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fromFuncheap
31 minutes ago

Thursday Night Poem Jam | SF Main Library

Join San Francisco Main Public Library with talented poets for a poetry jam. The Main Library's monthly Poem Jam poetry reading series, moderated by Kim Shuck, takes place on Thursdays at 6 pm in the Main Library. Thursday Night Poem Jam Every 2nd Thursday | 6 pm San Francisco Main Public Library, 100 Larkin St, San Francisco FREE - Updated 6/26/19 - Event info last checked via website
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fromwww.theguardian.com
10 hours ago

If holding a grudge is wrong, why does it feel so right? Just ask Margaret Atwood | Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett

Grudge-holding can be wryly humorous, justified, and publicly gratifying, especially when prominent individuals voice private vendettas and name or shame perceived wrongdoers.
#family-dynamics
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fromGameSpot
1 day ago

House Of Leaves Author's New 1,232-Page Book Gets Huge Limited-Time Discount

Tom's Crossing, a 1,232-page horror-western novel, is available at Amazon hardcover for $23.27 (was $40), heavily discounted two weeks after release.
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fromSun Sentinel
1 day ago

Miami Book Fair kicks off this weekend: Here are some highlights

The Miami Book Fair presents a diverse lineup of writers and cultural figures, culminating in a three-day street fair Nov. 21–23.
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fromSFGATE
1 day ago

With 'East of Eden' adaptation, fans are rediscovering canneries and characters

John Steinbeck's Monterey settings, especially Cannery Row, draw literary tourism, bolstered by walking tours and renewed interest from a Netflix 'East of Eden' adaptation.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Life at the Edge of a Famous Family

Eleanor Coppola struggled for creative visibility and personal identity while living in the shadow of her celebrated husband and daughter.
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fromIndependent
1 day ago

Boosting our cupla focal with the help of the original Irish influencer Hector O hEochagain

Daily Irish words, stories, and warm humor encourage regular use of the Irish language regardless of fluency.
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

Svetlana Alexievich: Homo Sovieticus hasn't died; he's in the Kremlin and fighting in Ukraine'

Svetlana Alexievich, the Belarusian author who writes in Russian and won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2015, lives in the same Berlin apartment, with its high ceilings and spacious rooms, where EL PAIS visited her four years ago. The author of Voices from Chernobyl, Zinky Boys: Soviet Voices from the Afghanistan War, and Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets continues to write by hand.
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fromThe Nation
1 day ago

The Hidden Politics of the Crossword Puzzle

A summer internship with Will Shortz immersed an aspiring cruciverbalist in the culture, artifacts, and daily routines surrounding high-level crossword editing.
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fromSlate Magazine
1 day ago

In the '90s, a Prolific Bank Robber Stumped the FBI. There's Still One Thing About Her That No One Can Figure Out.

Peggy Jo Tallas, a devoted caregiver, donned men's clothing, a fake beard, and a cowboy hat as a disguise on a May 1991 morning.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The best recent crime and thrillers review roundup

At Tithe Hall, Lord Conrad Stockingham-Welt is busy instructing his servants to prepare for the apocalyptic disaster he believes will be triggered by the imminent passage of Halley's comet. The labyrinthine house is a nest of secrets and grudges, harboured by both staff and family members, who include an irascible and splendidly foul-mouthed maiden aunt, Decima. When Lord Conrad is discovered in his sealed study, killed by a crossbow bolt to the eye, she co-opts a new footman to help her find the culprit.
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fromwww.psychologytoday.com
2 days ago

Can Reading Fiction Actually Make You Happier?

During the pandemic, I provided counseling for several health care providers. These dedicated medical professionals faced overwhelming stress due to: Patients dying at an increasingly higher rate. Longer hours of work, changing work conditions, and schedule changes. Significant risk of getting sick, and/or dying themselves. Risk of spreading the disease to family members at risk. My clients desperately needed stress-reduction tools to help them through a challenging time.
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fromPortland Mercury
2 days ago

Two Former Editors at The Nib Have Made the Only Primer On Ethical Comics Reporting

F rom the jump, I should admit that I have been skeptical of comics journalism. The method is too slow for the 24-hour news cycle, and making comics about complex and evolving issues risks simplifying things that should remain nuanced. However, a new, deeply-considered textbook by former editors at The Nib, Shay Mirk and Eleri Harris, has changed my mind.
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fromThe Walrus
2 days ago

