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Books
fromPortland Mercury
3 days ago

Kevin Sampsell's New Novel Looks at the World Through a Baby in the Night

A two-year-old narrator perceives his world without stereotypes or cynicism, searching for his departed father whom he believes is the Moon while encountering homeless relatives and learning compassion through innocent observation.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Gloria Don't Speak by Lucy Apps review tender portrait of a woman with a learning disability

Lucy Apps's debut novel follows Gloria, a 19-year-old with a learning disability navigating east London in 1999, whose friendship with Jack reveals exploitation and vulnerability.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Gin Phillips talks about her new novel, 'Ruby Falls'

A 1932 mystery novel set in Chattanooga's Ruby Falls caves follows a diverse group trapped underground searching for a hatpin while a murder complicates their escape.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

What Went Wrong When Susan Sontag Met Thomas Mann?

Susan Sontag recalled a disappointing 1947 meeting with Thomas Mann at age fourteen, experiencing profound disillusionment when the literary titan failed to match her idealized expectations of him.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Quick on the draw: the worldwide appeal of sketching 100 people in a week

The #OneWeek100People challenge encourages artists globally to sketch 100 people in seven days, prioritizing quantity over quality to build drawing skills and momentum.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

The Art of Taking Smart Risks

Intelligent risk-taking involves distinguishing between reckless behavior and brave action, with society facing pressure from industries profiting off compulsive gambling rather than meaningful risk-taking.
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fromThe Verge
1 day ago

A Scavengers Reign artist explores contemplative sci-fi in new comics

French animator Jonathan Djob Nkondo is releasing English versions of his self-published graphic novels Peaceful Remission and Wandering, with a Kickstarter campaign exceeding $100,000 in funding.
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Salman Rushdie Doesn't Want to Be Your 'Free Speech Barbie'

When you've written 23 books, it's a little frustrating to be known not even for a book, but for something that happened to a book in 1989—when that was my fifth published book and this is my 23rd. Can we please talk about books? I keep trying to say.
Books
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
3 days ago

Alice Day Pratt's memoir, 'A Homesteader's Portfolio,' is a delicious read * Oregon ArtsWatch

Alice Day Pratt, a single woman homesteader in early 1900s Eastern Oregon, built a remarkable life through determination, self-reliance, and honest perseverance without complaint or self-pity.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

The Last Days of Franco

Montserrat Roig's The Time of Cherries captures pre-democratic Barcelona through the story of Natàlia, a former activist confronting unfinished personal and political business in a repressive atmosphere.
Books
fromEngadget
1 day ago

What to read this weekend: Locked in with The Iron Garden Sutra

A.D. Sui's The Iron Garden Sutra combines locked room mystery, horror, and sci-fi philosophy aboard a haunted spaceship where a death monk encounters an inexplicable presence killing researchers.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

How America Learned to Love Barnes & Noble Again

Barnes & Noble, once a threat to independent bookstores, faced decline from Amazon but is now experiencing revival through physical store expansion and learning from independent bookstore models.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Duke and Duchess of Sussex hit back at deranged' author's claims in new book

This is someone who has publicly stated, the monarchy in fact depends on actually obliterating the Sussexes from our state of life,' language that speaks for itself. He has made a career out of constructing ever more elaborate theories about people he does not know and has never met.
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

How Not to Recommend a Book

Reader's advisory—the skill of matching specific books to individual readers' preferences—is essential for successful book club experiences and literary recommendations across libraries, bookstores, and online platforms.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

The Guardian view on changes to copyright laws: authors should be protected over big tech | Editorial

Writers are protesting unauthorized AI training on their work through labeling schemes and blank books, demanding government protection against copyright relaxation that would allow AI companies to use their content without consent or payment.
Books
fromwww.amny.com
2 days ago

Banned Books: New York writers and educators talk about the dangerous impacts of censorship on literature | amNewYork

Author Abdi Nazemian's young adult novel 'Like a Love Story' faces banning efforts by conservative groups who misrepresent its content about queer identity and AIDS history.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
3 days ago

The Columbia Gorge Museum: Lacing communities together * Oregon ArtsWatch

A turning point in the world can be identified as a 'still point,' and lace serves as a metaphor for understanding psychological resilience, community connection, and navigating uncertain times.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Daisy Johnson: I wasn't a fan of David Szalay, but Flesh is a masterpiece'

