to musings about lantern flies and Lolita, the collection-much of which was published in this magazine-spotlights the vibrancy of topics often under-noticed. In the playful and diligent hands of the seasoned staff writer, these ordinary things feel extraordinary.
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fromSlate Magazine
2 days ago

Are We Just Recycling Old Stories, Ideas, and Styles?

21st-century culture is abundant and accessible but suffers an innovation deficit, leaving a "blank space" where original cultural creation should emerge.
Books
fromwww.newyorker.com
1 day ago

April Bernard Reads John Ashbery

April Bernard reads John Ashbery's A Worldly Country and her poem Beagle or Something; she has published novels and poetry and teaches at Skidmore College.
#independent-bookstore
Books
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

Author Ellie Levenson talks about her novel, 'Room 706'

A London hotel hostage forces Kate Bright to confront her marriage, longtime affair, and complicated identity as mother and woman.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
1 day ago

So what if 'Your Truck' doesn't move? Kids know it's full of possibility

A child's still red truck represents ownership as latent possibility—patience, anticipation, and the promise of departure when the child is ready.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The Puma by Daniel Wiles review a visceral tale of cyclical violence

After finding this seam of gold, miner Michael dreams that his son will be able to go to school, rather than join the other children who work in the mine, like blind, bald rodents unearthing themselves in search of scraps of candlelight. In the novel, which won the 2023 Betty Trask prize, everything closes in on Michael: lungs clog, tunnels collapse, horse-drawn narrowboats are attacked by robbers in the sooty dusk. It's a vivid reminder of the cost, in bodily suffering, of resource extraction.
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Books
fromHarvard Gazette
1 day ago

Gathering medieval French prayerbook, Kabuki in America, Sylvia Plath's thoughts - Harvard Gazette

Houghton Library's new acquisitions display showcases diverse rare materials—from an 18th–19th-century Georgian Bible to Sylvia Plath's books and internment camp letters.
fromSlate Magazine
1 day ago

A High-Society Lawyer and a Hedge Funder Got Divorced. The Result Is the Best Memoir I've Read in Some Time.

but there's something comforting about knowing that even an ultrarich woman can't make a man act right. You can come from a good family, bring a couple of enormous trusts into the marriage, make some kids, build homes in both New York City and Martha's Vineyard if you'd like, but he'll still leave if he wants to. There's something relieving in that obviousness, in that inevitability, as if no one can truly get heterosexual marriage right, even those with all the resources in the world.
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fromInc
2 days ago

The Most Important Brand Your Business Has Isn't Your Logo-It's You

Leadership brand shapes employee trust more than external branding and must be intentionally designed with values, structure, consistency, and a clear blueprint.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

With The Rainbow Serpent, Dick Roughsey shared the spirit of our country. His work is a gift to us all | Alexis Wright

The Rainbow Serpent is an ancestral creation being that shapes landscape, law, ritual, and care for country central to Aboriginal spiritual belief.
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fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Bring Back Moral Fiction

George Saunders integrates moral wisdom into contemporary fiction, actively teaching practical lessons about how to live, countering wisdom's recent absence.
Books
fromBustle
2 days ago

Jennette McCurdy Is Over Cringey Sex Writing

Jennette McCurdy's debut novel Half His Age centers on a tender, intimate relationship between a 17-year-old Alaskan student and her high-school teacher.
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Less 'Lolita,' More Late-Stage Capitalism

Whatever you might think you're going to get from the familiar setup of Jennette McCurdy's Half His Age (a lonely high-school girl in Anchorage begins an extremely questionable sexual relationship with her teacher), any presumptions are dispelled from the very first page. When Waldo, the teenage narrator of the novel, observes her boyfriend's "slimy tongue that loop-de-loops over and over like a carnival ride, mechanical and passionless," she's setting a tone: irreverent, graphic, bilious.
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#george-saunders
Books
fromSlate Magazine
2 days ago

A Fan-Favorite Survivor Contestant Has Written a Novel About a Show That Looks a Whole Lot Like Survivor

A washed-up reality-show winner joins a new escape-style competition while a producer seeks redemption by crafting manipulative, high-stakes television moments.
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

The Marathon Moby-Dick Reading Is a Radical Act

I'm on a mission here. A collision with immensity awaits: the 2026 Moby-Dick Marathon at the New Bedford Whaling Museum. Programming, scholarship, and-the event's steadily droning core-a 25-hour cover-to-cover reading of the great book itself. Hundreds of volunteer readers, in five-minute increments, from noon on Saturday to 1 p.m. on Sunday. A test of my fortitude as a listener, of my ability to keep my behind in a seat.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Glyph by Ali Smith review bearing witness to the war in Gaza

