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fromNature
3 hours ago

Marvellous microbes, memory and the multiverse: Books in brief

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

MAGA pop culture gets another boost fromThe Hunting Wives'author

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

9 nonfiction books to kick-start 2026

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

George Saunders Has a New Mantra

George Saunders writes with a luminous, frequently supernatural imagination that pairs large-heartedness with unsparing wit and a ritualized, anywhere-capable writing practice.
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fromwww.npr.org
11 hours ago

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

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

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

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

Can Jennette McCurdy Transcend Provocation?

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

Elisa Shua Dusapin Is The Real Deal | Defector

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Real Fight for the Smithsonian

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

Reading for the New Year: Part Four

Kaspar Hauser emerges from prolonged isolation into society, becoming a public curiosity, developing artistic sensibility, and embodying a tragic, unresolved life.
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fromwww.courant.com
1 day ago

Han Kang, Angela Flournoy, Arundhati Roy nominated for National Book Critics Circle awards

National Book Critics Circle finalists include novels by Han Kang and Angela Flournoy, a memoir by Arundhati Roy, and nominees across eight categories.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Vigil by George Saunders review will a world-wrecking oil tycoon repent?

A spectral death doula confronts an unrepentant, fossil-fuel–profiting oil tycoon in a liminal afterlife, forcing moral reckoning over climate-denial harms.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Is listening to an audiobook as good as reading?

Audiobooks and comics are legitimate, effective forms of reading that expand access, boost literacy, and contribute significantly to the publishing industry.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

A Debut Novel About the Quest for Eternal Youth

The boundary between responsible adult and dependent child has frayed as caregivers flail through midlife while youth confront a crumbling, dishonest world.
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fromwww.courant.com
1 day ago

3 authors win $10,000 prizes for blending science and literature

Three authors received $10,000 Science + Literature awards for works blending scientific research and literary artistry examining nature, Indigenous impacts, and queer perspectives.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

I could never hope to equal it again': Jeffrey Archer announces next novel will be his last

When I came across the idea for this novel a few years ago, I knew it was bigger in scope than anything I'd done before and I accepted that the research alone would be more demanding than anything I'd tackled in the past. When I finally sat down to write Adam and Eve I also realised, by the end of the first draft, that this was going to be my final novel,
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#grief
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fromFuncheap
1 day ago

Free Discussion: Democracy in the Digital Era (SF)

Democracy is being transformed by AI, digital platforms, and polarization, requiring literature, technology, and spirituality to rebuild solidarity amid war, displacement, and competing Western narratives.
fromItsnicethat
1 day ago

"A scrapbook of raw, layered process, inspiration and practice": Dixon Baxi on their 500-page manifesto for making

"We started by asking everyone to collect images regularly. Just spontaneous snapshots as we went. Of everything. Sketches, screens, notes, half thoughts, moments in motion. Over time it became this huge grab bag of elements," Simon says.
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fromItsnicethat
1 day ago

The Bible, iPhones and hardware manuals inspired Mindy Seu's book about sex on the internet

The internet, since its very inception, has been a conduit for pleasure, sex and sexuality. From early erotic ASCII art and hook-up sites, to the proliferation of porn sites in the 1980s and 90s, despite attempts to curtail it, shadowban it and commercialise it from the top down, sex remains an underlying force in our online world, fuelling intimate moments of screentime and alternative forms of income generation.
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fromwww.berkeleyside.org
1 day ago

Remembering Sue Bender, ceramist and author of bestseller about life among the Amish

Sue Bender lived simply, wrote books about simplicity and self-discovery, collaborated with her architect husband, and died at 91 in Oakland on Aug. 3, 2025.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

There is a sense of things careening towards a head': TS Eliot prize winner Karen Solie

Karen Solie's work confronts ecological and social harms directly, refusing to aestheticize suffering while insisting art must keep attention and counteract distraction.
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fromABA Journal
1 day ago

Understanding women in their lives is important for men's happiness, divorce lawyer says in new book

A 93-year-old divorce lawyer reflects on a decades-long legal career, landmark cases, and cultural shifts emphasizing understanding women's lives for broader happiness.
fromKqed
2 days ago

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

Fresh off the success of her Oakland-set debut novel, Shut Up, This is Serious, Bay Area author Carolina Ixta returns with a sophomore offering inspired in part by the inequities she saw in the region. For Ixta - a public education advocate and alumna of the Oakland Unified School District who now teaches fourth and fifth grade in San Leandro - fiction writing is a megaphone for social consciousness. Writing for a young adult audience, in particular, allows her to entertain young readers and teach them about their own realities.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

