• Philip K. Dick
    January 19, 2015

    "Wolf Hall" the TV series begins this week

    The New Yorker has posted a trailer for its new video series on Amazon, The New Yorker Presents, which will include a film by Jonathan Demme based on an article by contributor Rachel Aviv; Ariel Levy’s interview with artist Marina Abramovic; and a short based on a Simon Rich story, in which Alan Cumming stars as God. (The pilot Amazon's other literary TV series The Man in the High Castle—directed by Ridley Scott and based on the Philip K. Dick novel—is now available, and receiving strong reviews.)

    Claudia Rankine's book Citizen is currently on the New York Times best-seller list—a rare

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  • Natasha Vargas-Cooper
    January 16, 2015

    National Magazine Award finalists announced

    A boy who claimed to have died, gone to heaven, and come back to life has said he lied. We ran a story on Colton Burpo, a kid who claims a similar story. Burpo hasn’t retracted his (yet?).

    Yesterday, the Brian Lehrer show staged a debate about Amazon between the attorney Scott Turow and the self-published author Joe Konrath. An informal poll asked listeners whether they think Amazon is good for readers, bad for readers, or whether the answer is “complicated.” Responses were split about equally among the choices.

    Natasha Vargas-Cooper (a frequent Bookforum contributor) is leaving The Intercept

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  • Joan Didion in an ad for Celine
    January 15, 2015

    Wired's new digs; Joan Didion's Celine ad

    French provocateur Dieudonné was arrested yesterday after he posted what authorities are calling a terrorist apologia on Facebook, “Tonight, as far as I’m concerned, I feel like Charlie Coulibaly.” At the Intercept, Glenn Greenwald digs into the hypocrisy he sees in the free-speech tributes in France, concluding, ”This week’s celebration of France—and the gaggle of tyrannical leaders who joined it—had little to do with free speech and much to do with suppressing ideas they dislike while venerating ideas they prefer.”

    Jonathan Franzen will be appearing on May 27th at BEA to get the conference

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  • Ed Park
    January 14, 2015

    New stars added to adaptation of Michael Lewis's 'The Big Short'

    The American Dialect Society, an organization of linguists, academics, and other word lovers, has named \#blacklivesmatter its “Word of the Year.” It is the first time in the society’s 125 year history that a hashtag has won the award (though the word hashtag was the 2012 winner). Language aficionado Ben Zimmer, who chairs the society’s committee on new words, said of their choice: ”While \#blacklivesmatter may not fit the traditional definition of a word, it demonstrates how powerfully a hashtag can convey a succinct social message. . . . Language scholars are paying attention to the innovative

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  • Sasha Frere-Jones
    January 13, 2015

    Sasha Frere-Jones leaves the New Yorker; Charlie Hebdo's new cover

    Sasha Frere-Jones has quit his job as the New Yorker’s pop music critic and is heading to Genius.com; his last New Yorker column is a piece about Northwest rock heroines Sleater-Kinney. Foster Kamer considers Frere-Jones’s move, writing that it really isn’t all that surprising, while at Gawker, Leah Finnegan pleads with trailblazing start-ups to stop giving Old Guard journalists so much money.

    Charlie Hebdo’s new issue will have a cartoon of a crying Prophet Muhammad on the cover.

    The Nation has |http://www.thenation.com/blog/194585/nation-magazine-names-david-hajdu-music-critic#|hired David

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  • Robert Stone
    January 12, 2015

    J.K. Rowling responds to Rupert Murdoch

    Novelist Robert Stone died on Saturday. He was the author of numerous novels, including the National Book Award-winning Dog Soldiers, which updated Graham Greene’s international thrillers for the Vietnam War era and paved the way for Denis Johnson’s counterculture classic Already Dead.

