• Lisa Dierbeck
    March 28, 2011

    Mar 28, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    As Borders goes bankrupt, its top executives may get big bonuses.

    The Financial Times profiles Mischief + Mayhem, a writer’s collective including novelists Dale Peck and Lisa Dierbeck (among others) who plan to bypass Amazon and Barnes and Noble, and reach readers through OR Books and some independent bookstores.

    Ayelet Waldman tweeted a screed about Katie Roiphe: “Really Roiphe? You seek ‘slightly greater obsession w/ the sublime sentence.’ My husband's sentences are INFINITELY more sublime than yours.” (etc.) The New York Observer is calling it a battle “with no winners,” which is actually

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  • Jenny Erpenbeck
    March 25, 2011

    Mar 25, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    Japanese publishers, after the quake.

    As the New York Times’s pay-wall looms, Times fans accustomed to reading online for free are trading slightly panicked queries: If you’re a weekend subscriber, do you get online access? If you pay, can you read articles from more than one computer? And WHY OH WHY ARE THEY DOING THIS? The Times has enlisted Paul Smurl, “vice president for paid products,” to provide chipper answers to all of your digital subscription Qs. Meanwhile, Gawker offers a profile of the people planning to defy the pay wall. As the Times’s publisher Arthur "Pinch" Sulzberger Jr.

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  • Oe
    March 24, 2011

    Mar 24, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    The Baffler returns! The seminal magazine of culture and politics—which was founded by Thomas Frank in 1988—has often been plagued by intermittent outages (even a disastrous office fire in 2001) and has been “on hiatus” since last fall. But in a tweet yesterday morning, the publication told subscribers to “hang on!”: It will have a new print issue later this year, and new online content soon.

    The man who wrote Elizabeth Taylor’s New York Times obituary actually died in 2005.

    In the New Yorker, the Nobel-winning novelist Kenzaburo Oe writes of the dangers of nuclear power: “This disaster

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  • Roberto Bolaño
    March 23, 2011

    Mar 23, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    Yesterday, the Google Books settlement was rejected by Federal judge Denny Chin. What is Google’s next step?

    In Ishinomaki, a Japanese town wrecked by the earthquake and tsunami, reporters published their newspaper using felt-tip markers and large sheets of paper, as all other technology had failed. A recently penned headline: “We Now Know the Full Extent of the Damage.”

    The New York Review of Books blog has published an essay by the late Roberto Bolaño about the books he remembered best, such as Camus’s The Fall: “I read it, devoured it, by the light of those exceptional Mexico City mornings

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  • Madison Smartt Bell
    March 22, 2011

    Mar 22, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    In the latest entry in Bomb magazine’s engrossing “Fiction for Driving Across America” series, Madison Smartt Bell reads from his bewitching novel The Color of Night.

    Where have we heard that argument for e-books before? Tick a square on the Electronic Publishing Bingo Card every time someone spouts a (usually false) truism such as “printing is the most costly part of publishing.” Did we hear someone yell “Bingo!”?

    Literary-minded New Yorkers will wish they could be in three places at once tonight, as there is a trio of stellar events in the city. First up, McNally Jackson Books hosts an NBCC

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  • James Carroll, photo by Patricia Pingree
    March 21, 2011

    Mar 21, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    Colson Whitehead’s forthcoming postapocalyptic book, Zone One, is a zombie novel.

    From CBS News, a video profile of Benedikt Taschen, the print book publisher flourishing by creating luxe volumes in lean times.

    At PWxyz, Laura Miller has some intriguing insights into the current state of book reviewing, especially the oft-debated question of the purpose of panning a book: “It’s bad when an author gets a bad review he or she doesn’t deserve, but it’s bad for the overall ecology of book reviews, if a reviewer gives a book an unduly positive review. It establishes a climate of bad faith. . . .

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  • Sasha Grey
    March 18, 2011

    Mar 18, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    Is the era of free content coming to an end? After yesterday’s announcement that the New York Times pay-wall was finally happening, came a press release from the Newspaper Guild urging unpaid bloggers at the Huffington Post to withhold their writing in solidarity with a strike by the Visual Arts Source, a writer’s organization who are refusing to provide free work.

    Mary Ellen Bute’s mid-sixties film adaptation, Passages from James Joyce's Finnegans Wake (with subtitles, natch), is available on Ubu Web and is an exceedingly odd retro romp, and a pleasure to watch, though we don’t recommend it

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  • March 17, 2011

    Mar 17, 2011 @ 12:00:00 pm

    The great experiment in charging for once free web content begins: The New York Times's long-rumored pay-wall plan was announced today. Beginning on March 28, readers will be able to access twenty articles a month before the Times starts charging, with various e-subscription plans available (an all-access plan will cost $35). Subscribers to the print edition will have free access to all online articles.

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  • Mina Pam Dick
    March 17, 2011

    Mar 17, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    Jonathan Franzen didn’t win the NBCC award in fiction, but his picture still illustrated the LA Times story reporting that Jennifer Egan had won the prize (they later changed it). Was this slip-up sinister or sincere? Most importantly, is it fodder for more Franzenfreude? The Times explains.

    The Paris Review has an excerpt from Edouard Leve’s forthcoming Autoportrait, a book Leve wrote while traveling in the US in 2002 taking photographs and musing on, well, absolutely everything. “There are times in my life when I overuse the phrase ‘it all sounds pretty complicated,’” he writes. And: “I am

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  • Deborah Eisenberg
    March 16, 2011

    Mar 16, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    Publishers Weekly has posted the first review of David Foster Wallace’s posthumously published unfinished novel, The Pale King.

    Deborah Eisenberg has won the 2011 PEN/Faulkner Award for her Collected Stories, a compilation of a quarter century of first-rate fiction.

    Have you ever wondered what it is like to be edited by the top-flight professionals at the Washington Post? Yesterday, the Post accidentally uploaded a version of a story with ALL CAPS EDITOR NOTES (and typos) included.

    A new website, Churnalism, can detect the difference between original journalism and regurgitated copy from

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  • Maura Johnston
    March 15, 2011

    Mar 15, 2011 @ 9:00:00 am

    Critic David L. Ulin on nine literary earthquake books, including Haruki Murakami’s collection of stories, After the Quake, written after the 1995 Kobe earthquake: “Although in many of the pieces here the disaster plays only a peripheral part, it reverberates throughout the book like an aftershock.”

    Novelist Marie Mutsuki Mockett, author of Picking Bones From Ash, writes a moving meditation on Japan. Before: “If it’s spring, the bento stalls in the station sell cherry blossom-themed meals to eat on the train . . . cakes made of mochi rice paste are cut into flower shapes.” And now: “After 36

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