Forget Running Groups and Work Socials. Find a Book Club | The Walrus

M olly Dunn had always wanted to join a book club. Until last winter, the twenty-five-year-old had been too busy or distracted to find the right one. The opportunity to start one struck when she began a new job as a sales associate at BMV, a Toronto bookstore. With her manager's permission, she set a date for the inaugural meeting and posted an announcement to the store's Instagram page. The question was: Would anyone come?
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fromwww.esquire.com
2 days ago

All the Weird Things 'The Running Man' Predicted About 2025

A dystopian future features crypto-like currency, addictive ad-supported media, tech elites, rising xenophobia and fascism, and manipulated computerized elections.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Demonic' Wind in the Willows jumper banned from Westminster Abbey

A visitor wearing a Hellebore sweatshirt featuring W. Graham Robertson's Pan illustration from The Wind in the Willows was asked to remove it at Westminster Abbey because staff deemed it demonic.
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fromwww.nytimes.com
3 days ago

The Best Historical Fiction Novels to Read Right Now

Diverse historical novels portray survival, cultural collision, alternate histories, evolving gender roles, and personal transformation across varied eras and global settings.
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fromAnOther
3 days ago

Constance Debre: "Literature Shows We're Not Alone in Our Loneliness"

The novelist's life is an anguished, solitary, necessary quest born from personal struggle and radical life change.
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fromGameSpot
3 days ago

The Dark Tower Graphic Novel Omnibuses Are $38 Each With Amazon's Early Black Friday Deal

Amazon's Buy Two, Get One Free sale reduces the three Dark Tower graphic novel omnibuses to about $114.73 for the complete 2,000-page set.
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fromDefector
3 days ago

The Man Who Defined "Sheeple," With Stefan Fatsis | Defector

Merriam-Webster lexicography reveals meticulous methods, devoted language obsessives, and dynamic processes shaping American English and word inclusion.
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fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Doomscrolling in the 1850s

The Atlantic was founded in 1857 to offer steady, high-quality intellectual guidance amid 1850s political turmoil, financial panic, and overwhelming media proliferation.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

King Sorrow by Joe Hill review dragon-fired horror epic is a tour de force

Six friends accidentally summon an ancient dragon and must spend their lives battling it while confronting escalating supernatural horrors.
fromGameSpot
3 days ago

All Four Harry Potter Interactive Illustrated Editions Are In Amazon's B2G1 Free Sale

If you're looking for a gift for a Harry Potter fan this holiday, the wonderful Interactive Illustrated Editions are steeply discounted and eligible for Amazon's Buy Two, Get One Free Book Sale ahead of Black Friday 2025. The Interactive Illustrated Edition of the Goblet of Fire, the four book in the series, just released last month and is discounted to $39 (was $50). Like the first three books, this hardcover edition has over 150 full-color illustrations and eight papercraft elements scattered throughout the novel.
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fromFast Company
3 days ago

This incredible book can explain physics to a 2-year-old

Interactive book uses working models to teach toddlers basic mechanical engineering concepts, building intuition and curiosity through hands-on play.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

A girl of genius': archives unsealed of Amy Levy, queer Jewish writer admired by Oscar Wilde

Amy Levy's newly unsealed archive at Cambridge reveals materials illuminating her exploration of women's independence, Jewish identity, same-sex desire, and mental health.
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fromVulture
3 days ago

What Went Wrong With SantaCon?

Cacophony Society's anti-capitalist performance experiments, including Santa Rampage, morphed from disruptive creative play into chaotic, commercialized spectacles undermining original intent.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
3 days ago

'A Larger Reality: Ursula K. Le Guin' honors the work and the life of the iconic novelist * Oregon ArtsWatch

"I was very into film and particularly TV at that point," he recalls, "and this was the first made-for-TV movie that public television had ever done. When I saw her on set with all these people deferring to her and making a movie out of one of her books, the pennies began to drop for me. I was like, 'Oh. My mother's important.'"
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Hilary Mantel story imagining Margaret Thatcher's assassination to be staged in Liverpool

This isn't just a play for people who have an opinion or strong feeling towards Maggie Thatcher, said Young. It's about class, about lives that collide, people trying to understand, asking questions, coming together and bridging that divide. I also think it's a play about what happens when people feel they don't have a voice, and how dangerous it is when they feel they don't have anything to lose.
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fromFuncheap
3 days ago

Uncovering the Lost Pleasure Behind Female Pain (SF)

