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fromVulture
7 hours ago

Book Gossip Is Going Biweekly

Book Gossip, a newsletter about what the literati are really thinking, is entering a new chapter. I'm Jasmine Vojdani, a senior newsletter editor at New York, where I also cover books and culture. I first moved to the city to start a degree in creative writing, choosing the M.F.A. and NYC (and, naturally, debt) - and I have lots of thoughts about that.
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fromThe Atlantic
13 hours ago

Sense of an Ending

Julian Barnes's Departure(s) eschews conventional plot, blending memoir, sparse romance, and reflections on memory and aging in elegant prose.
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fromThe Atlantic
9 hours ago

The Internet Novel Is Growing Up

Internet-driven isolation and online radicalization intensify familial fractures, transforming traditional unhappy-family narratives into a distinctly digital crisis.
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fromVulture
13 hours ago

Promising Young Women

1990s media portrayed American suburbs as sites of structural, psychic rot and boredom; contemporary creators like Madeline Cash revisit suburban symbolism through nostalgia, humor, fame.
#colleen-hoover
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fromHarvard Gazette
5 hours ago

What karaoke taught Elizabeth McCracken about fiction- Harvard Gazette

Accepting failure and personal limits fosters sustained creative work, prioritizing writing while embracing imperfect ambitions and private pleasures.
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fromGameSpot
1 hour ago

The Battle Royale Manga Returns With A New Deluxe Edition

Battle Royale receives a Deluxe Edition manga first volume releasing January 27, available for preorder at $44 (20% off the $55 MSRP).
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fromTravel + Leisure
11 hours ago

This Small California Town Has the Largest Outdoor Bookstore in the World-and It's Just 3 Hours From L.A.

Bart's Books in Ojai is the world's largest outdoor bookstore offering over 130,000 used and new titles in an outdoor cottage setting.
#game-changers-series
fromBuzzFeed
1 day ago
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Attention "Heated Rivalry" Fans: Shane And Ilya Are Coming Back In A Brand New Book

fromBuzzFeed
1 day ago
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Attention "Heated Rivalry" Fans: Shane And Ilya Are Coming Back In A Brand New Book

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fromsfist.com
5 hours ago

'Dilbert' Cartoonist Scott Adams, Who Spent His Final Years as a Trump-Loving Podcaster, Dies at 68

Scott Adams, creator of Dilbert, died of aggressive prostate cancer; he popularized satirical office-culture comics and later promoted self-help and controversial politics.
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fromwww.npr.org
15 hours ago

'Fly, Wild Swans' is Jung Chang's painfully personal tribute to her mother

Jung Chang's personal and family history shaped her historical work, prompted state surveillance, and produced long-term estrangement from her elderly mother.
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fromFuncheap
23 hours ago

Anime & Manga Club: An Afternoon Full Of Fun | SF

Monthly teen anime and manga club at Park Branch Library offers art, discussion, snacks, and refreshments for ages 12–18 on every 2nd Sunday.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

Two novels explore grief, memory, time, and human connection through speculative science and intimate caregiving narratives revealing loss, longing, and emotional reciprocity.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Act of family vengeance': French defamation case highlights perils of writing autofiction

The Polish poet Czesaw Miosz is famously credited with the line: When a writer is born into a family, the family is finished. In contemporary European literature, a book these days is often the beginning of a familial feud. With thinly disguised autobiographical accounts of family strife undergoing a sustained boom across the continent, it can increasingly lead to family reunions in courtrooms.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Seven by Joanna Kavenna review a madcap journey to the limits of philosophy

Seven is an uncategorisable, idea-rich novel blending academic satire, absurdism, travel, and philosophical inquiry through a narrator's quest linked to a mythical game.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

British Library acquires archive of rural life writer and essayist Ronald Blythe

The British Library acquired Ronald Blythe's meticulously ordered archive, preserving over a million words documenting a century of rural East Anglian life and social change.
fromThe Nation
1 day ago

John Updike, Letter Writer

Not only had young John not written as much as he thought he had; his mother (who was his true soulmate) was now feeling self-conscious because she had written three letters to his every one. Two perfect paragraphs follow these opening sentences, addressing the situation as John has been led to believe the folks back home are experiencing it, after which he writes:
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Brutal, vibrant and creative: capturing the soul of Latin America in 100 photographs