When Family Secrets Create New Wounds

Secrecy about traumatic pasts among refugee families often aims to protect but can cause lasting emotional harm and fractured family histories.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Cameo by Rob Doyle review a fantasy of literary celebrity in the culture war era

Perky, satirical portrait centred on a globe-trotting Dublin figure whose sensational life—crime, drugs, sex, espionage—and pettiness lampoon contemporary literary culture and celebrity.
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fromsfist.com
3 days ago

Green Apple Books' Sunset Location Finally Gets a New Tenant in Upstairs Mezzanine: A Literary Co-Working Space

Green Apple Books mezzanine now houses Backstory Above, a writers' co-working space offering silent work areas, a soundproof booth, and a small conference room.
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fromKqed
2 days ago

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

A San Francisco exhibition uses diverse handmade book forms to critique U.S. injustices and affirm the healing power of art during the nation's 250th anniversary.
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fromwww.npr.org
2 days ago

Poet Rachel Eliza Griffiths says she won't let pain be 'the engine that drives the ship'

Rachel Eliza Griffiths experienced dissociative episodes and memory blackouts after her best friend's death and during subsequent trauma, and she chronicled these experiences in a memoir.
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fromWIRED
2 days ago

You've Never Heard of China's Greatest Sci-Fi Novel

The Morning Star of Lingao depicts modern Chinese engineers traveling to the late Ming to spark an industrial revolution, symbolizing China's modernization crisis and anxieties.
fromItsnicethat
2 days ago

Leo Flugler's whispery graphite comic tells the story of a female boxer struggling against sexism

"It works for me best to draw analog, edit digitally and add text or colour my drawings in a second step. But for this I already need to know the text elements, so it usually takes me really long to figure out the different elements before I can really start working and puzzle everything together," says Leo. "Most often I work with already existing stories (not strictly texts) and love to do lots of research and deep dives to find links and parallels in other stories. It's important to add historical context and give the stories more dimension."
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Sex, death and parrots: Julian Barnes's best fiction ranked!

Duffy, The Porcupine and The Lemon Table deliver a bisexual private-eye crime caper, a savage satire of a collapsed communist regime, and stories about ageing.
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fromThe New Yorker
3 days ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

Three new books explore personal transformation through an adventurous treasure hunt, caregiving choices at end of life, and Africa's influence on Europe's self-conception.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Departure(s) by Julian Barnes review this final novel is a slippery affair

A final novel frames departures as both career finale and mortality, revisiting recurring themes of memory, missteps, rueful humor, and controlled, varied tone.
fromAnOther
3 days ago

A Reading List by Ocean Vuong: Part One

Because, let's face it, creative work does require some form of faith. It is a tumultuous thing to launch an idea into a vast nothingness and hope that it makes a light bright enough to be found by others. Luckily, these luminaries were my light, and I hope they may become yours as well, and - more so - that these snippets lead you to more of their work.
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fromTODAY.com
3 days ago

Dylan Dreyer's Rejected Children's Book Idea Finds its Moment Now: 'Wicked Smaaht'

Dylan Dreyer created and shared a rhyming listing of all Massachusetts towns, received strong audience interest, and continues publishing children's books.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
4 days ago

An intimate exhibit at Lewis & Clark College brings medieval manuscripts into the context of community * Oregon ArtsWatch

Medieval manuscripts from the 13th–16th centuries, including annotated vellum books, legal scrolls, and printed books altered to mimic manuscripts, are exhibited at Lewis & Clark.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Karen Solie's Wellwater wins TS Eliot poetry prize

Karen Solie won the 2025 TS Eliot poetry prize for Wellwater, a collection exploring environmental destruction.
fromMouse Vs Python
3 days ago

New Book: Vibe Coding Video Games with Python - Mouse Vs Python

In this book, you will learn how to use artificial intelligence to create mini-games. You will attempt to recreate the look and feel of various classic video games. The intention is not to violate copyright or anything of the sort, but instead to learn the limitations and the power of AI. Instead, you will simply be learning about whether or not you can use AI to help you know how to create video games.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Poem of the week: Now, Mother, What's the Matter? by Richard W Halperin

Life and art belong to troubled hearts; Hamlet embodies human trouble, and poetry bridges earthly distress with spiritual and artistic uncertainty.
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fromwww.archdaily.com
4 days ago

A Very Small 24-hour Bookstore / SZ-ARCHITECTS

A tiny bookstore on Nanjing's Qinhuai River functions as an open, guest-centered space staffed by four adopted stray cats with walls covered in message postcards.
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fromwww.newyorker.com
4 days ago

Joseph O'Neill Reads Light Secrets

A recorded reading presents "Light Secrets" from the January 26, 2026 issue; listening options and a Books & Fiction newsletter sign-up are provided, with several novels noted.
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fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

Was Infinite Jest Right About Everything?

