• December 31, 2014

    Melville House sends the Torture Report into another printing

    At the Intercept, Natasha Vargas-Cooper has a multipart interview with Jay Wilds, who figures prominently in Sarah Koenig’s twelve-episode documentary podcast, Serial, and who was a key witness in the case against Adnan Syed. (Syed was convicted of killing his ex-girlfriend in 1999, but has maintained his innocence; Serial suggests he may be telling the truth and casts doubt on Wilds.) The Observer talks to Vargas-Cooper about her decision to do the interview.“I think [Wilds is] a really complicated guy and I think I’m dealing with somebody who has like been really traumatized. [This interview]

    Read more
  • Bob Mankoff
    December 30, 2014

    How about never—is never good for you?

    Forward names 2014 the year of Soviet-born writers, with books by Lev Golinkin (A Backpack, A Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka), Yelena Akhtiorskaya (Panic in a Suitcase), Anya Ulinich (Lena Finkel's Magic Barrel), David Bezmozgis (The Betrayers), Gary Shteyngart (Little Failure), Lara Vapnyar (The Scent of Pine), and Ellen Litman (Mannequin Girl). Bookforum interviewed Akhtiorskaya over the summer and reviewed her novel as well.

    The Guardian previews fiction and nonfiction to be published in the coming year, including Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant, Kate Atkinson’s A God in Ruins, and Anne

    Read more
  • Tomaz Salamun
    December 29, 2014

    Remembering Tomaz Salamun

    Bill de Blasio has blamed the media for “dividing” people. Not a very original move, but the mayor’s irritation in this case is somewhat understandable. He was asked in a press briefing whether he’d let his children recite some of the chants that have been sung at protests in recent weeks, specifically those that compare the NYPD to the KKK. De Blasio pointed out that most protesters had not repeated this chant: “What you manage to do is pull up the few who do not represent the majority, who are saying unacceptable things.” He’s unhappy because some of the blame for last week’s shooting of two

    Read more
  • December 23, 2014

    The year's worst mistakes in journalism . . .

    New York Magazine has a timeline describing Rolling Stone’s handling of the University of Virginia rape story. Most recently, Rolling Stone has asked the Columbia University journalism school to independently review the editorial process behind the article. The magazine will publish the report once it’s concluded.

    The Columbia Journalism Review looks back at the past year’s worst mistakes in journalism. The UVA rape story tops the list, especially for the way Rolling Stone tried blame the report's inaccuracies on the subject of the story rather than on its own staff. CJR also includes Time

    Read more
  • Steven W. Thrasher
    December 22, 2014

    The Sony hacks, and a new book on cyberterrorism

    The Tribeca Film Festival has announced that it is creating a new annual award, the Nora Ephron Prize. The prize will be given to "a woman writer or director with a distinctive voice who embodies the spirit and vision of the legendary filmmaker and writer." Ephron, who wrote the screenplay and directed Sleepless in Seattle, among other films, as well as many books, died in June.

    At Slate, David Auerbach explains why the Sony hacks are “a wake-up call.” The attack might not have been as sophisticated as StuxNet, the virus that infiltrated and sabotaged Iran’s nuclear facilities, but it was

    Read more
  • Secret Behavior
    December 19, 2014

    Serial is over, and it didn't exactly give us what we wanted . . .

    The last episode of the popular podcast Serial has been released. The final show does not, as most listeners hoped, provide any firm answers about the case of Adnan Syed, who was convicted of murdering his ex-girlfriend, Hae Min Lee, in 1999. Dwight Garner calls it a “tangled and heartfelt yet frustrating hour of radio.” A public defender, writing in the Washington Post, says that the show missed an opportunity to show something important about the criminal justice system. “I don’t know whether Syed is innocent,” Sarah Lustbader says, “but he was clearly convicted despite many reasonable doubts.”

    Read more
  • Marlon James
    December 18, 2014

    The Colbert Report ends . . .

    In honor of the end of the Colbert Report, the New Republic collects clips of some of Stephen Colbert's best author interviews—with Toni Morrison, George Saunders, and Richard Ford, among others.

    On the New York Review of Books blog, Michael Greenberg reflects on the protests in the wake of the grand-jury decision over the Eric Garner case: “Nationally, a shift of consciousness seems to have taken place, a budging of fixed ideas about African-Americans and law enforcement. Policing has become a civil rights issue.”

    And, on the Harper’s blog, Sam Frank reports on Manhattan’s three-day TechCrunch

    Read more
  • Kathryn Schulz
    December 17, 2014

    The Times begins layoffs; Newsweek hires . . .

    At n+1, Nicholas Dames writes about a handful of books based in the 1970s, among them Rachel Kushner’s The Flamethrowers, Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Lowland, Norman Rush’s Subtle Bodies, and Darcey Steinke’s Sister Golden Hair. “Here is the territory the novels evoke: a mythic late summer, spacious, unsupervised, a little druggy, a little restless, hedged only by the feeling that everything is about to end,” Dames explains. The nostalgia is intense. But “what if one could imagine a nostalgia that didn’t idealize, that in fact celebrated a past moment’s stubborn resistance to idealization, that coexisted

    Read more
  • Laura Kipnis
    December 16, 2014

    Vice Media considering an IPO next year

    Vice Media may explore an initial public offering next year after a “deal spree.” Two funds recently invested $250 million each in the company. “This is the birth of the next big media brand,” said CEO Shane Smith.

    James Patterson just gave away the third and final round of donations to independent bookstores across the country. He spent more than a million dollars this year helping out 187 bookstores with children’s book sections. The figure is pocket change for Patterson, who made ninety million last year, according to a Vanity Fair profile. The “relentless writing machine” has 130 titles

    Read more
  • Jane Freilicher and John Ashbery
    December 15, 2014

    David Denby leaves post as regular New Yorker film critic...

    Late last week, the website Our Bad Media published “A Guide for Journalists: Understanding why Malcolm Gladwell Is a Plagiarist.” Included are a number of comparisons between Gladwell’s articles and articles by other writers that he most likely drew from but did not cite. Contacted by the Poynter media journalist Andrew Beaujon, New Yorker editor David Remnick responded to the blog post: “The issue is not really about Malcolm. And, to be clear, it isn’t about plagiarism. The issue is an ongoing editorial challenge known to writers and editors everywhere — to what extent should a piece of

    Read more
  • Tom McCarthy
    December 12, 2014

    Next year's Tournament of Books . . .

    Nominate your favorite novel of the year to be a contender in the Morning News’ 2015 Tournament of Books.

    “Gamergate,” a loose confederation of (generally antifeminist) gamers upset about how gaming is portrayed, apparently cost Gawker seven figures, according to the company’s head of advertising. In response to a tweeted joke by writer Sam Biddle, gamergaters urged advertisers to pull ads. Gawker’s response to Biddle’s tweet and the gamergate reaction was “inconsistent and confused,” writes Peter Sterne at Capital New York.

    Tom McCarthy on realism at the London Review of Books: “That such

    Read more
  • Claudia Rankine
    December 11, 2014

    Nick Denton steps down as president of Gawker

    Melville House is rushing publication of the newly released Torture Report. The 480-page book will be available December 30.

    Alan Rusbridger, the editor in chief of The Guardian, is leaving the newspaper. He's been in the role for twenty years.

    Nick Denton has fired himself as president of Gawker.

    The Believer website has an interview with Claudia Rankine, whose recent book, Citizen, was nominated for the National Book Award. "If you make a mistake, then you should own that mistake," Rankine says. "You should admit, 'What I said was racist and that is really unacceptable.' You don’t say, '

    Read more