Latin America balances a history of violent subjugation with a resilient, culturally rich identity expressed through art, photography and transnational solidarity.
fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

"Men's Beds"

I was promiscuous With my feelings most of all. Under stars, I sprayed saline solution into two wineglasses And took out my contacts. I didn't want summer to end, but it did. Many lives Happened inside those walls, And, for a season, I wore a designer hoodie And got iced americanos every morning. I slept in men's beds: They took turns breaking Me. It felt good, but one's absence Weighed on me like a death.
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fromConsequence
1 day ago

Puscifer Unveil Comic Book Series "Tales from the Pusciverse"

Puscifer released Tales from the Pusciverse Issue No.1 featuring Bellendia Black and Maynard James Keenan; the comic is available for $6.66.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Poem of the week: Dream-Pedlary by Thomas Lovell Beddoes

Dream-Pedlary i. If there were dreams to sell. What would you buy? Some cost a passing bell; Some a light sigh, That shakes from Life's fresh crown Only a rose-leaf down. If there were dreams to sell, Merry and sad to tell, And the crier rung the bell, What would you buy? ii. A cottage lone and still, With bowers nigh,
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fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

First Memory

Already she remembers scenes, so many- her mother walking in through the front door with her wrapped-up baby brother; that time the big dog gobbled up her toast before she could take a single bite; that day a bad man pushed her so hard on the swing she spun out, landing face down in the dust. Also, sometimes, some first happy thing she barely senses anymore- a soapy bath toy, warm in her baby hands?
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fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 day ago

Australia festival faces mass boycott after dropping Palestinian author

About 100 writers, four board members and a sponsor withdrew from the Adelaide Festival after the board disinvited Australian-Palestinian Randa Abdel-Fattah.
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

Sadia Shepard on Loss, Faith, and the Web Between Stories

I think there's a deep loneliness to her life that cohabiting with her brother kept at bay-and, now that he's gone, she is forced to face it. As more of Kim's letters are delivered, Helen becomes invested in the narrative they form, as if she were piecing together a puzzle, one that, in some ways, echoes her own past. Kim's family is Muslim, from Pakistan.
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fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

Patrick Radden Keefe on Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood"

Truman Capote explored human fascination with violent spectacle and promoted the 'nonfiction novel' to turn lurid true-crime reporting into literary art.
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fromIndependent
2 days ago

'I'm getting married in 2027. So that's a great come around' - Eoin McGee on the injury that changed his life, finding new love and his latest financial advice book

Eoin McGee begins a new life chapter after an eight-year health scare, shifting focus to philosophical and practical strategies for living free from financial stress.
fromwww.dw.com
2 days ago

Jack London: A life of adventure DW 01/11/2026

Born in San Francisco as John Griffith Chaney on January 12, 1876, he was an illegitimate child. His biological father never acknowledged paternity, shunning his mother while she was still pregnant. She would later marry Civil War veteran John London, who took him in as his stepson and gave him his surname. London grew up in severe financial hardship. From an early age, he left school and took up multiple jobs to help support his family.
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#silicon-valley-reads
fromThe Mercury News
2 days ago

Silicon Valley Reads events in Milpitas include watercolor class

Adults ages 18 and older are invited to welcome the season of renewal with a Jan. 17 watercolor session at the Milpitas Library inspired by fairytale mushrooms and spring landscapes. This guided workshop, part of this year's Silicon Valley Reads, is meant to help participants relax and create through watercolor art. The session is set for 10:30 a.m.-noon. All necessary supplies will be furnished. Registration is not required. Seating is limited to the first 30 attendees and is available on a first-come, first-served basis. For more information, visit https://bit.ly/3LhOWPC.
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fromThe Mercury News
2 days ago

Sunnyvale library hosts tree walk, book sale

Walk among evergreens The Sunnyvale Urban Forest Advocates will lead a tree walk around the Sunnyvale Public Library on Jan. 17, noon-1:30 p.m. Participants will learn the differences between deciduous and evergreen trees and about evergreens' resilience and their role in the ecosystem. The program will meet on the Library Plaza, 665 W. Olive Ave. Registration is required to https://bit.ly/4qEQTVd.
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fromHarper's Magazine
2 days ago