Infinite Jest is highly readable and prescient about short-form digital entertainment, while Hyperion's ambitious adaptation has faced prolonged delays despite high hopes.
#julian-barnes
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fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

Flat Earth theory, talking raccoons and ghosts on strike: The fascinating world of the weird

Dan Schreiber documents global fringe beliefs and bizarre claims, revealing human eccentricity, committed conviction, and the odd humor and strangeness of these ideas.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
5 days ago

PuzzleWatch: What the Dickens * Oregon ArtsWatch

Charles Dickens achieved lasting literary celebrity through prolific serialized novels, vivid characters, public lectures, and enduring popularity that keeps his works continuously in print.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Can you solve it? Are you cut out for these puzzling slices?

Three geometric challenges: a triomino tiling impossibility, an alternative four-piece dissection forming a square, and minimizing pieces for equal pizza shares.
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fromIndependent
5 days ago

Sarah Breen: Is 'Hamnet' grief porn or great art? As I sobbed silently in the cinema, I was in no doubt

A remarkable movie can compel people to confront and not look away from real-life tragedies.
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fromFuncheap
6 days ago

Author Chat: Literary History of Computing (Mountain View)

Influential books have shaped computing innovations, inspired transformative visions, and continue to inform understanding during the AI era.
fromSlate Magazine
5 days ago

My Body Is Being Battered and Broken by an Unlikely Tormentor: Books.

For the 10 th year in a row, my New Year's resolution is to read more books. Ideally, as I tend to tell myself during these protean early weeks of January, 2026 will be remembered for languorous evenings on the couch, tearing through the inventory of novels that crowd the modest capacity of my living-room shelves, perhaps with a tumbler of scotch resting on a coaster.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

This month's best paperbacks: Anne Tyler, Jason Allen-Paisant and more

Childhood in rural Jamaica reveals nature, memory, walking, herbalism, and the interplay of landscape, loss, and cultural memory.
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fromTravel + Leisure
6 days ago

I Spent a Cozy Night in a 'Literary Oasis' Above a Nantucket Bookstore-Here's What It Was Like

Travelers increasingly seek book-centered getaways and curated reading spaces, prompting travel companies to create dedicated "readaway" listings.
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fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

A Journey Through the World of Book Publishing

Sharing professional and personal insights through books can extend reach; choosing traditional publishing or self-publishing involves distinct tradeoffs.
fromDefector
6 days ago

Natan Last Has Thought A Lot About Crosswords | Defector

It may seem like they've been around forever, but the crossword as we know it is barely a century old. They started in the New York World in 1913, where it was originally called a "word-cross." Going on to obsess writers like T.S. Eliot and Vladimir Nabokov, who reportedly wrote the first Russian-language puzzle as a teenager, the crossword settled into a kind of urbane normalcy over the course of the 20th century, a feature of newspapers and cheap jumbo packs.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Chosen Family by Madeleine Gray review friends, lovers or something in between?

A complex, humorous portrayal of a lifelong relationship between two women, tracing childhood friendship, betrayal, queer awakening, co-parenting, and mysterious absence.
fromABC7 Los Angeles
6 days ago

Sarah Shahi reveals 'Paradise' season 2 secrets, reflects on being an "outlaw" in new book

"Through playing her, I was able to get the courage to make the changes that I wanted to make in my life, to really go after the version of my life that I felt like I was meant to live. And when the show came out, I became acutely aware of women all over the world that were feeling very similarly,"
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fromwww.nytimes.com
6 days ago

What Kind of Lover Are You? This William Blake Poem Might Have the Answer.

Love manifests as selfless nurturing (the clod) and as selfish possession (the pebble), offering two opposing definitions of love.
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fromSFGATE
6 days ago

A legendary American author's historic home hits the LA market

Upton Sinclair's Monrovia neo-Mediterranean home served as a peaceful writing retreat with abundant fruit trees and is listed on the National Register and for sale.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

'How do you really tell the truth about this moment?': George Saunders on ghosts, mortality and Trump's America

Ghost stories are used to explore mortality, memories, and ethical legacy, forcing characters to confront past actions and discover more truthful perspective.
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fromwww.amny.com
1 week ago

The Winter Show, one hundred years of Winnie-the-Pooh, and the civilizing power of the book amNewYork

The Winter Show affirms books' power to preserve cultural memory, foster literary humanism, and showcase scholarship through rare Winnie‑the‑Pooh and climate science collections.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

H Is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald audiobook review a soaring journey through grief

Training a temperamental goshawk named Mabel provides a pathway through intense grief via falconry, close observation of the bird and contrasts with harsher training methods.
fromScary Mommy
1 week ago