Reading shapes identity across life stages, from childhood memories through formative teenage years to adult perspectives, with specific books creating lasting connections and inspiring creative ambitions.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

It's like a giant book club': how schools are getting children excited about reading again

Research has shown there is a reading for pleasure crisis among children in the UK, where enjoyment of books has fallen to its lowest level in two decades. Not so here at Christ Church primary, a tiny Church of England school tucked behind the maze of HS2 construction works in Camden, north London, where children fizz with excitement about books.
Books
#creative-writing
Books
fromHarvard Gazette
2 days ago

'New trick' at 50: Fiction. And now, raves. - Harvard Gazette

Epidemiologist Janet Rich-Edwards was inspired to write her debut novel 'Canticle' after attending a Radcliffe lecture on medieval nuns' liturgical books, discovering a connection between academic scholarship and creative fiction writing.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

Patricia Cornwell on Crime and Creativity

Fear is the primary obstacle to creativity; overcoming it and persisting through rejection enables successful creative work.
Books
fromHarvard Gazette
2 days ago

'New trick' at 50: Fiction. And now, raves. - Harvard Gazette

Epidemiologist Janet Rich-Edwards was inspired to write her debut novel 'Canticle' after attending a Radcliffe lecture on medieval nuns' liturgical books, discovering a connection between academic scholarship and creative fiction writing.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

Patricia Cornwell on Crime and Creativity

Fear is the primary obstacle to creativity; overcoming it and persisting through rejection enables successful creative work.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Hooked by Asako Yuzuki review follow-up to global hit Butter

Both are 30, an age which in Yuzuki's telling spells disaster in Japan for unmarried women who are no longer girls. During her long office hours, Eriko becomes addicted to Shoko's pseudonymous, self-deprecating blog The Diary of Hallie B, the World's Worst Wife, and contrives to accidentally-on-purpose meet the blogger at a cafe Shoko mentions in one of her posts.
Books
fromPortland Monthly
2 days ago

Why Can't a 5-Year-Old Write a Memoir?

Tony Volcano Ventura is a streetwise baby. He's 2 when we pick up with him, which immediately puts this in the category of "weird books." "I know people don't usually remember their baby years," young Tony begins his narration, "but I do." Ipso facto, weird book, on account of its being narrated by a toddler, one who rides dogs under moonlight, dodges cops in alleys, and receives enigmatic assignments via the fax machine the moon gave to him.
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

Atlanta's Edith Wharton

Tayari Jones employs early-20th-century literary styles and conventions to explore contemporary social issues, creating richly layered narratives that blend timeless emotional depth with modern subject matter.
Books
fromBusiness Insider
2 days ago

I attended a weekend reading retreat in my 60s. Surrounded by women of all ages, I learned more than I'd ever imagined.

A weekend reading retreat in the Catskill Mountains brought together eight women of different ages who bonded through book discussions, meditation, hiking, and meaningful conversations about life and intentional living.
Books
fromOpen Culture
4 days ago

How to Rescue a Wet, Damaged Book: A Handy Visual Primer

Syracuse University Libraries provides practical tips for salvaging water-damaged books through a visual guide with both intuitive and specialized restoration techniques.
Books
fromwww.7x7.com
3 days ago

13 New Books by Local Authors to Break for This Spring

Three new books explore pivotal moments in cultural history: a 1960s San Francisco novel about reproductive rights, a contemporary suburban thriller involving a Chinese American family, and Rolling Stone Magazine's counterculture origins in 1967.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Strange Beach by Oluwaseun Olayiwola audiobook review a debut that dances with passion

Oluwaseun Olayiwola's debut poetry collection explores race, family, queer identity, and the body through shoreline imagery as a threshold where forces collide and meaning transforms.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

In Bloom by Liz Allan review an electric debut of grunge and teen spirit

Three teenage girls in 1994 Australia investigate a sexual assault accusation against their music teacher to save their band's chance at a Battle of the Bands competition.
#ai-generated-content
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago
Books

I wrote a book about theft and deception and now AI scams are flooding my inbox | Walter Marsh

Authors receive targeted emails from AI-generated accounts offering fake praise, reviews, and exposure using sophisticated language that mimics genuine engagement while concealing artificial origins.
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago
Books