Word Collision, by Richard E. Maltby Jr., Roddy Howland Jackson

This year, Maltby, who was first hired by the Harper's editor emeritus Lewis H. Lapham, celebrates fifty years writing the magazine's monthly cryptic crossword. (To mark the occasion, I've included a cryptic clue below.) Maltby describes the puzzle as a "little universe on the back page," like a god estranged from his own intelligent design. It is "kind of lonely," he told me. But for his many loyal solvers, Maltby has always made this universe feel lively and large.
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fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

How Living With Black Bears Transformed a Woman's Life

Healing from grief and finding common ground with maligned black bears shows that human behavior, not bears, creates conflicts; bears possess unique personalities and value.
fromInsideHook
2 days ago

Nicolas Cage's Historic Superman Comic Sells for $15 Million

What's more rare than the first issue of Action Comics, the comic book that introduced the world to Superman? How about this: a copy of Superman's first comic book appearance which was once owned by an actor who almost (depending on how you feel about the film The Flash) played Superman on screen. The Man of Steel made his first appearance in the first issue of Action Comics; that issue, printed in 1938, is now a collectors' item.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Mass surveillance, the metaverse, making America great again': the novelists who predicted our present

An infinite branching conception of time in which every possible path occurs anticipates many-worlds ideas in physics.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Heated Rivalry review these physically perfect people have so much sex it's tedious

For those not aware: intimacy coordinators gained prominence in the aftermath of the #MeToo movement, when assorted testimonies from actors (largely female) made public and unignorable the shocking fact that actors (largely male) and directors (largely male) will often (largely always) try to get away with more than has been contracted for once they are naked with A N Other person. An intimacy coordinator is there to help arrange scenes and advocate for actors. Think of them as somewhere between a bureaucrat and a contraceptive.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Roger McGough: How often do I have sex? Hang on, I'll find out Alexa, how often do I have '

Roger McGough is an 88-year-old Liverpool-born poet, performer, radio host, and author who values family, humor, and accessibility in poetry.
fromFortune
3 days ago

The 'Holy Grail of comic books' that Nicolas Cage bought for $150,000 before it was stolen sells at auction for a record $15 million | Fortune

The comic - which sold for 10 cents when it came out in 1938 - was an anthology of tales about mostly now little-known characters. But over a few panels, it told the origin story of Superman's birth on a dying planet, his journey to Earth and his decision as an adult to "turn his titanic strength into channels that would benefit mankind." Its publication marked the beginning of the superhero genre.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

It's younger people seeking some sort of spirituality': UK Bible sales reach record high

For Christian booksellers, the good news about Bible sales has been few and far between. But in recent retail figures, there was a revelation. Sales of the good book reached a record high in the UK in 2025, increasing by 134% since 2019 the highest since records began according to industry research. Last year, the total sales of Bibles in the UK reached 6.3m in 2025, 3.61mup on 2019 sales.
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fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

The Gospel According to Emily Henry

Emily Henry channels rom-com sensibility and religious upbringing to create a fresh, cinematic-influenced romance novel blending humor, nostalgia, and emotional depth.
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fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

What a Fantasy Can Reveal About Real Life

Fictional lies and imagined worlds can reveal deeper human truths through protagonists who fabricate realities, exposing inner desires, vulnerabilities, and psychological unraveling.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Sarah Moss: I never liked Wuthering Heights as much as Jane Eyre'

Early reading experiences and family support shaped lasting literary tastes, identity, and critical awareness, prompting later reassessments of values and perspectives.
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fromFast Company
4 days ago

Brick-and-mortar bookshops look better than ever in the Amazon age

Physical print books remain widely popular despite Amazon's dominance in sales, e-books, and audiobooks, with strong brick-and-mortar growth and sustained print revenue.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

The best recent science fiction, fantasy and horror review roundup

Two novels blend science-fiction or supernatural elements with intimate suspense: an alien-linked serial-killer investigation and a Cornish folk horror about ancient sea pacts and sisterhood.
#tv-adaptation
fromThe Walrus
5 days ago
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"It's Not Something I'm Squeamish About": Heated Rivalry Author on Writing Explicit Sex Scenes | The Walrus

fromThe Walrus
5 days ago
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"It's Not Something I'm Squeamish About": Heated Rivalry Author on Writing Explicit Sex Scenes | The Walrus

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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Belgrave Road by Manish Chauhan review a tender tale of love beyond borders

A tender coming-of-age love story portrays immigrant loneliness, secrecy, precarious futures, and love as home, hope, and destiny in Leicester's immigrant community.
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fromianVisits
4 days ago