Book Passage hosts Suzannah Weiss with Dr. Carol Queen for Eve's Blessing at 1 Ferry Building, San Francisco; verify event details with the organizer.
fromFast Company
3 days ago

Adam Grant on lessons from the pandemic, datum versus data, and how abstract numbers can lead to very real human outcomes

In an era when we are all talking about AI, the climate crisis, surveillance and privacy, and how technology shapes our choices, we wanted to reframe data not as something cold or distant, but as something deeply personal: a tool we (as human beings) can wield to understand ourselves and the world better. The book explores what we call Data Humanism, an approach that brings context, nuance, narrative, and imperfection back to the center of how we collect, design, and communicate data.
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fromOpen Culture
3 days ago

Aleister Crowley Reads Occult Poetry in the Only Known Recordings of His Voice (1920)

Theirs was a feud over the practices of occult society the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn; but it was also-at least for Crowley-over poetry. Crowley envied Yeats' literary skill; Yeats could not say the same about Crowley. But while he did not necessarily respect his enemy, Yeats feared him, as did nearly everyone else. As Yeats' biographer wrote a few months after Crowley's death in 1947, "in the old days men and women lived in terror of his evil eye."
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fromScary Mommy
4 days ago

The 20 Best Books Of The Year, According To Amazon Editors

Exceptional 2025 books span family epics, memoirs, and science nonfiction that blend emotional resonance, betrayal, resilience, humor, and surprising twists.
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fromAbove the Law
4 days ago

20 Nonfiction Book Recommendations, Most Written By Women, For Holiday Gifts And The Year Ahead - Above the Law

Twenty recommended nonfiction books emphasizing female authors and covering environment, history, science, and cultural narratives.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Loren Ipsum by Andrew Gallix review chronically funny satire of the literary scene

Loren Ipsum uses a murder premise to satirize vanity, pretension, and performative culture among contemporary writers, critics, and literary scenesters.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Celebrating literature is good but I'm running out of patience with celebrity book clubs | Emma Brockes

Celebrity involvement in literary events raises questions about authenticity and commodification while increasing visibility and publicity for books.
fromNature
4 days ago

Fossilized technology: Books in brief

This thought-provoking study by palaeobiologists Sarah Gabbott and Jan Zalasiewicz discusses 'technofossils': the vast remnants of modern civilization. The authors itemize plastic bottles, ballpoint pens, concrete dams, credit cards, aluminium cans, teabags, motorways, mobile phones, T-shirts and computers, among numerous items "produced by our species for our comfort and pleasure and then, sooner or later, discarded". How long these items will last is unknown - but for many, it could be millions of years.
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fromThe New Yorker
3 days ago

Malala's Favorite Mother-Daughter Memoirs

Malala Yousafzai reconciles surviving a Taliban assassination attempt with her private identity while honoring her mother's complex influence on her courage and literary path.
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fromThe Nation
4 days ago

Franz Kafka's Best Friend

A philosopher dog and other animal figures expose and mourn the erosion of human empathy and lost humanity.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

We Did OK, Kid: A Memoir by Anthony Hopkins review a legend with a temper

It's the greatest entrance in movie history and he doesn't move a muscle. FBI rookie Clarice Starling must walk along the row of cells until she reaches Dr Lecter's reinforced glass tank, where the man himself is simply standing, his face a living skull of satanic malice, eerily immobile in his form-fitting blue prison jumpsuit immobile, that is, until such time as he launches himself against the glass, making that extraordinary hissing-slavering sound.
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fromTime Out New York
3 days ago

A Jewish pop-up bookstore lands on the Lower East Side

A pop-up bookstore on the Lower East Side will celebrate Jewish Book Month's 100th anniversary with 1,000 free books, signings, bagels and programming.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
4 days ago

Pablo Escobar's son publishes a comic book about his childhood: Netflix glorifies the drug world, I raise awareness'

Juan Pablo Escobar uses a comic to dismantle myths about Pablo Escobar and portray a childhood marked by fear, secrecy, and constant armed protection.
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fromIrish Independent
4 days ago

The Indo Daily: Paul Williams on exposing Irish Gangland's Jimmy Savile, and unknowingly training a Provo bomber

Veteran crime correspondent Paul Williams reveals he trained an IRA suspect and exposes gangland figure Stephen 'Rossi' Walsh as a prolific child abuser.
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fromGameSpot
4 days ago