UK Society of Authors launches logo to identify books written by humans not AI

The Society of Authors launched a certification scheme allowing human authors to register works and display a 'Human Authored' logo, addressing the need to distinguish human-written books from AI-generated content in an increasingly flooded market.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

I wrote a book about theft and deception and now AI scams are flooding my inbox | Walter Marsh

Authors receive targeted emails from AI-generated accounts offering fake praise, reviews, and exposure using sophisticated language that mimics genuine engagement while concealing artificial origins.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

UK Society of Authors launches logo to identify books written by humans not AI

The Society of Authors launched a certification scheme allowing human authors to register works and display a 'Human Authored' logo, addressing the need to distinguish human-written books from AI-generated content in an increasingly flooded market.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Self-publish and be scammed: Jon's tale of heartbreak highlights boom in fraudsters using AI to supercharge book swindles

AI-powered publishing fraud schemes exploit authors' emotional investment in their work by promising global recognition and marketing campaigns, resulting in significant financial losses.
#heartstopper
fromSlate Magazine
4 days ago

The Ur-Internet Writer Is Back With a New Memoir. This Time, She's Polyamorous.

It takes one cross-country plane, a train, a ferry, then another hour or so by car to reach the writer Lindy West. I had read plenty about how remote her home is, but only by sitting shotgun with West in her girlfriend's maroon Hyundai Elantra did I understand just how far she was from even a gas station.
Books
fromwww.independent.co.uk
4 days ago

UK Society of Authors launches logo to identify books written by humans instead of AI

Author Malorie Blackman said the scheme seeks to highlight the imagination, commitment, craft and care taken to produce stories and books which can be enjoyed by everyone. She added: Any creative endeavour requires time, effort, a willingness to learn from mistakes and failure, and a determination to persevere lifelong, essential skills which cannot be learned and honed by allowing AI to do all of our creative thinking and production for us.
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Books
fromThe Atlantic
5 days ago

Six Books You'll Have to Discuss With a Friend

Reading in public creates social connections and marks readers as members of an enthusiastic community that spans all walks of life and geographic locations.
Books
fromIntelligencer
4 days ago

Ibram X. Kendi Can't Separate His Fame From How to Be an Antiracist

Dr. Ibram X. Kendi's antiracism framework defines racism as a descriptive policy term based on material effects, not a personal identity, though institutions misappropriated his work for performative diversity initiatives.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Imagine, if everyone had a sex auntie': Nana Darkoa Sekyiamah on tradition as a basis for pleasure

Seeking Sexual Freedom is about rediscovering the rites of passage across African cultures that Nana believes can build new models of sexual freedom. In the book, she asks: Are our Indigenous religions more expansive than the Abrahamic faiths we predominantly practise today? Can we go back to the best of our traditional practices, and use that knowledge as a foundation?
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Books
fromKqed
5 days ago

A Riveting Graphic Novel of an Armenian Family in San Francisco | KQED

Nadine Takvorian's autobiographical graphic novel Armaveni chronicles her Armenian family's survival through genocide and their diaspora experience in San Francisco.
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Sex with Scorsese, beef with Sondheim and inventing the moonwalk? The wildest moments in Liza Minnelli's memoir

Our love affair had more layers than a lasagna. We were both Italian. Passionate. Intense. Committed to our craft. We both had volcanic tempers. He was a diabolically handsome man who shared my love for film. Their cocaine-dusted romance continued after the film wrapped, and she picked him to direct her in the Broadway musical The Act.
Books
Books
fromFuncheap
5 days ago

After Hours: The Tension That Divides Us with Claude M. Steele

Trust building mitigates tensions between people with different identities and power levels through psychological understanding of historical wariness rather than bias alone.
Books
fromTravel + Leisure
5 days ago

Southern Morocco Is One of the World's Last Great Unexplored Destinations-Here's How to Visit

Returning to familiar travel destinations enables deeper understanding and appreciation than initial visits, requiring intentional re-exploration to move beyond surface impressions.
#book-recommendations
fromBustle
5 days ago
Books

Daniel Radcliffe On Therapy, His Favorite Books & A "Terrifying" Broadway Return

fromBustle
5 days ago
Books

Daniel Radcliffe On Therapy, His Favorite Books & A "Terrifying" Broadway Return

Books
fromVulture
5 days ago

There Are No Great Pandemic Novels

Andrew Martin's novel Down Time captures pandemic-era anxiety through characters navigating personal humiliation and inaction while confronting the disconnect between aspirational pursuits and the crisis unfolding around them.
Books
fromConsequence
5 days ago

