ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

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Mario Vargas Llosa Says He Has Published His Last Book

"In a postscript to the new book, Le dedico mi silencio (I Give You My Silence), the 87-year-old novelist writes: 'I think I’ve finished this book. I’d now like to write an essay on Sartre, my teacher as a young man. It will be the last thing I write.'" - The Guardian

Why Toni Morrison Left Publishing

In her last years as an editor, Morrison helped lead the chorus of those calling to take up arms against conglomeration. - LitHub

The Writing Machines: They Won’t Kill Good Writing

These days, it is something of a fool’s errand to try to determine whether a text encountered online is written by a human or a chatbot. You might think a text sounds cheesy, canned, or off-the-shelf, but isn’t a lot of human writing just that? - Boston Review

A New High Schoolers’ Prize From Penguin Random House To Help Combat Book Bans

"The Freedom of Expression Award invites applicants to write about one banned book that changed their life and why. The $10,000 (£8,168) prize will be awarded to a high-school student planning to attend university in 2024." - The Guardian

Scholastic Reverses Course, Won’t Segregate Diverse Titles For Kids At Book Fairs

"The educational company, which both publishes and distributes books, waded into hot water last month after it confirmed that it was changing its policy for its middle school book fair offerings, … putting most of the titles dealing with race, gender and sexuality into their own collection." - NPR

British Library Puts Chaucer Manuscripts Online

In a “major milestone” for the library, which holds the world’s largest surviving collection of Chaucer, it is hoped the digital platform will enable new research into the 14th-century poet, courtier, soldier, diplomat, and MP who is most famous for his Middle English epic, The Canterbury Tales. - The Guardian

How Much Does It Matter Whether Fiction Is Written By A Human Or A Chatbot?

"In moments of doubt, I think of Gertrude Stein’s infamous line, “A rose is a rose is a rose.” Isn’t a word a word — still a word — regardless of who, or what, wrote it? … And how do we evaluate if a machine’s work is worth reading?" - Boston Review

Spotify CEO Talks About New Audiobook Service And AI Creation

Premium subscribers get 15 hours free a month and can top that off with discrete credit card payments if they want more. “We are seeing them doing that." - Deadline

The Frankfurt Book Fair Has A Long History Of Political Calculation

A commercial book fair might not immediately seem a site of position-taking, but as we discovered when researching our book, The Frankfurt Book Fair and Bestseller Business (2020), the fair has political roots. - The Conversation

92NY Puts Its Entire Literary Events Series On Hold

"92NY, one of the city’s leading cultural organizations, announced Monday that it was putting its prestigious literary reading series on pause, following an outcry over its decision to cancel an appearance last week by a prominent writer who had been critical of Israel." - The New York Times

Can A New Graphic Novel Of Watership Down Actually Not Traumatize Children?

The 1978 movie "was rated G but famously scared a lot of the unsuspecting kids who saw it. In fact, just in this past year, it was re-classified as PG." - NPR

Best Bookstore Day Ever?

Sir Patrick Stewart saw copies of his book in a window and just ... dropped in and signed some. The bookseller stayed calm ... externally. - BBC

Authors, Stressed About AI, Take Their Objections To The Courts

Authors are suing to get their work, and characters, out of AI programs. "OpenAI, for its part, has contended that training an AI system falls under fair use protections." - Los Angeles Times

AI Companies Are Using Artists’ Work (And Getting Rich). How Do Artists Get Paid?

Right now, a few authors joining together to sue the likes of Mark Zuckerberg and Meta is a bit of a David-vs.-Goliath situation. Book publishers need to join this fight. Magazine publishers need to join this fight. - Washington Post

Iowa’s New Library Book Ban Law Bans Books By James Joyce, Margaret Atwood And Toni Morrison

This week, the Iowa City Community School District released a list of 68 books that it removed from schools to comply with the law. Among the titles: “Ulysses” by James Joyce, “Nineteen Minutes” by Jodi Picoult, “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood and “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison. - Washington Post

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