Glyph confronts Israeli apartheid and genocide in Palestine, using Petra and Patch's names, etymology, and imagery to intensify ethical and linguistic urgency.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Two Women Living Together by Kim Hana and Hwang Sunwoo review the Korean bestseller about platonic partnership

Two middle-aged women in South Korea buy and share a home as friends, treating their partnership like family while navigating daily life and caregiving.
fromFuncheap
2 days ago

"Dessert" Arts & Crafts Release Party w/ Crafts + Free Cupcakes (SF)

Illustoria is a print magazine for creative kids and their grownups. The magazine celebrates visual storytelling, makers, and DIY culture through stories, art, comics, interviews, crafts, and activities. This high-quality triannual publication is geared toward readers ages 6-12 and the young at heart. Illustoria is the official publication of the International Alliance of Youth Writing Centers, publishing writing and art by young people alongside accomplished professionals.
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fromCN Traveller
2 days ago

What revisiting my grandparents' land in Bangladesh taught me about belonging

Deep personal and cultural ties to Sylhet reveal diaspora identity shaped by memory, changing landscapes, migration, and evolving language and environment.
Books
from24/7 Wall St.
2 days ago

Dave Ramsey's Best Advice for Anyone Nearing Retirement

People in their 50s should eliminate debt, spend conscientiously, and apply clear, actionable personal-finance strategies to secure a financially stable retirement within 10–15 years.
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago
Books

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

A tragicomic novel probes livestream fame and vulnerability, while a Volga travelogue examines contemporary Russia's identity, patriotism, and consequences of war and sanctions.
Books
fromVulture
3 days ago

What's a Satirist to Do in Times Like These?

An oil executive confronts his role in causing mass death and climate catastrophe on his deathbed as supernatural visitors press him to face the consequences.
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

"Infinite Jest" Has Turned Thirty. Have We Forgotten How to Read It?

"Go, litel book," he bids the manuscript that's soon to be out of his hands. "That thou be understonde I god beseche!" Had Chaucer stuck around to witness the ensuing six hundred-plus years of literary discourse-and the past few decades in particular-he might have concluded that, when it comes to being understonde, the litel books aren't the ones you have to worry about. It's the big ones that'll get you.
Books
fromThe Nation
4 days ago

George Whitmore's Unsparing Queer Fiction

A 1987 novel titled Nebraska uses the state's flat, isolating landscape to frame a family chamber drama that serves as an oblique allegory of AIDS.
Books
fromWomen Writers, Women's Books
4 days ago

The Case for Self-Publishing, and Why It's Easier Now Than Ever Before - Women Writers, Women's Books

Self-publishing teaches more about publishing mechanics and provides greater control over a book's journey than relying on a traditional publisher.
Books
fromHarvard Gazette
3 days ago

The stories behind the books - Harvard Gazette

Harvard's library collection includes books that use layered images, movable elements, and raised type to create interactive, tactile, and accessible reading experiences.
Books
fromJezebel
3 days ago

George R.R. Martin Needs to Learn from Recent HBO History

George R.R. Martin's unfinished final two A Song of Ice and Fire books risk being completed by others unless he publicly names a successor.
fromPortland Monthly
3 days ago

5 Oregon-Made Comics to Know

Sacco is from Malta. He immigrated here, I think when he was 11 or 12, and created a whole genre of comics journalism: He embeds himself in conflict zones, then writes a graphic novel. Palestine is incredibly powerful and it's obviously still relevant. It was the story of Palestine in the '90s. That's the book to go to if you wanted to start reading Joe Sacco.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

A Guardian and a Thief by Megha Majumdar review survival in a climate-ravaged Kolkata

Climate-driven scarcity in Kolkata forces caretakers into theft, blurring the distinction between guardian and thief.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
4 days ago

A fresh retelling of the tale of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight * Oregon ArtsWatch

A contemporary retelling renders Sir Gawain and the Green Knight in modern English, blending skeptical scrutiny of magic with medieval enchantment and antiquarian sonnets.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Parents, please don't stop reading to your children a great picture book could change their life | Sally Rippin

Reading picture books aloud builds vocabulary, phonological awareness, brain development and gives children a school advantage while representing diverse family experiences.
fromRoger Ebert
3 days ago