Alice Cooper Announces New Memoir Devil on My Shoulder

Alice Cooper releases his definitive autobiography 'Devil on My Shoulder' on October 6-8, 2024, separating reality from decades of myths and fabrications surrounding his career and persona.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
6 days ago

Sidney Walter Moss and Oregon's 19th-century literary mystery * Oregon ArtsWatch

Sidney Walter Moss claimed Oregon entrepreneur Emerson Bennett stole his novel manuscript and published it as The Prairie Flower in 1849, creating Oregon's most famous literary mystery that remains unresolved.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Why independent bookshops strike fear in the heart of Germany's culture tsar

Germany's culture commissioner consulted domestic intelligence to exclude three antifascist independent bookshops from receiving federal funding, citing undisclosed security concerns.
Books
fromwww.7x7.com
6 days ago

Locals We Love: Author Kristina Voegele's 'Annie in Retrospect' is a Love Letter to Our City and Ourselves.

A novel follows a woman who slips into her 25-year-old body with midlife knowledge, exploring identity loss, memory, and San Francisco's transformation through disorientation, grief, and acceptance.
Books
fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 week ago

Bible sales at their highest in almost three decades

Quiz books and Bible sales surged to their highest levels since the 1990s, with quiz book spending rising 24% and Bible purchases increasing 19%, while overall non-fiction spending declined 5%.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

We all want to know what he was doing in the bedroom': Kerouac's unseen archive goes on show in New York

A new exhibition featuring previously unpublished Kerouac letters and artifacts aims to move beyond the mythologized rebel image and reveal the literary development and humanity behind the beat generation icon.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

Books Are Meant to Be Slow

The slowness of reading books is a virtue, not a weakness, offering contemplative depth that digital media cannot replicate.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
6 days ago

A Radiant New Novel Uses Time Travel in a Wonderfully Fresh Way

Francis Spufford's novel Nonesuch features a time-travel plot centered on a fascist sympathizer attempting to prevent Britain's declaration of war, with conflict between her and a working-class secretary driving the narrative.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

"Giant" Takes on Roald Dahl and His Antisemitism

Mark Rosenblatt's debut play 'Giant' examines Roald Dahl's 1983 antisemitic statements, becoming a West End success with international productions and Broadway opening.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
6 days ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

Two novels explore identity and agency: Floodlines examines sisterhood amid Middle Eastern political upheaval through rediscovered art, while Murder Bimbo satirizes contemporary politics through an unreliable narrator's shifting self-presentation.
fromPoynter
6 days ago

What are your favorite nonfiction books by journalists? - Poynter

"Race Against Time: A Reporter Reopens the Unsolved Murder Cases of the Civil Rights Era" quickly became one of my favorite nonfiction books written by a journalist. I appreciated how he showed the grueling, day-to-day work local journalism requires, and how many layers of people fought him in revealing the despicable work of the Ku Klux Klan.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Look What You Made Me Do by John Lanchester review a battle between millennials and boomers

John Lanchester's latest novel explores generational conflict between affluent boomers and millennials through a story of a married couple discovering their private life depicted in a TV show.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
1 week ago

Everyone Tells Me It's the Way to Read. I'll Never Give In.

A Gen Z reader reads exclusively physical books, completing over 100 annually, finding them superior to digital formats for genuine reading engagement and enjoyment.
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Addie Citchens Reads "The City Is a Graveyard"

Addie Citchens reads her story 'The City Is a Graveyard,' from the March 16, 2026, issue of the magazine. Citchens is a Mississippi Delta-born, New Orleans-based writer of fiction and nonfiction. Her first novel, 'Dominion,' was published in 2025 and was short-listed for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, and long-listed for the Center for Fiction's First Novel Prize.
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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Plan to turn Irish borderlands into Unesco region of literature'

A literary heritage initiative aims to rebrand the Ireland-Northern Ireland border as a Unesco region of literature, creating nine guided routes through 11 counties associated with major writers like Yeats, Beckett, and Heaney.
fromDefector
1 week ago

Dan Simmons Is Dead So It's Time To Read 'Hyperion' | Defector

This is a shame, because his best work belongs with the greats of fantasy, horror, and sci-fi. Summer of Night is a tighter, more satisfying version of Stephen King's It. Carrion Comfort is a brick-sized epic about psychic vampires that reads as breezily as a trade paperback. The Terror, which inspired the well-regarded show, is for its first three-quarters a brilliant and non-supernatural speculative take on a real doomed Arctic expedition.
Books
Books
fromSlate Magazine
1 week ago

Something Strange Is Happening With Books. It Could Reshape Literary Culture.