New Chronicles Of Narnia Collector's Omnibus & Deluxe Box Set Are Steeply Discounted

Collector's deluxe editions and boxed sets of The Chronicles of Narnia are currently discounted, offering budget-friendly options for holiday gifting and collectors.
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fromThe Walrus
4 days ago

I Was Warned There's Little Money to Be Made in Publishing. I Built a Career in It Anyway | The Walrus

Independent book publishing offers modest livelihoods, persistent cash-flow instability, and seasonal sales cycles, yet sustains national culture and preserves Canadian cultural space.
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fromwww.amny.com
4 days ago

Comic book co-creator and Lower East Side native Jack Kirby street co-naming advances, art exhibit opens | amNewYork

Jack Kirby, a Lower East Side native, is honored with a street co-naming and a Manhattan exhibit celebrating his life and superhero legacy.
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
4 days ago

How can Jennifer Aniston call her hypnotist boyfriend normal'?

Jennifer Aniston is dating hypnotherapist and wellness entrepreneur Jim Curtis, who runs multiple businesses, authors books, and helps people heal through hypnotherapy.
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fromDefector
4 days ago

The Real Marty Supreme | Defector

Marty Reisman ran a shabby but lively Riverside Table Tennis club where he hustled opponents using eccentric handicaps and theatrical flair.
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fromwww.npr.org
5 days ago

This week brings new books grappling with the endings of relationships and eras

Notable new books center on endings—personal, relational, and historical—revealing that endings frequently morph into unexpected beginnings.
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fromScary Mommy
5 days ago

17 Books To Read This Winter That Feel Like A Warm Hug

Low-stakes, cozy romances with warm settings and uplifting endings offer soothing, restorative escapism from daily stress.
#booker-prize
fromBustle
5 days ago

Allison Williams Will Always Be An Overachieving English Major

If you're an overachiever, suddenly you're in seminars with grad students. They would sit there and be like, 'I only know the word in German to describe the feeling I get when I read this chapter,' Then it's some 20-syllable-long word that is so specifically a reference to the feeling and I was like, 'God, I'm out of my league here.'
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fromJezebel
4 days ago

Beatriz Serrano's 'Discontent' Is Jezebel's November Book Club Pick

Marisa tolerates a well-paid ad-agency job that breeds apathy and discomfort, mixing darkly comic corporate absurdity with anxiety, malaise, and rare human connection.
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fromScary Mommy
5 days ago

7 Books To Gift Your Tween Who Hates To Read

Use short, easy-to-read books and graphic or mixed-media formats to engage tweens in reading, fostering empathy, imagination, and sustained interest beyond screens.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Vaim by Jon Fosse review the Nobel laureate performs a strange miracle

Vaim portrays lonely Jatgeir's humiliating needle-and-thread errand, his reunion with Eline, and a quiet, incantatory disintegration of ordinary life.
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

One Aladdin Two Lamps by Jeanette Winterson review freewheeling reflections on life, art and AI

When he runs out of victims, the young Persian queen Shahrazad volunteers but stalls her own murder by telling the king one captivating tale after another and those become the stories we're reading. As Jeanette Winterson puts it in her new book a dizzying whirligig of memoir, history, philosophy, politics and self-help, loosely tied to commentary on the Nights Shahrazad's feat of creativity refuses the present emergency the contrived drama of a powerful man.
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fromGameSpot
5 days ago

The Complete Calvin And Hobbes Slipcase Collection Gets Huge Early Black Friday Discount

The Complete Calvin and Hobbes three-volume hardcover slipcased box set is available for $86.15 (was $225) after coupon, often lowest price during major sales.
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fromFuturism
5 days ago

Elon Musk Got One-Shotted by an Extremely Mean Tweet

Joyce Carol Oates publicly mocked Elon Musk's cultural awareness on X, triggering a viral backlash and an angry, defensive response from Musk and his supporters.
fromTime Out New York
4 days ago

This NYC library was just ranked the most beautiful in all of America

The grand marble entrance on Fifth Avenue is a stunner that only hints at the beauty inside. With its stately lions (Patience and Fortitude) guarding the steps, the library looms as a temple of knowledge. Inside, mesmerizing architecture and finishings can be found around every corner, celebrating the art, history and literature within. The NYPL system was founded in 1895, but its main branch opened in 1911 after nearly a decade of construction.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Can art enhance your life? Here's what I learned from Ali Smith, Tracey Emin, Claudia Winkleman and more