The Archaic Mother's Embrace: How "If I Had Legs I'd Kick You" and "Die My Love" Reframe the Monstrous | Features | Roger Ebert

Protagonist Edna Pontellier, heartbroken and hopeless, swims out into the Gulf of Mexico until her body tires and the water swallows her up. The act is impossibly sad, but it also feels as if it's not about itself. Or rather, it expresses something about the act, choice, of suicide that so often remains out of focus: how hard our world is to live in.
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Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

"Mami at Her Vanity"

A woman adopts many public and private faces, masking pain, joy, and identity until only absence and memory remain.
Books
fromInverse
3 days ago

'Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms' Episode 2 Just Dropped A Big Targaryen Easter Egg

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms uses intimate, small-scale scenes to reference the Blackfyre Rebellion and its lasting impact on Targaryen succession.
Books
fromIndependent
5 days ago

'I don't see there is any point retrospectively criticising people for the way that they behaved' - 'Butcher Boy' novelist Patrick McCabe

Patrick McCabe remains rooted in Irish counter-culture while engaging with communal rituals and symbols.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Underground wit and poor attention spans | Letters

Poems on the Underground seldom capture the London Underground experience, inspiring satirical commuter poems and comparisons between oral epic attention strategies and modern cinema.
Books
fromTravel + Leisure
4 days ago

How a 1948 Murder Mystery Turned My New Orleans Trip Into a Killer Vacation

Reading fiction set in a travel destination enhances immersion and enriches travel by connecting stories to local landmarks, history, and personal experiences.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

'Crux' author Gabriel Tallent says taking risks doesn't always guarantee a safety net

Two teenage climbers confront mental illness, working-class tensions, intense friendship, and the perilous, cooperative risks and exhilaration of rock climbing.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Green Dot author Madeleine Gray: Chosen family is big in the queer community'

I thought: holy fuck, there's been a mistake, the 31-year-old author laughs.
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

Tom Stoppard's Secret-And Mine

Tom Stoppard's Leopoldstadt parallels hidden Jewish family histories, reflecting both Stoppard's and the narrator's late discovery of Jewish ancestry and Holocaust losses.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

"The Quiet House," by Tessa Hadley

An elderly Geraldine reflects on youthful memories of Mattie, mixing nostalgia, loss, and the contrast between past admiration and present solitude.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

Tessa Hadley on the Power of Memory

A lasting friendship rests on shared sensibility, mutual trust to perceive and understand, and an affinity of insight beyond mere shared experiences.
fromMedium
4 years ago

bell hooks saved me

bell hooks saved me. I say that in all sincerity. At a critical time in my life, when I was at my lowest point, it was bell hooks, through her books, who pulled me out of a hole of profound depression and set me on a path of self-renewal on which I have remained ever since. Newly divorced with two very young sons, I was determined to give a better fatherhood experience than the one I had.
fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

The new treasure hunters: How metal-detecting became a way for women in the UK to bond

While looking for ways to pass the time during the pandemic, cousins Lucie Gray and Ellie Bruce, 34 and 26 respectively, tried out a metal detector in their grandfather's garden. That same day, they found a button from a naval jacket, which piqued their curiosity. It made us wonder what other hidden things might be out there, Gray recalls. She had recently moved from her native New Zealand to Lincoln, England, where her relatives live.
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Books
fromKqed
3 weeks ago

10 Books We're Looking Forward to in Early 2026

Early 2026 releases include translated and original fiction about friendship and nature, celebrity and historical biographies, and a Liza Minnelli memoir.
Books
fromKqed
3 weeks ago

Put These 12 Eye-Opening Nonfiction Books on Your 2026 Reading List

Pop culture and corporate power shape individual lives, influencing female self-image, corporate accountability, nature appreciation, and music consumption dynamics.
Books
fromKqed
2 weeks ago

20 Recommendations From 2025 for Your 2026 Book Club

Twenty 2025 book-club selections that spark conversation through diverse genres, complex characters, family dynamics, psychological ambiguity, and narrative techniques.
fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

A wintry mix: 12 reading recommendations to get you through the storm

If you're hunkering down ahead of the big winter storm this weekend, we want to make sure you're well prepared. Yes, with batteries, flashlights, toilet paper, and food but perhaps most importantly with good reading material. We looked back through some recent interviews and Books We Love, our annual year-end reading guide, to find snowy suggestions to get you through the storm.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
6 days ago