Fans, Frigates and Flirtation: Jane Austen's world in Greenwich exhibitions

Two Greenwich exhibitions reveal contrasting Georgian life aspects: fashionable social rituals via decorated fans and naval, personal histories through Austen brothers' maritime documents.
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fromKqed
5 days ago

10 Books We're Looking Forward to in Early 2026

Early-2026 releases feature fiction about friendship and class, translated works, memoir-inspired fiction, short-story collections, and underrecognized cultural biographies.
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fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

10 books we're looking forward to in early 2026

Early-2026 releases include translated fiction, nature-driven and friendship-centered novels, a celebrity fiction debut, acclaimed literary novels, and a speculative short-story collection.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

The Long Shoe by Bob Mortimer audiobook review typically quirky cosy crime

A down-on-his-luck man is offered a mysterious job and apartment amid a crime, surreal humour, and strong audiobook performances.
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fromGameSpot
5 days ago

Silo Series Collector's Edition Books On Sale For Over 60% Off

Deluxe Collector's Editions of Hugh Howey's Wool and Shift are currently discounted by at least 50%, with Wool at $15.19 and Shift at $20.
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fromTime Out London
5 days ago

A new bookshop cafe has opened next to Hampstead Heath

Funny Weather bookshop and café opened at 31 Grove Terrace, NW5, offering books, reading nooks, barista coffee and pastries near Hampstead Heath.
fromItsnicethat
5 days ago

Agata Grzybowska on collaborating with Chloe Zhao and Jessie Buckley to make a photobook companion for Hamnet

"She wanted me to photograph the unseen, the unconscious, and this is something I am also very dedicated to," says Agata.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie reveals her one-year-old son has died after a short illness

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's one-year-old twin son, Nkanu Nnamdi, died after a brief illness; the family requests privacy and prayers.
fromKqed
5 days ago

Thomas Lake Harris, the Cult Leader of Fountaingrove, Revisited in New Book | KQED

It's no secret that America is fascinated with cults and their scamming, grifting leaders. Viewers flock to TV series like Wild Wild Country, The Vow and Keep Sweet: Pray and Obey, and elevate con artists like the Tinder swindler and Elizabeth Holmes as antiheroes who've found loopholes in American society and business. Paddison tells Harris' story from its beginning in upstate New York, at the time a hotbed of self-proclaimed seers and prophets, including Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism.
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fromEngadget
5 days ago

Three months of Audible is only $3 right now

The promotion is live until January 21. Have a hankering for some audiobooks? Audible is holding one heck of a sale right now, giving users three months of access for $3. That's a dollar per month. This is something of a winter tradition for the Amazon-owned platform and the promotion ends on January 21. An Audible subscription grants one audiobook per month to keep. This can be selected from a massive catalog of new releases and bestsellers. The collection here has just about everything.
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fromItsnicethat
5 days ago

Underwater worlds and soft marine shapes: Julie Legrand and Nina Izycka's zine investigates seaweed

Julie and Nina created Alga, a pocket-sized publication documenting seaweed through collaborative illustrations and screen printing, inspired by their coastal swims.
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fromIndependent
5 days ago

Going, going, gone? Former Bonhams CEO thinks AI could deliver a hammer blow to auction houses

Enduring appetite for nostalgia drives a permanent market in which well-preserved collectibles command extreme prices and attract abundant buyer capital.
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fromFortune
6 days ago

Netflix co-CEO says he doesn't read business books-instead, he reads one 1902 novella about a ship and its captain 'over and over again' | Fortune

Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos uses Joseph Conrad's Typhoon as a recurring leadership guide, valuing fiction's lessons over traditional business books.
#book-recommendations
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago
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Reading for the New Year: Part Two

A humorous, detailed account of a bungled attempt to play baseball with Major League All-Stars highlights participatory sports journalism's masochistic micro-detail.
fromAnOther
1 week ago
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Ten Books to Add to Your Reading List in 2026

Ten forthcoming 2026 books offer diverse literary and non-fiction explorations, from experimental fiction to cultural deep dives into art, wartime history, and media.
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fromKqed
1 week ago

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

Corporate accountability in tech, pop culture's impact on young women, and evocative nature narratives that personify rivers.
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fromJezebel
6 days ago

