• F. Scott Fitzgerald
    January 26, 2012

    Jan 26, 2012 @ 4:00:00 am

    Last week, novelist Hari Kunzru was advised to leave the Jaipur Literature Festival after he read excerpts of Salman Rushdie’s novel The Satanic Verses, which remains banned in India. (Rushdie, also present, received death threats.) On Twitter, Kunzru argues that he did nothing wrong: “More Indian legal experts confirm that we broke no law by reading from The Satanic Verses."

    Everyone’s talking about Newt Gingrich’s personal life and political record, but what about his books? In addition to a series of novels about WWII, Gingrich wrote a revisionist take on the Civil War—in which the South

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  • January 25, 2012

    Jan 25, 2012 @ 4:00:00 am

    Jonathan Safran Foer has joined the likes of Sam Lipsyte and George Pelecanos. That’s right, he’s writing for HBO. His new show will star Ben Stiller.

    After putting out her debut, a plague novel titled Last Last Chance with FSG, Fiona Maazel has sold her second novel to Graywolf Press. Described as a “sweeping commentary on loneliness in America,” Maazel’s new book, Woke Up Lonely, features “a cult leader, his ex-wife, and the four people he accidentally takes hostage.” It’s scheduled to come out in Spring 2013. In the meantime, you can read her review of Ben Marcus’s The Flame Alphabet in

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  • New Rumpus contributor Marie Calloway.
    January 24, 2012

    Jan 24, 2012 @ 4:00:00 am

    Gearing up for President Obama's State of the Union address, the website RealClearBooks is posting daily "state of" reports. Kicking things off is “The state of American Books,” by Bookforum’s Chris Lehmann.

    Was the threat that prevented Salman Rushdie from attending last weekend’s Jaipur Literary Festival real, or was it fabricated by Indian police? That’s the question overshadowing the scandal, which drove several authors home early out of concern for their safety after they read from Rushdie’s novel, The Satanic Verses, which remains banned in India. Rushdie says he was threatened by “paid

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  • Sara Marcus reads from Gertrude Stein's The Making of Americans at the inaugural event for online magazine Triple Canopy's new Brooklyn space.
    January 23, 2012

    Jan 23, 2012 @ 3:00:00 am

    Congratulations to Triple Canopy for inaugurating their new space at 155 Freeman Street in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, with a 48 hour plus reading of Gertrude Stein's The Making of Americans.

    The announcements for the 2011 National Book Critics Circle Award finalists were made on Saturday. Topping the list for fiction are Jeffrey Eugenides for The Marriage Plot (Farrar, Straus and Giroux) and Alan Hollinghurst for The Stranger’s Child (Knopf); and for nonfiction, Adam Hochschild’s To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), Maya Jasanoff’s Liberty's

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  • One of Sera Hur's Murakami/Sartorialist mashups
    January 20, 2012

    Jan 20, 2012 @ 2:00:00 am

    Want to glimpse inside what is soon to become the world’s most expensive book? The Guardian runs a slideshow of images from John James Audobon’s The Birds of America, a book of ornithological illustrations that goes on auction at Sotheby’s tomorrow.

    Don’t go into it for the money: According to a New York Times Economix blog breakdown, newspaper writers and editors have a one in 62 chance of breaking into the one percent.

    What is the role of criticism today? Hear Elif Batuman, Rivka Galchen, Mark Athitakis, Eric Banks, and our very own Michael Miller discuss how criticism informs, inflects,

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  • January 19, 2012

    Jan 19, 2012 @ 4:00:00 am

    The Huffington Post names Dominique Strauss-Kahn's wife as the new editor of newly inaugurated Huffington Post France; meanwhile, Forbes reports that the site is preparing to launch a 24-hour online video news site.

    Francis Ford Coppola's adaptation of On the Road—starring Viggo Mortensen, Amy Adams, Steve Buscemi, and Kirsten Dunst, among other newcomers—could hit French theaters by the end of May.

    Virginia retailers are not happy about legislation allowing Amazon to skip paying state sales taxes—in spite of the company's "physical presence" in the state.

    Mein Kampf returns to German

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  • Etgar Keret
    January 18, 2012

    Jan 18, 2012 @ 2:00:00 am

    Featuring Philip Larkin and Kingsley Amis: The Guardian releases an e-book on jazz.

    The Mitt Romney word cloud: "smooth, smart, slick; detached, disciplined, dogged; pragmatic, protean, phony; careful, cautious, calculating." Michiko Kakutani reviews The Real Romney, a bio of the likely GOP nominee by Boston Globe reporters Michael Kranish and Scott Helman.

    On the fiction front, at FSG's Works in Progress site, Gary Shteyngart Reads Etgar Keret’s “What, of This Goldfish, Would You Wish?” and The Telegraph runs Lydia Davis's newest story, "The Landing."

    Conde Nast has signed up to take on

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  • Art for a Mexican horror magazine.
    January 17, 2012

    Jan 17, 2012 @ 4:01:00 am

    Wikipedia will be shut down on Wednesday, January 18, in protest against SOPA, anti-piracy legislation that's currently under debate in Congress.

    "#Outsourced2India Namaste, everyone! This is the Real Gary Shteyngart from NYC, USA!"—Gary Shteyngart outsources his Tweets.

    The Obama campaign and administration have collected tens of thousands of Americans' "mini-memoirs" over the past several years. Can they be used to more accurately target voters?

    Bookstore sales fell 8.6 percent in November—the steepest decline all year.

    Here's the first part of Sheila Heti's Believer interview with Joan

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  • Still from Stephen Elliot's Cherry
    January 16, 2012

    Jan 16, 2012 @ 4:00:00 am

    How Ben Lerner's knockout debut Leaving the Atocha station has gotten its publisher, Minnesota's Coffee House Press some long-overdue attention. Read Deb Olin Unferth's review of the novel from our Fall issue.

    Cherry, the first feature film by novelist and Rumpus editor Stephen Elliott, will debut at the Berlin International Film Festival next month. The movie stars Heather Graham, Dev Patel, and (naturally) James Franco.

    Zadie Smith inaugurates Guernica's Writers Bloc series with a talk on global education.

    Reporters can't talk to citizens without special permission, and the bureau chief

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  • Memoirist Lil Wayne
    January 13, 2012

    Jan 13, 2012 @ 4:00:00 am

    Under a promotion with Harper Collins, British kids will get books instead of toys with their Happy Meals for the next four weeks.

    The end of an era, as announced on Twitter: “This is the final post from @Borders. We hope you'll follow @BNBuzz for reading recommendations, exclusive author content, deals & more.” And yes, @BNBuzz is Barnes and Noble.

    Mary Karr’s elegy for Christopher Hitchens (who she only met twice).

    The trailer for the new Wes Anderson movie is now online. It’s called Moonrise Kingdom, and we have to agree with Slate’s accessment: with it’s twee soundtrack and child-heavy

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  • Caitlin Flanagan
    January 12, 2012

    Jan 12, 2012 @ 4:00:00 am

    Amazon is going into business with “America’s favorite librarian” Nancy Peal by launching a Book Lust Rediscoveries line dedicated to bringing back her favorite out-of-print books. Meanwhile, indie bookstores are battling Amazon by going into publishing, and Salon’s Laura Miller resolves to give up her Amazon habit in 2012.

    Rumor has it that Apple’s January 19th press event (which will be held at the Guggenheim) is going to be about about the future of e-books, and specifically, “textbooks. Ebooks. E-textbooks.”

    Evan Hughes explains why James Franco’s Hart Crane biopic is boring—in spite of

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