Seaside's Beach Books celebrates 20 years, serving readers nationwide * Oregon ArtsWatch

Beach Books, a 20-year-old independent bookstore in Seaside, Oregon, built nationwide loyal customers and endured Amazon and eBooks through perseverance and community focus.
Books
fromKqed
1 week ago

'Who is America at 250?' Interrogates the (So-Called) Land of the Free

Art exhibition uses book arts to critique America's freedoms and highlight art's healing power.
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fromQueerty
1 week ago

Queerty Book Club's February Pick: Darcy Michael's ADHD Memoir - Queerty

A neurodivergent comedian reframes ADHD with humor and honest reflection, treating it as a way to live alongside rather than a problem to fix.
Books
fromwww.eastbaytimes.com
5 days ago

Library Lines: Contra Costa branches' 2025 digital checkouts broke record

Contra Costa County Library achieved a record 3,045,601 digital checkouts in 2025 via Libby, while Pinole Library will close March 1 for an 11-month renovation.
Books
fromKqed
1 month ago

What Was on Jane Austen's Nightstand? 'The White Lotus' of Its Time

Jane Austen engaged with contemporary urban culture and the picturesque; Doctor Syntax's satirical vogue waned but is being revived through a modern critical edition.
Books
fromKqed
1 week ago

In Carolina Ixta's New Novel, Teens Fight Against Pollution for a 'Few Blue Skies'

Few Blue Skies portrays environmental and labor injustices affecting a Latinx family in California, blending romance, familial drama, and expressive language aimed at young readers.
fromKqed
1 month ago

'The Sea Captain's Wife' Brings a San Francisco Legend to Life

A couple of years ago, I stumbled across a most unusual story from the annals of old San Francisco. It concerned a 19-year-old woman named Mary Ann Patten who spent two months captaining a 216-foot-long clipper ship after her husband fell deathly ill during an around-the-world journey. In that time, Patten squashed an on-board mutiny, won the loyalty of the crew and kept her husband alive. The kicker? She did all of this while pregnant with her first child.
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fromwww.esquire.com
6 days ago

22 Most Anticipated Books of 2026

Vigil explores memory, compassion, and atonement through a dying oil CEO visited by a ghost who helps him cross over.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

A Biography Without 'The Boring Bits'

Biographies of editors benefit from focusing tightly on editorial work rather than sprawling reconstructions of the subject's later, uneventful life.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Ali Smith: Henry James had me running down the garden path shouting out loud'

Early exposure to Beatles labels, Charlotte's Web, and Liz Lochhead’s poetry sparked a lifelong love of reading and inspired a desire to write.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

How Do You Write About the Inexplicable?

Rational skepticism coexists with a persistent tendency to personify evil and read coincidences as omens.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Nina McConigley discusses her new novel and being an immigrant in rural America

Two mixed-race sisters in 1980s Wyoming plot revenge for sexual abuse and racialized displacement, channeling postcolonial anger into a planned murder.
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fromNature
1 week ago

Marvellous microbes, memory and the multiverse: Books in brief

Microscopy uncovered microbes and cellular anatomy; biosemiotics connects life and sign systems; memory constitutes both reader and read of personal identity.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

May We Feed the King by Rebecca Perry review a dazzling puzzle-box of a debut

We are initiated into a world in which historically accurate foodstuffs can be ordered online a half oyster shell, the exposed flesh shining as if with the freshest brine, is 31.25 for a single piece and begin to understand one of the most striking things about this novel: its insistence upon detail, its utter specificity, set against a deliberate lack of specificity regarding the larger details that the reader's mind naturally itches to fill in.
Books
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 week ago

New book offers fresh perspectives on why Cubism came into being

Cubism and Reality is his return to the works by Georges Braque, Pablo Picasso and Juan Gris that define early Cubism. The book has many strands but turns around a highly informed reconstruction of the processes by which their interactions with reality resulted in physical works of art, what Green terms "material things to be looked at". The revolutionary works discussed remain visually difficult; as he acknowledges, they are "most often only slowly penetrated by looking, imagining, reflecting and looking again".
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fromArs Technica
6 days ago

TR-49 is interactive fiction for fans of deep research rabbit holes

Research notes in a cataloged database reveal interlinked authors, hidden computer commands, and an unfolding narrative converging on a metaphysical search and encroaching threat.
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

MAGA pop culture gets another boost fromThe Hunting Wives'author

East Texas settings and conservative social dynamics are fueling popular, lurid fiction and TV about wealthy oil families, sexual intrigue, and traditional gender roles.
fromFast Company
1 week ago