Jezebel's January Book Club Pick: 'Television' by Lauren Rothery

A declining movie industry centers on a disillusioned star who stages a salary-and-points lottery to gain leverage and demand better scripts while revealing industry inequities.
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

I Lost My Library in a Fire

I had weighed that exact yes-or-no question untold thousands of times across my 60-some years of book collecting. This time was different. Weeks earlier, excepting a few hastily grabbed items, my entire collection of something like 4,000 volumes, acquired one by one over all those decades, had turned to smoke and ash in the Palisades fire. The question before me was not just about this particular book,
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

A moment that changed me: in the bombed-out ruins of an apartment block, I saw a book I'd translated

A translator's books and work symbolize resilience as Tehran endures sudden missile strikes, blackout, displacement, and the collapse of daily life.
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

For a moment, only that story matters': my plan to reignite the all-consuming love of books

A girl on the cusp of adolescence gazes down at a book. Her left hand rests against her flushed pink cheeks, while her right clutches the pages, ready to turn to find out what happens next. She has porcelain-like skin and golden hair seemingly full of air, executed in textures that contrast with the scratchy, loose marks that make up her shirt and the book's pages.
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
6 days ago

Christianity Today writer Philip Yancey quits, admits to 8-year affair with married woman

Philip Yancey is retiring after admitting an eight-year affair with a married woman while seeking reconciliation with his wife.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

This, My Second Life by Patrick Charnley review an astonishing debut of recovery

Jago Trevarno retreats to an off-grid Cornish farm to rebuild his life and recover mentally after a cardiac arrest, confronting isolation and the past.
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fromPortland Mercury
6 days ago

Literary Portland for Palestine Plans Readings, Still Asks Portland Book Fest To Divest

Writers and local arts groups are urging Literary Arts to reject sponsorship from banks tied to weapons firms and Israeli military suppliers.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

The Oak and the Larch by Sophie Pinkham review are Russia's forests the key to its identity?

Russia's forests, containing roughly 642 billion trees, shape national identity, economy, warfare, and political rhetoric through cycles of exploitation and conservation.
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fromOpen Culture
1 week ago

Dictionary of the Oldest Written Language-It Took 90 Years to Complete, and It's Now Free Online

U. Chicago released a free 21-volume Akkadian dictionary in 2011, offering downloadable PDFs that make the ancient Mesopotamian language accessible.
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fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

The Perils of Killing the Already Dead

Fear of the unquiet dead drove communities to mutilate and restrain corpses across cultures long before and beyond nineteenth-century vampire lore.
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fromScary Mommy
1 week ago

How To Satiate Your Kid's Curiosity Without Turning To The Internet

Children's curiosity faces obstacles because online information, instant gratification, and AI-generated content make reliable, age-appropriate research harder, prompting parents to seek safer, analog alternatives.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Put these 12 eye-opening books on your 2026 reading list

Investigative history of Argentina's stolen children and a cultural analysis of blue's meaning in Black history exemplify eye-opening nonfiction of 2025.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

What we're reading: Alan Hollinghurst, Samantha Harvey and Guardian readers on the books they enjoyed in December

the prose is rich, precise, disciplined and meticulously detailed; the many characters are so vividly rendered that none appears two-dimensional; each experiences and processes reality in a way that feels distinct and unmistakably individual; and the pacing of events feels perfectly judged. Although the novel is threaded with philosophical reflections on goodness and love, these never feel laboured or artificially imposed. Rather, they emerge naturally as an integral part of the novel's dense and intricate tapestry.
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fromThe Mercury News
1 week ago

Author, film director Sayles to appear Jan. 20 in Berkeley for new book

Crucible traces Ford Motor Company's evolution from the 1920s through World War II, mixing historical figures and fictional workers to explore industrial, racial, and political dynamics.
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Six Books for the Chronic Daydreamer

What is available is the daydream-a limitless realm of freedom. In this other world, one might be famous or rich, finally catch the attention of their beloved, or simply sit on a beach as a waiter brings them cocktails. They might fly or speak to animals, heroically save a child, tell off their boss with no consequences, win the Super Bowl at the whistle, or travel to another continent, planet, or time period. No one can stop them; no one can even object.
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fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 week ago