Short daily engagement with art reduces stress, restores attention, enriches life, and counters smartphone-driven distraction and outsourced creativity.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Jilly Cooper died of head injury suffered in fall at home, inquest hears

Jilly Cooper, 88, died from a traumatic subdural haematoma after an unwitnessed fall at her Gloucestershire home; the coroner ruled the death accidental.
fromGameSpot
5 days ago

Sunrise On The Reaping New Collector's Gift Edition Is Already Discounted At Amazon

One of the this year's biggest fiction releases is now available in a gorgeous new collectible hardcover edition. Sunrise on the Reaping, the fifth novel in Suzanne Collins' best-selling dystopian series The Hunger Games, received a Collector's Gift Edition on November 4. Now, less than a week later, the Sunrise on the Reaping Collector's Gift Edition is on sale for $24.74 (was $33) at Amazon.
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fromDefector
5 days ago

Big Words Are Big Fun | Defector

I know a few big words, and sometimes I use them where they make sense. I am a professional writer, after all. It's fun to use a big word in certain spots, and not even for the cheap ego boost. I just like it when there's a specific word that sounds exactly right for the thought I'm trying to convey.
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fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

Fantasy Racism

Constantinople's fall reshaped Europe and culture, inspiring works that led to Dungeons & Dragons controversies over racist, sexist content and billionaire backlash.
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fromFast Company
5 days ago

5 insights to help you untangle fear knots that hold you back

Human fear is partly hardwired, shaped by biology, history, and culture, often misdirected, and can be untied with tools to align perception with real risks.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

The risky strategy of Booker winner Flesh pays off

Flesh renders a man's life without interiority, using others' perspectives to probe identity, fate, masculinity, and rootless modern European existence.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 week ago

Portland Book Festival: Stacey Abrams, Susan Orlean on the perils, pitfalls, and joys of writing * Oregon ArtsWatch

Writing is a creative act, an act of resistance, a way to educate readers, inspire action, and deepen understanding of self and past experiences.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Bread of Angels: A Memoir, by Patti Smith review a wild ride with the poet of punk

Patti Smith blends music and literature across her life story, moving from hardscrabble childhood to near-present with a distinct, sometimes archaic narrative voice.
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

Solvej Balle's Novels Rewire the Time Loop

Their twosome ruptures when Tara, who has travelled to Paris for an auction, wakes up on what should be the morning of November 19th to shimmers of déjà vu: the headlines in the newspaper look familiar; at breakfast, the same hotel guest drops the same slice of bread. A horrified Tara soon realizes that she is living in a repeating November 18th, while Thomas and the rest of the world go on without her.
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fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

Trees actively engineer ecosystems—manipulating water, air, soil, fire, and animal behavior—while early photography arose through hazardous, ingenious experimental techniques.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Poem of the week: Leaves by Frederic Manning

A poem contrasts serene moonlit nature with sudden, violent artillery, using imagist techniques informed by trench-war experience.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Novels I haven't finished reading are piling up by my bedside. What if that's a good thing? | Hanna Thomas Uose

Putting down books that no longer engage reflects intentional prioritization of limited attention and life time, not necessarily a failing of attention span.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 week ago

Portland Book Festival had it all: Rebecca Yarros, Nicholas Boggs, Omar El Akkad, Karen Russell, Jason De Leon, and Magha Majumdar * Oregon ArtsWatch

Big themes swirled in thoughtful, even intimate, conversations Saturday at the sold-out Portland Book Festival. Headliner Rebecca Yarros talked about how her work centers on themes of inclusion, representation, and authoritarianism, as well as about what it's been like to ride a huge wave of book sales that has altered the publishing industry in some ways. Nicholas Boggs and Mitchell S. Jackson mused about love and the creative process.
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fromIndependent
1 week ago

Matt Cooper on Ivan Yates: 'I think there is a psychological thing going back to his bankruptcy... He seems to want to blow things up when they're successful'

Matt Cooper admires Succession and frames his books on Irish business dynasties as comparable dramas to the TV series.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Hannah Goldfield on Anthony Bourdain's "Don't Eat Before Reading This"

Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential exposed the restaurant industry's unsanitary realities and popularized practical rules like never ordering fish on Monday.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

The Mushroom Tapes review Erin Patterson through the eyes of Helen Garner, Chloe Hooper and Sarah Krasnostein