BookTok readers increasingly prefer first-person narrative perspective in romance and fantasy novels, viewing third-person narration as unnecessarily complex and off-putting.
Books
fromFast Company
1 week ago

Can't read books anymore? Neuroscience has a 5-step plan to get your focus back

Declining deep reading ability reflects harmful brain changes, but neuroscience provides strategies to restore focused reading skills.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Malorie Blackman on Noughts & Crosses at 25: It's even more relevant today'

I sat down at my computer really angry, she tells me. It was the 1990s, the time of the murder of Stephen Lawrence and the Macpherson report's finding of institutional racism within the Metropolitan police. It was my way of channelling that anger.
Books
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 week ago

Poet Q&A: Brittney Corrigan talks eco-anxiety, daughterhood, and finding importance in art * Oregon ArtsWatch

I've been writing both poetry and short stories since I was a child, but I first began to think of myself as a writer when my 11th-grade English teacher encouraged me to lean in. I started to take my craft seriously in college, majoring in English with a focus on creative writing. By the time I graduated in the mid-1990s, I considered myself a poet.
Books
Books
fromAxios
1 week ago

Black-owned bookstores reach record numbers, but many still struggle

Black-owned bookstores face economic fragility despite reported growth, with 90% earning under $250,000 annually and many evolving beyond traditional retail through community programming and partnerships.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

A Beautiful Loan by Mary Costello review a profound exploration of the inner life

From the outset, in the novel's prologue, Anna tells us she is determined to account for herself and her life. But we are to expect no ordinary narrative, concerned only with actual events, evidence-based or relying on historical data. No, Anna is interested in the climate of the psyche and the vibrations of the soul. Can it be that the very things we cannot quantify or rationalise are what make life meaningful?
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fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

An Uncomfortable Emotion That's Worth Feeling

Boredom teaches valuable lessons about human insignificance and connects to a meaningful life when embraced rather than avoided.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The best recent poetry review roundup

Andrew Motion's latest collection explores mortality and loss through elegies, showing a shift toward rootedness and acceptance of death as a universal human experience rather than personal bewilderment.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Saba Sams: I've no interest in reading Wuthering Heights again'

Jacqueline Wilson's unflinching approach to children's literature, alongside works by authors like Gwendoline Riley and Clarice Lispector, demonstrates that literary courage and emotional complexity resonate more powerfully than conventional safety or virtuousness.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

From luxury dupes' to literary doubles: why doppelgangers are everywhere right now

The doppelganger figure permeates contemporary culture across literature, fashion, and film, reflecting widespread paranoia about identity and authenticity in modern society.
#childrens-literature
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Guardian view on 25 years of Malorie Blackman's Noughts & Crosses: a love story that changed an industry | Editorial

Malorie Blackman's Noughts & Crosses, celebrating 25 years, pioneered young adult fiction addressing racism and class in the UK, influencing generations of readers and inspiring cultural figures like Stormzy.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Guardian view on 25 years of Malorie Blackman's Noughts & Crosses: a love story that changed an industry | Editorial

Malorie Blackman's Noughts & Crosses, celebrating 25 years, pioneered young adult fiction addressing racism and class in the UK, influencing generations of readers and inspiring cultural figures like Stormzy.
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Pushing the Limits of Historical Fiction

Enrigue's 'penchant for shooting the facts of history through the prism of the absurd' makes him singular-but it also puts him firmly in a long literary tradition. The book 'distills a byzantine swirl of historical events through the lives of a handful of very colorful characters,' intertwining several real and invented incidents with major moments in the Apache Wars, a series of skirmishes involving Native Americans, the U.S., and Mexico across the Southwest borderlands.
Books
Books
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