How an artist and a writer forged a frank friendship-and a book

"I have been reading your book The Lonely City: The Art of Being Alone and I wanted to write and say how very good it is," "I discovered Henry Darger's work about 15 years ago. I am so interested in how you write about him and [Edward] Hopper, [Andy] Warhol and [David] Wojnarowicz."
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fromFortune
1 week ago

Nearly half of Americans didn't read a single book last year-it's the one daily habit separating them from billionaires | Fortune

Elite achievers commonly read daily, while reading among Americans has sharply declined, undermining focused attention, nuanced analysis, and leadership-critical skills.
fromBig Think
1 week ago

The most successful information technology in history is the one we barely notice

Joel Miller opens his new book, The Idea Machine, with this famous scene from The Confessions because it sparked his own epiphany. Not a spiritual conversion, mind. What struck Miller during his recent reread was how Augustine marked his place with his finger. This seemingly unremarkable detail - a move any reader has made countless times - forced Miller to reevaluate books as not simply a vessel for ideas, but as history's most successful "information technology."
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Many schools don't think students can read full novels any more. That's a tragedy | Margaret Sullivan

Many high school students now read fewer full novels because schools assign excerpts and digital texts driven by attention-span beliefs and testing standards.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Arborescence by Rhett Davis review why would people turn into trees?

Cross-species human-to-tree transformation becomes large-scale voluntary protest and ecological strategy, centered on an ambivalent man and an advocate promoting arborescence.
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fromWIRED
1 week ago

Margaret Atwood on Doomscrolling: 'I Want to Keep Up With the Latest Doom'

An 86-year life recounts childhood, career struggles, settled grudges, political commentary, and enduring optimism about the United States.
fromwww.cntraveler.com
1 week ago

BookTok Fans Can Walk in the Footsteps of "People We Meet on Vacation" With This New Tour

2026 is the year of the book club, and there's never been a better time to explore a new city based on your favorite read. In fact, according to a recent study from Skyscanner, 55% of travelers have booked or would book a trip based on literature. Whether you're looking to get between the pages of your favorite tome by spending time on a reading retreat
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Love, desire and community: the new generation of readers bonding over romance novels

In a packed room in Sydney, an excited crowd riffles through stacks of stickers and bookmarks searching for their favourite characters. Another group flicks through racks of clothing, pulling out T-shirts that say romance readers club and probably reading about fairies. A poster on the wall, with tear-off tabs, invites visitors to take what they need: a love triangle, a love confession mid-dragon battle, a morally grey man or a cowboy. Half of the tabs have already been taken.
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fromKotaku
1 week ago

Amazon Practically Gives Away the Kindle Colorsoft to Clear Out Last Year's Remaining E-Reader Stock - Kotaku

The Kindle Colorsoft is available for $200 (20% off) and offers a 7-inch color display with adjustable lighting, color highlights, and features for illustrated books and comics.
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fromianVisits
1 week ago

New book reveals the overlooked modern architecture of Britain's Big Four railways

Interwar Big Four railway architecture transformed from ornate Neo‑Classical to Streamline Modernist mainline stations now comprehensively photographed and catalogued in a limited hardback.
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fromThe Mercury News
1 week ago

Rejection of award-winning novel for Sonoma County high school class sparks debate about censorship

A Windsor school board blocked teaching Scythe, citing concerns that depictions of state-sanctioned killings and suicide could be triggering for students.
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
1 week ago

Remembering Joanne Wilkens, teacher, writer, restorer of historic barns

Joanne Wilkens, beloved wife, mother and grandmother, passed away peacefully on Nov. 27, 2025, at the age of 84, surrounded by her loving family. Her lifelong connection to her family and to her cherished Gilmanton farmhouse was there to the very end; she was tending her wood stove and making breakfast in her warm kitchen when she suffered a severe stroke.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Ten Year Affair by Erin Somers review the midlife adultery story our generation deserves

A millennial mother yearns for passionate adultery amid smug, self-conscious suburbanites but spends a decade fantasizing and overthinking instead of acting.
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Feeling cooped up? Get out of town with this delightful literary road trip

Tom Layward, the narrator and main character of Ben Markovits' new novel, The Rest of Our Lives, introduces himself in a curious way: On the very first page of the book, he talks, matter-of-factly, about the affair his wife, Amy, had 12 years ago, when their two kids were young. Amy, who's Jewish, got involved at a local synagogue in Westchester; Tom, who was raised Catholic and is clearly not a joiner, remained on the sidelines.
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