Erin Patterson was convicted of murdering three relatives, sentenced to life with a 33 year non‑parole period, and is appealing.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Ambition is a punishing sphere for women': author Maggie Nelson on why Taylor Swift is the Sylvia Plath of her generation

Taylor Swift's songwriting, especially on The Tortured Poets Department, shares Plath-like introspection and emotional tumult, positioning her lyrics as contemporary poetry.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Paul Yoon on the Danger of Hope

Two brothers live in a postwar shantytown; the younger narrator realizes their lives have diverged while a census job and an older woman provide stability.
fromIndependent
1 week ago

Eilis O'Hanlon: Cancel culture is in retreat, but the tide could turn again

In 2020, a prize-winning English poet and teacher who worked as a writer-in-residence with young refugees published a book about her experiences. Reviews were warm. Sales were strong. It won awards. A year later, Kate Clanchy's book suddenly came on the radar of a small number of other writers, who criticised her for some supp­posedly racist or otherwise belittling depictions of her students.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

"The New Coast," by Paul Yoon

We were all neighbors in one of the many settlements that had sprouted up in the city, and we had been waiting there for everything to be rebuilt. Or that was what the officials kept telling us-to stay where we were so that they could begin restoring the city. But no one seemed convinced that the city would ever be restored, and this was a big reason people came and went, looking for someplace better.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

The Queen Mary's' strange second life: From maritime jewel to paranormal attraction

Paul Gallico's 1937 RMS Queen Mary voyage inspired his novel The Poseidon Adventure after experiencing the ship's severe heeling.
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fromemptywheel
1 week ago

Yet More of a Lapsed Catholic's Bible Study - emptywheel

Without love, spiritual gifts, knowledge, and sacrificial acts have no value; love's enduring virtues define true moral excellence.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 week ago

Photo First: Authors, authors, everywhere * Oregon ArtsWatch

A sold-out Portland Book Festival fills South Park Blocks with workshops, readings, a book fair, and many Oregon Book Award winners alongside visiting literary figures.
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Poet Kate Baer explores the beauty and tension of mid life in 'How About Now'

I always loved spending time at Midtown Scholar. It is one of my favorite bookstores in the world. It's a converted old theater with cozy wooden walls, several floors of books, a stage, a balcony filled with little tables and a coffee shop. Midtown Scholar is also one of poet Kate Baer's favorite bookstores. So on a rainy day last week, we met there to talk.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

When Scarcity Blurs the Line Between Right and Wrong

At the turn of the 20th century, a young Sicilian woman who will soon marry a "rich American" presents two postcards, supposedly from the United States, to a village elder. The first depicts a man holding a wheelbarrow that contains a massive onion, so large that it dwarfs both the wheelbarrow and the man. The second postcard displays a tree that is bursting with coins, as if money is sprouting from the branches.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Fall and redemption of Becker and Wiggins shows sporting glory does not deliver purpose or meaning | Cath Bishop

Viewed through one end of the lens, the two new autobiographies from the sporting legends Boris Becker and Bradley Wiggins might seem like classic tales of the downfalls of two deeply flawed heroes who then claw their way back to redemption. But viewed through the other end of the lens, we see troubling portrayals of an extremely inhumane and, at times, unsafe world of sport where talent is no saving grace, in fact it's more of a liability.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

What links Augusta Savage and WEB Du Bois? The Saturday quiz

2 In what combat sport are competitors divided into east and west? 3 Which force is based in Aubagne, Bouches-du-Rhone? 4 In hospitals, the Bristol scale is used to classify what? 5 Which English rugby player has been immortalised as a Barbie doll? 6 What begins at Theresienwiese on the first Saturday after 15 September? 7 The River Irwell separates which two cities? 8 Which band played with red flowerpots on their heads?
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fromIndependent
1 week ago

Sinead Kissane: Andy Farrell will want final word over old boss Eddie Jones as duo renew their rivalry

Eddie Jones gained many leadership and personal lessons from his relationship with the former Saracens supremo, embracing mistakes as portals to discovery.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

For the women who gave birth in the dark': a portrait of motherhood in Gaza

A young mother in Gaza navigated motherhood amid a devastating offensive that killed tens of thousands, destroyed cities, and forced caregiving under constant danger.
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fromThe Walrus
1 week ago

Why Squirrels Drive Us Absolutely Nuts | The Walrus

Encounters with squirrels prompt varied human reactions ranging from affection to hostility, challenging people to choose responses and practical solutions like sealing entry points.
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