That's a book? - Harvard Gazette

Italo Calvino used tarot card decks as a computational system to generate interconnected narratives, predating modern AI by decades and demonstrating how structured systems can create complex literary works.
#portuguese-literature
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Infamous Gilberts by Angela Tomaski review a delicious comfort read

Everything, no matter how broken or aged, is precious because of the people who touched it, used it, abandoned it. When the new owners plan to replace the carpet with an exact replica, Maximus laughs: the original, he tells us, is fifty per cent Gilbert DNA—and the scurf of fifteen beloved Labradors and one Miniature Schnauzer with dermatitis.
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Books
fromJezebel
1 week ago

Sarah J. Maas Is My Fantasy Daddy

Sarah J. Maas is releasing two interconnected books in October 2026 and January 2027, designed to be read as one massive story, showcasing her commitment to her creative vision.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Tales of the Suburbs by John Grindrod review an entertaining alternative history of queer Britain

John Grindrod's alternative history chronicles queer life in British suburbs and small towns, departing from typical urban-centered narratives to reveal how LGBTQ+ people navigated identity and community in non-metropolitan areas.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Virginia Giuffre's invisible ghostwriter' on the Epstein survivor's legacy: She wanted to name all of them. They deserve to be named'

Ghostwriter Amy Wallace promotes Jeffrey Epstein accuser Virginia Roberts Giuffre's posthumous memoir, which has helped trauma survivors worldwide understand their experiences and healing.
fromBustle
1 week ago

Rachel Weisz's New Netflix Show Has A Bizarre Twist

At the same time, the narrator is taken with her new colleague, Vlad, who is married to fellow professor Cynthia. One day, the narrator and her adult daughter, Sid, follow John's car and see him meeting with Cynthia at the school. Believing that they're having an affair, the narrator resolves to act on her obsession with Vlad.
Books
fromVulture
1 week ago

We're Getting Two New ACOTAR Books Very Soon

There will be two books within a very short span. It's just the story that was finally ready to come out of me was big, really, really, really big. One of these books will be so big it will need to be bound as a set of two, so the story will occupy three physical volumes. But it's like one thing altogether, that no amount of glue in any publisher's factory could ever hold this.
Books
Books
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 week ago

'ridiculously good-looking saunas' showcases 36 design-led thermal retreats worldwide

Gestalten's book documents 36 global sauna projects, showcasing how contemporary architecture is reviving thermal retreats as intentional gathering spaces across diverse cultures and landscapes.
fromInsideHook
1 week ago

How to Read More Books Than Ever This Year

According to a National Endowment for the Arts study published a few years back, only 48.5% of adults are typically reading "one book or more for pleasure" in a 12-month span. The numbers get even grimmer when isolating for fiction: just 37.6% of the survey's participants reported reading a novel or short story from July 2021 to July 2022.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley audiobook review a topical time-hopping romance

A British civil servant is hired to manage time travelers displaced from history into the present day, navigating sci-fi, romance, and contemporary social issues.
fromVulture
1 week ago

Sarah J. Maas Could Still Make an ACOTAR TV Show

I have the rights back to everything now. And getting the rights back to all my things has been a big part of my journey in recent years. I look at any TV or movie adaptation as another facet of the worlds I've created, and it's something I want to be in charge of.
Books
Books
fromDefector
1 week ago

Don DeLillo's Funniest Novel Is A 1980 Hockey Sex Romp He Won't Acknowledge | Defector

Don DeLillo evolved from a 1970s chronicler of American unease into a major novelist whose 1980s-90s trilogy epitomized postmodern American literature and presaged national decline.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Susan Choi and Katie Kitamura among authors longlisted for Women's prize for fiction

Sixteen authors including Katie Kitamura, Susan Choi, Kit de Waal, and Lily King are longlisted for the Women's Prize for Fiction, a prestigious annual award worth £30,000 recognizing excellence in women's writing.
fromKqed
2 weeks ago

A Novel Tracks the Fallout of Free Love, and the Girls Who 'Went Away'

In 1968, a "good girl" is squeaky clean. She studies hard, follows the rules, gets into college and doesn't embarrass her parents. She doesn't lie or drink or do drugs. She doesn't participate in the Summer of Love or experiment with any of its alternative ways of living. She definitely doesn't have premarital sex, get pregnant and upend everyone's meticulously laid plans for her future.
Books
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