• Margaret Drabble
    July 14, 2011

    Jul 14, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    Will the Bancroft family hold a Eliot Spitzer-style press conference expressing regret for selling the Wall Street Journal to Rupert Murdoch?

    "It’s sad, but our feud is beyond repair": Margaret Drabble talks about a lifetime of enmity with her sister A. S. Byatt.

    Members of the National Book Critics Circle are naming their favorite comic novels, which include Charles Portis’s Masters of Atlantis, Flann O’Brien’s At Swim Two Birds, and Kingsley Amis’s Lucky Jim (duh). Our favorite selection: George and Weedon Grossmith's Diary of a Nobody.

    Google has announced its first e-reader, the iRiver

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  • The Book Barge, via Flickr
    July 13, 2011

    Jul 13, 2011 @ 3:10:00 pm

    After railing against Twitter in the New York Times Magazine, Bill Keller expands his beef with the written word in a new column titled “Let’s Ban Books, or At Least Stop Writing Them.” The gist: too many reporters are taking leave to write books, and Keller’s own failed attempts at book-writing haven’t endeared him to the practice: “Book-writing is agony—slow, lonely, frustrating work that, unless you are a very rare exception, gets a lukewarm review (if any), reaches a few thousand people and lands on a remaindered shelf at Barnes & Noble.” Let the Twitter wars begin.

    In honor of Snooki’s

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  • Via McSweeney's
    July 13, 2011

    Jul 13, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    McSweeney’s debuts its food magazine, Lucky Peach, which features essays by chefs Anthony Bourdain and David Chang, recipes by Wylie Dufresne and Mario Carbone, and art by Tony Millionaire and Scott Teplin. The first issue is dedicated to Ramen, staple of the collegiate food pyramid.

    The New York Times’s Ravi Somaiya is tweeting from Julian Assange’s trial in London: “Just got—and I am not making this up—a really strong whiff of gin in #Assangecourtroom. Unmistakeable.” For background on the case, check out Ken Silverstein's Bookforum essay on WikiLeaks as literature.

    At myunfinishednovel.com

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  • Michael Seidenberg, from Freebird Books
    July 12, 2011

    Jul 12, 2011 @ 1:35:00 pm

    It wasn’t corporate bookstores that drove Brazen Head Books underground, but New York City real estate prices. After the secondhand bookstore’s rent quadrupled in 1998, owner Michael Seidenberg took a ten-year hiatus before reopening Brazen Head as an appointment-only shop run out of an unmarked apartment. Since then, Seidenberg, now known as the “secret bookstore guy,” has opened his doors to novelists, bibliophiles, the occasional New Yorker journalist, and, most recently, an Etsy video team, which interviewed Seidenberg and profiled Brazen Head for their blog.

    Even without business taxes,

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  • John Lurie, photo by Sylvia Plachy
    July 12, 2011

    Jul 12, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    The New Republic’s Bradford Plumer wonders why British tabloids play so much dirtier than their American counterparts in spite of the UK’s stricter libel laws.

    A Stolen Life, Jaycee Dugard’s account of eighteen years in captivity with a convicted sex offender, has skyrocketed to the number one bestseller spot on Amazon, a day after her ABC interview drew fifteen million viewers.

    The editors of the Oxford English Dictionary trace the first use of "OMG" back to a letter written in 1917 by British Admiral John "Jacky" Fisher.

    A douchebag by any other name? In response to a query from her editor

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  • Wayne Koestenbaum
    July 11, 2011

    Jul 11, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    On the heels of its best-of nonfiction roundup—which ended in a tie between Joan Didion and Joan Didion—The New York Times Magazine releases a list of favorite novels as selected by Times staffers. Turns out, the sixth floor’s taste skews to the classics. With Sam Anderson’s blessing, Lolita was crowned the universal favorite, though NYT magazine editor Hugo Lindgren didn’t miss the opportunity to sneak in a DeLillo knock: “I’m sorry, but White Noise is overrated—a great novelist cracking grad-student one-liners.”

    In a series of new videos, poet-novelist-critic Wayne Koestenbaum, author of a

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  • July 08, 2011

    Jul 8, 2011 @ 3:00:00 pm

    With former spokesman and ex-News of the World editor Andy Coulson arrested, Prime Minister David Cameron pledges to overhaul British media. "I believe we need a new system entirely,” Cameron asserted this morning. Slate media critic Jack Shafer, however, has a different take: “Cameron is trying to make general problem out of too-cozy press-media relations. It's his specific problem.”

    As News of the World editors scramble to get their stories straight, The Guardian quizzes readers on great denials in literature.

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  • Steve Jobs
    July 08, 2011

    Jul 8, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    In April, Simon & Schuster announced plans to publish Walter Isaacson’s authorized biography of Steve Jobs tentatively titled iSteve: A Book of Jobs, in 2012. Many people derided the title; now, as Philip Elmer-DeWitt reports, the book has been given a new, no-frills name: Steve Jobs. We wonder if perhaps Simon & Schuster had second thoughts because they don’t want to be associated with right-wing blogger Steve Sailer, who goes by the catchy moniker “iSteve” online. In April, Sailer angrily put out a "request for pro bono legal help," stating, “I shall defend my iSteve brand and intellectual

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  • Jennifer 8. Lee
    July 07, 2011

    Jul 7, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    Blogger, author, cooking show host, and all-around media phenomenon Emily Gould is about to add another role to her ever-expanding repertoire: niche e-book vendor. The Observer reports that Gould and Ruth Curry, the best friend featured in Gould’s 2008 New York Times Magazine cover story, are discussing launching an imprint with OR Books. EmilyBooks.com is described as a “curated site” that will carry “a small number of hand-selected books.” According to an email Gould sent to OR co-founder John Oakes: “Our goal is to be super-specialized and targeted and to build an audience that trusts us.”

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  • July 06, 2011

    Jul 6, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    Michael Kimball, author of the deeply sad novel, Dear Everybody, and a master of the micro-biography, has sold his new novel, Big Ray, to Bloomsbury.

    In The Believer’s music issue, historian Paul Collins recounts the golden era of cars equipped with record players, including this description of Chrysler’s harrowing road-test: “Horn-rimmed execs swapped records in and out of the player as the auto giant’s president wildly drove a car over a torture-track of cobblestone, speed bumps, and washboard test strips . . . . [The] player performed perfectly, and the car swung into the test garage with

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  • Jarvis Cocker
    July 05, 2011

    Jul 5, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    French politician Dominique Strauss-Kahn faces allegations of attempted rape from French novelist Tristane Banon just days after a case against Strauss-Kahn for sexual misconduct with a hotel maid seemed to disintegrate.

    Brit-pop singer Jarvis Cocker has a new book, Mother, Brother, Lover, being published this fall by Faber & Faber. Cocker, known for his epic and sultry evocations of everyday life in songs such as “Common People,” talks with Faber publisher Lee Brackstone about writing lyrics, and how falling out of a window led to a lyrical breakthrough.

    In her eloquent New York Times review

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  • Alan Hollinghurst
    July 01, 2011

    Jul 1, 2011 @ 4:00:00 am

    South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, a “Tea Party politician on the rise,” has signed a book deal with Sentinel, which will publish her memoir Can’t Is Not an Option: My Story in January 2012.

    The Guardian details the disastrous results of the recently announced Booker Prize, which columnist (and Wodehouse biographer) Robert McCrum calls a “car crash.” Meanwhile, another one of Britain’s literary awards, the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, has been suspended.

    The Rest Is Noise author Alex Ross has been documenting his visit to Italy, including his trip to Venice’s San Michel cemetery, where he

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