Scary Mommy's Most Anticipated Books Of 2026

I know you probably have a bunch of unread books at home that you already own - maybe entire bookcases full of them - but what fun is that!? Our Scary Mommy team of voracious readers have done all of the research for you and compiled a list of the very best and most exciting new releases coming our way in 2026.
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fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

She Shook Up the Literary World, Then Renounced It

Many editors languish in the margins of history, their contributions largely invisible despite how much they shape whom and how we read. But in recent years, amid a wave of books unearthing overlooked figures, biographers have turned their sights to pioneering book and magazine editors-including Malcolm Cowley of Viking, Judith Jones of Knopf, Bennett Cerf of Random House, and Katharine S. White of The New Yorker -anointing them as the unsung architects of the American literary canon.
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fromBig Think
1 week ago

5 literary conspiracy theories - debunked

Literary conspiracy theories question authorship, use pseudonyms, and misattribute works, sometimes entertaining but often distorting historical understanding.
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fromDaily News
1 week ago

Things to do in the San Fernando Valley, LA area, Jan. 15-23

Multiple community events, author signings, and club meetings are scheduled across San Fernando Valley and greater Los Angeles.
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fromVulture
1 week ago

Agatha Christie's Seven Dials Recap: Battle Commences

Jimmy and Bundle investigate linked deaths of Gerry and Ronnie, uncovering connections to "Seven Dials" while Bundle's bold detective actions drive the plot forward.
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fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Can't decide what to read next? Here are 20 recommendations for your book club

Twenty conversational novels from 2025 showcasing narrative ambiguity, family curses, midwestern history, and psychological depth for book clubs.
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fromKqed
1 week ago

20 Recommendations From 2025 for Your 2026 Book Club

Twenty conversation-starting books for book clubs are recommended from 2025 favorites and NPR's Books We Love archive, including Audition, Buckeye, and Cursed Daughters.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Reading for the New Year: Part Three

Muriel Spark's The Bachelors showcases dark British comic fiction with dry London dialogue, ingeniously malignant plotting, and mordant social observation.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Half His Age by Jennette McCurdy the follow-up to I'm Glad My Mom Died

In her debut work of fiction, Half His Age, McCurdy continues to shake open a Pandora's box, shedding light on blurred parent-child boundaries and loss of identity due to over-enmeshment, with solid one-liners that feel straight out of a sitcom writers' room. Lead character Waldo is a high school senior whose life doesn't seem to be her own. She play-acts through sexual encounters and disassociates at the school disco (I stand off to the side watching, enveloped by a blanket of catatonia).
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fromPortland Mercury
1 week ago

Film Review: Kristen Stewart's Trauma-Soaked Adaptation of Lidia Yuknavitch's The Chronology of Water

A fragmented film portrays a swimmer's traumatic life through nonlinear imagery, vivid water motifs, and visceral scenes that intermix past and present.
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fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Why "Heart the Lover" Resonates With So Many People

Heart the Lover captures the innocence and complexity of youthful exploration and the tender, fragile nature of young love.
#colleen-hoover
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Making the Most of Midlife

Human development is a lifelong, cumulative process. Midlife, however, is largely overlooked and misunderstood. When exactly is midlife? The general consensus is that midlife encompasses the years between 40 and 60, give or take. In a 2015 poll, people expressed the belief that midlife begins at age 44 and ends at age 59, however the roles and life circumstances that surround middle adulthood are perhaps more defining of this era than a specific age.
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fromGameSpot
1 week ago

Battle Angel Alita Manga Box Set On Sale For Lowest Price In Seven-Year History

One of the best cyberpunk manga of all time is on sale for an incredible price at Amazon. Battle Angel Alita's Deluxe Edition Series Box Set collects the complete original run in premium hardcover format. The Deluxe Edition Series Box Set is on sale for $100 off, dropping the price from $180 all the way down to $80. This is the best deal ever for the six-volume, 2,392-page collection, and this says a lot considering it was published in December 2018 by Kodansha Comics.
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fromianVisits
1 week ago

Half price entry to Dr Johnson's House on Friday afternoons

Entry to Dr Johnson's House is half price every Friday afternoon, allowing visits to Samuel Johnson's 17th-century home and dictionary museum.
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fromNature
1 week ago

Beneath acid skies

An android named Gretel faithfully guards a ruined gate for twenty-six years until a survivor, Elijah, returns to awaken memories and offer her rest.
fromVulture
1 week 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
1 week 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
1 week 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.
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fromHarvard Gazette
1 week 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 week 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
1 week 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.
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fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago

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

A third Ilya and Shane novel, Unrivaled, will be published Sept. 29, 2026, continuing their story as married Ottawa Centaurs facing fan backlash.
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fromsfist.com
1 week 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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