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Big Publishing’s Lawsuit Against The Internet Archive’s Open Library Is “A Trojan Horse”

The big-firm plaintiffs' brief accuses the Internet Archive of "mass-scale copyright infringement" and giving away "full-text digital bootlegs for free." (The Archive's Open Library does the same limited-time lending that public libraries do.) The companies seem really to want to legally establish ebooks as completely different from print books. - The Nation

How Quality TV Is Changing Writing

“There’s so much love from the film and television industry for books, Whether it’s scouts or producers or buyers, there’s a huge passion for books in a way that feels even stronger at times than original screenwriting projects.” - The Walrus

Unpublished Poems By Ted Hughes About His Lover’s Suicide Have Been Discovered

No, these aren't about Sylvia Plath (who was Hughes's first wife): they're about Assia Wevill, who took up with Hughes (her landlord at the time) the year before Plath gassed herself — as Wevill did, along with her daughter by Hughes, six years later. - The Guardian

A Time To Laugh, A Time To Cry

Sometimes, it's easier to attack serious subjects with biting satire - and for Black authors, though that's not exactly new, it is having a bit of a resurgence. - The New York Times

A Life Skills Coach And A Gallery Conspire To Get Black Canadians To Write More Romance Novels

The group founder: "I don't hear about romance novels taking place in Alberta — with Black people. There are Black people in Alberta, Edmonton and Calgary. I don't hear about Black romance taking place in Nova Scotia. There are Black people there, too, and in Ontario." - CBC

The Alleged Mysterious Manuscript Thief May Manage To Avoid A U.S. Trial

Filippo Bernardini allegedly impersonated numerous authors, agents, and others in order to obtain unpublished manuscripts — for reasons nobody yet understands. Now his first court date has been postponed while a deferred prosecution request is considered. - The Guardian

Graydon Carter’s Vanity Fair And The Inevitable Fade Of The American Glossy Magazine

"What happens when legacy magazines can no longer rely on their reputation to get readers, let alone party invites? Condé Nast's magazines, especially Carter's Vanity Fair, used a strategy of exclusion to generate a sense of luxury. ... Can any publishing project today succeed on that basis alone?" - The Nation

The Serious Right-Wing Threat To Queer Children’s Literature

"The assumption that 'a gay book' is necessarily a sexualized book, and therefore inappropriate for children, is baked into the language of 'Don’t Say Gay,'" the censorious, proudly homophobic Florida law that Republicans would like to pass and enforce everywhere. - The New Yorker

In The Maw Of The Reality Show Beast: America’s Next Great Author

Will there be a montage of typing fingers? A poetry read-off in Iowa City? A "who navigated the workshop the best" scene in LA? Well: "The six finalists, locked together for a month, will face 'live-wire' challenges as they attempt to write an entire novel." - The Guardian (UK)

So Many Writers Wish They Could Just Redo Their First Novel.  Akhil Sharma Did.

"He (has) revised and radically rewritten ... An Obedient Father, (which) he published 22 years earlier. Considerably shorter, with a very different ending but the same title, the novel ... reappears this month — more than 30 years after Sharma began it." - The New York Times Magazine

English In India: The Colonial Oppressor’s Language?  Not Anymore.

"English has always been a language that has looked ahead to the future. Forged multiply in the crucible of caste, class, gender, and ethnic politics, English has found roots in India as a language that erases itself in the hope of what it could be." - Los Angeles Review of Books

Percy Shelley: Poetry As Political Crusade

"Shelley's greatest gift was in the deftness with which he interwove the poetical and the political. Poetry had, for Shelley, of necessity to appropriate a political dimension. And politics required a poetical imagination. That was why ... 'poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world'." - The Observer (UK)

And Here Is The New Poet Laureate Of The United States

Ada Limón "assumes the role with two primary intentions: to use poetry to help people reclaim their humanity and to repair their relationship with the natural world. ... Instead of seeing nature as separate from humanity, she implores us to remember that 'we are nature too.'" - MSN (The Washington Post)

Surprising Good News: New Indie Bookstores Are Opening, Doing Good Business, And Serving Diverse Populations

Many of them opened during the pandemic shutdown, such as The Salt Eaters Bookshop in L.A. County and Socialight Society in Lansing, Mich., oriented toward Black women; Pocket Books Shop in Lancaster, Pa., a "queer, feminist indie bookstore"; and Yu and Me Books in Manhattan's Chinatown. - The New York Times

This Couple Bought Their Small Newspaper Back From Gannett

Amy Duncan was editor and publisher, and her husband, Mark Davitt, managing editor, of The Record-Tribune in Indianola, Iowa, and when they heard that Gannett wanted to sell some of its smaller titles, they leapt at the chance.  They're publishing in hard copy weekly and operating online daily. - NPR

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