    Michel Houellebecq—the subject of a Charlie Hebdo cover story titled “The predictions of the Great Houellebecq,” published on the day that terrorists killed twelve people at the satirical newspaper—has stopped promoting his novelSubmission. The novel, which was released on Wednesday, is about a radical Muslim

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  • Claudia Rankine
    January 09, 2015

    Charlie Hebdo staffers will publish next week.

    The Charlie Hebdo staff members who survived Wednesday’s attack will publish an issue of the paper next week. They are planning to increase its print run from around sixty thousand to one million copies, with donations helping to defray the costs.

    Claudia Rankine's Citizen—which concerns, among other things, racism and police brutality—was published in October 2014, but subsequent printings of the book, a finalist for the National Book Award, have already included changes that reflect the deaths of new victims, including Michael Brown and Eric Garner.

    David Haglund, who edits Slate’s Brow

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  • Stéphane Charbonnier
    January 08, 2015

    Reactions to the Charlie Hebdo attack; the New Republic staffs up

    How publications are responding to the attack on Charlie Hebdo: from solidarity to censorship. And, at the Times, a profile of Stéphane Charbonnier (aka Charb), the paper’s editorial director, one of twelve people killed in the attack.

    The New Republic has announced the first new hires since the magazine's disastrous editorial reboot this fall, which culminated with many prominent staff members leaving. Charged with righting the ship are two new senior editors, Jamil Smith and Elspeth Reeve; an associate editor, Bijan Stephen; and a poetry editor, Cathy Park Hong. TNR’s editor, Gabriel Snyder,

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  • Nicholas and Cathy Sparks
    January 07, 2015

    n+1's winter issue; the Morning News' Tournament of Books

    Nicholas Sparks and his wife, Cathy, have declared everything Sparks ever wrote null and void by divorcing, and Twitter has consequently lost hope in the power of love.

    The National Book Critics Circle has elected its board for the coming year, and among the eight is our own Michael Miller.

    There’s been a lot of hiring and firing lately. Amy O’Leary, formerly the Times’ digital deputy editor for the international desk, is moving to Upworthy to act as editorial director. (The Observer wonders if the hire signals “a more serious direction” for the company.) Lois Romano is leaving Politico to

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  • James Risen
    January 06, 2015

    Leon Wieseltier joins the The Atlantic

    Leon Wieseltier, formerly of the New Republic, has joined the staff of The Atlantic. Wieseltier was one of the first to announce his departure from TNR amid the general exodus in early December.

    The editor in chief of the Virginia Quarterly Review, Ralph Eubanks, will leave when his contract expires at the end of the summer.

    Forbes has announced its list of “30 under 30” in media. It includes Questlove; Peter Thiel, of Paypal and Palantir; Lauren Bush; Monica Lewinsky; and Tinder’s Sean Rad.

    On the NYRB blog, Geoffrey O’Brien writes about Inherent Vice. “If everything is at first sight a

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  • Ben Lerner
    January 05, 2015

    Mark Zuckerberg's new book club

    Mark Zuckerberberg is starting what could become the biggest book club in history. The Facebook founder has written that his “challenge for 2015 is to read a new book every other week—with an emphasis on learning about different cultures, beliefs, histories and technologies.” This will not be a solitary endeavor: Zuckerberg has created a Facebook page called A Year of Books, where he will name the books he’s reading, and invite others to discuss the titles. There are some basic rules for those who join the club: “We ask that everyone who participates read the books and we will moderate the

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  • Patton Oswalt
    January 02, 2015

    Twitter's nefarious ad placement; the graying of bookbinding

    Since this past summer, the London Review of Books has been serially publishing Jenny Diski’s memoirs.London Review of BooksIn this installment, Diski describes listening, as a teenager, to Doris Lessing (Diski's guardian) and her friends: “To start with, I couldn’t understand how it was so easy for them to have a point of view, to know how and why things ‘worked’. ‘Working’, the pivotal valuation, was never defined. There seemed to be too much to learn. I picked up quickly that having opinions wasn’t enough and that it was necessary to have a basis – from reading, from study, from hard conscious

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