9 nonfiction books to kick-start 2026

Every season, the Next Big Idea Club editorial team reviews dozens of upcoming books to curate a selection of the most exciting, must-read nonfiction titles. We start with a broad pool of nominees from which we identify a small handful of finalists and, ultimately, an official season selection. Today, it's our pleasure to share our list of five finalists for Season 29! Without further ado, the new books we're most excited about right now are . . .
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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

'Even the Dead' wraps up John Banville's smart, moody mystery series

Quirke mysteries combine noir darkness with literary prose, following a Dublin coroner confronting trauma, moral ambiguity, and hidden crimes in 1950s settings.
fromFuncheap
1 week ago

Swig / Swap: Free Bubbly and Book Exchange (Oakland)

Sharing knowledge & culture is community care. Our book swap series is back at Town Bar & Lounge - and every other month after that. The Swig: Come and get a drink token for a free glass of bubbly from the bar. (Refills or other drinks are on you, though). The Swap: Bring a book that has meaning to you, gave you joy & escape, changed your mind, or offered knowledge about the world.
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fromVulture
1 week ago

Can Jennette McCurdy Transcend Provocation?

A 17-year-old repeatedly engages in a sexual relationship with her 40-year-old English teacher, embodying cycles of self-degradation, neglect, and shock-driven scenes.
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fromDefector
1 week ago

Elisa Shua Dusapin Is The Real Deal | Defector

Elisa Shua Dusapin crafts spare, haunted short novels with exceptional mood and atmosphere, earning global comparisons, translations, and major literary recognition.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

'The White Hot' asks: If men can go find themselves, why can't women?

A woman undertakes a spiritual quest, mirroring male literary pilgrimages, challenging gendered expectations about freedom and motherhood.
fromFuncheap
1 week ago

Performance: Kim Shuck's Poem Jam Celebrates Women in a Golden State

San Francisco Poet Laureate emerita invites writers featured in Women in a Golden State to present at SFPL's Monthly poetry reading. was San Francisco's seventh Poet Laureate. Her poetry draws on her multiethnic background which includes Polish and Cherokee heritage, and her experiences as a lifelong resident of San Francisco. Her most recent book of poetry, Pick a Garnet to Sleep In, was published in 2024, and her book of essays, Noodle, Rant, Tangent, was published in 2022.
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fromDaily News
1 week ago

Things to do in the San Fernando Valley, LA area, Jan. 22-30

Natural History Museum Los Angeles County: New: "Unearthed - Raw Beauty," an exhibit of mineral specimens displayed in their natural and uncut form, through April 18, 2027 ( https://nhm.org/unearthed-rare-mineral-exhibition). Ongoing exhibit: "Fierce! The Story of Cats," is an international traveling exhibit, from the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in France, runs through Feb. 18 (this exhibit requires an add-on ticket price to the museum's general admission; nhm.org/cats). Hours: 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Sunday (but closed on the first Tuesday of the month and some holidays).
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fromFuncheap
1 week ago

Performance: Kim Shuck's Poetry Reading (SF Main Library)

Free monthly poetry reading at San Francisco Public Library on February 12, 2026, 6:00–7:15 pm, featuring Poet Laureate emerita Floyd Tangeman and special guests.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

It was a wipeout': how a family came back from a wife and mother's murder

A father reframes a brutal family trauma into a path of resilience, offering guidance for parents and leaders to transform grief into thriving leadership.
fromABC7 Los Angeles
1 week ago

Show your Percy Jackson fandom proudly with our collection of essential apparel and more

Hey Demigods and Campers! Show your fandom for the Percy Jackson Universe proudly with our collection of essential apparel and more, like Camp Half-Bloodt-shirts, comfy hoodies, and must-have books. And for a limited time only, fans can get a 15% discount using the code "ABCNEWS15". So whether you're gearing up for your next quest or just want to share your Riordanverse pride, we've got you covered.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The Real Fight for the Smithsonian

"The object of the Museum is to acquire power," announces a crusty old archaeologist in Penelope Fitzgerald's 1977 satire, The Golden Child. It isn't a goal he respects. He wants the museum where he's settled into semiretirement to genuinely devote itself to educating its visitors. Instead, he correctly charges, its curators act like a pack of Gollums, hoarding "the art and treasures of the earth" for their own self-aggrandizement and pleasure.
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