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paper trail

  • Emma Copley Eisenberg. Photo: Sylie Rosokoff
    August 27, 2020

    Marieke Lucas Rijneveld wins the Booker Prize; Emma Copley Eisenberg on raising fact-checking standards in publishing

    At Lit Hub, an excerpt from Sarah M. Broom’s The Yellow House about Hurricane Katrina, which hit fifteen years ago this week. This Saturday, Broom will discuss New Orleans as part of the Library of Congress’s National Book Festival.

    Marieke Lucas Rijneveld has won the International Booker Prize for their novel The Discomfort of Evening. At twenty-nine years old, Rijneveld is the youngest person to have won the award. They will split the award with translator Michele Hutchison.

    Ava DuVernay talks with Angela Davis at Vanity Fair about the movement for Black lives. Davis urges activists to

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  • Jenna Wortham
    August 26, 2020

    Jenna Wortham profiles Black Visions collective; Eve L. Ewing reports on the brotherhood of police unions

    At Jacobin, Alex N. Press writes about the police shooting of Jacob Blake and wonders if the response from the Democrats will be merely rhetorical: “Kind words from Democrats may be more palatable than the Republican Party’s racist fearmongering, but they are nowhere near enough.” Press argues that the party should support the movement to defund the police, pointing out that Republicans will accuse them of doing so regardless of what their actual policies may be.

    At The Nation, John Nichols compares the Republican National Convention to a ponzi scheme.

    Eve L. Ewing reports on police unions,

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  • Jamel Brinkley. Photo: Arash Saedinia
    August 25, 2020

    Nominations open for the Pauli Murray Book Prize in Black intellectual history; Paris Review writers on singular sentences

    At the New York Times, Elizabeth A. Harris and Concepción de León speak with food writers and chefs Toni Tipton-Martin, Nicole Taylor, and Kristina Gill about their experiences in book publishing. While there is increased demand for cookbooks by Black chefs, authors continue to face steep challenges before and after such book deals: “At every step, the teams involved tend to be overwhelmingly white. Some Black writers say this can put them in a position of having to explain the basics of the food they’re writing about.”

    Jamel Brinkley, Ottessa Moshfegh, and more authors with work in the Paris

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  • Ann Goldstein
    August 24, 2020

    The literary career of Elena Ferrante translator Ann Goldstein; a new fellowship for Octavia E. Butler scholars

    At the New York Times, Alexandra Alter gives the backstory on how the Pulitzer-winning presidential historian Jon Meacham, “who is not a Democrat,” came to speak at the Democratic National Convention. “Until now, Mr. Meacham has avoided any whiff of partisanship in his work,” Alter writes. “While he delivered eulogies at the funerals of George Bush and the former first lady Barbara Bush, he has never before spoken at a political rally or convention. He agreed to speak this week because he felt it was important to make an argument informed by history for why the country needs new leadership.”

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  • The Psychology of Fake News, edited by Rainer Greifeneder, Mariela E. Jaffé, Eryn J. Newman, and Norbert Schwarz
    August 21, 2020

    A look at the Criterion Collection’s overwhelmingly white canon; Nieman Lab examines what makes fake news “feel” true

    At Nieman Lab, Laura Hazard Owen outlines four points about “what makes a message ‘feel’ true” from a new collection of research on fake news: repetition, pronounceability, familiarity, and “regular photos.” You can download and read the collection, The Psychology of Fake News, for free from Routledge.

    For the New York Times, Kyle Buchanan and Reggie Ugwu scrutinize the Criterion Collection’s “blind spots.” Namely, “though the collection features the directorial debuts of multiple generations of white auteurs—including Gus Van Sant, Noah Baumbach, David Gordon Green and Lena Dunham—it has no

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  • Jill Filipovic. Photo: Gary He
    August 20, 2020

    The New York Times launches initiative to look beyond daily news and election cycles; Jill Filipovic discusses her new book

    Members of the National Book Critics Circle have released an open letter with short- and long-term recommendations for the organization to better address systemic racism. The letter calls for the cancelation of the 2020 NBCC awards and ceremony, and asks “to prioritize anti-racist labor, institutional accountability, and organizational restructuring immediately.” In June, more than half the NBCC board resigned after a dispute over a statement drafted in support of Black Lives Matter.

    At the Washington Post, a look at the art of the Zoom book tour.

    At Gothamist, Danny Lewis reports on efforts

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  • Ocean Vuong. Photo: Tom Hines
    August 19, 2020

    Vox Media to settle worker-exploitation lawsuits for $4 million; Ocean Vuong on writing for the future

    Vox Media has agreed to pay a $4 million settlement in the cases of three collective-action lawsuits brought by former SB Nation “team site” workers, who were lowly paid if paid at all.

    Vice is expanding its audio division, with a dozen new hires and promotions in addition to hiring Arielle Duhaime-Ross, of Vox Media’s Recode, to host their upcoming news podcast. According to Kate Osborn, the company’s vice president of audio, Vice has plans to launch three other shows: one focusing on the global climate crisis, another about authoritarianism, and a third “experimental” project involving

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  • Marlon James. Photo: Penguin Random House, © Mark Seliger
    August 18, 2020

    Writers and readers celebrate Ray Bradbury’s centennial; Alex Shephard on the media’s poor coverage of the USPS

    At Poynter, a story on the crisis in international reporting as a result of the pandemic: “At a time when global coverage has never been more important, the coronavirus has created a devastating cocktail of economic turmoil and heightened risks that throw the fate of foreign reporting into jeopardy.”

    Beginning on August 22nd, writers, actors, librarians, and young readers will participate in a read-a-thon for Ray Bradbury’s centennial. Participants include Marlon James, William Shatner, and Susan Orlean.

    At the New Republic, Alex Shephard diagnoses why the media is uniquely terrible at covering

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  • Alexander Chee. Photo: M. Sharkey
    August 17, 2020

    Revisiting the campaign classic What It Takes; Finalists for the John Dos Passos Prize have been announced

    At the New York Times, Alexandra Alter writes about Cherie Dimaline, Waubgeshig Rice, Rebecca Roanhorse, Darcie Little Badger, and Stephen Graham Jones—“Indigenous novelists reshaping North American science fiction, horror and fantasy.” Dimaline says: “There’s a big push now for the telling of Indigenous stories. The only way I know who I am and who my community is, and the ways in which we survive and adapt, is through stories.”

    In Portland, Oregon, around twenty independent journalists have banded together to report on the Black Lives Matter protests, and have been selling their footage to

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  • Akwaeke Emezi. Photo: © Scottie O
    August 14, 2020

    Hannah Black on the history and future of tenant organizing; Akwaeke Emezi and Esmé Weijun Wang in conversation

    Hannah Black discusses why rent strikes are so difficult to organize on a large scale, and looks to the possibilities of current efforts in cities across the country for Dissent. Tenant organizing, Black writes, “is part of a long tradition of situating politics in concrete everyday survival rather than focusing on abstract categories of law and labor, an orientation toward struggle familiar in black and indigenous contexts but often hard for mass movements to come to grips with.”

    At the Paris Review Daily, Aracelis Girmay revisits the work of former Maryland poet laureate Lucille Clifton,

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  • Sarah M. Broom. Photo: Hal Williamson
    August 13, 2020

    Niela Orr on Robyn Crawford’s memoir of Whitney Houston; Sarah M. Broom in conversation with Imani Perry

    New York Times editor Jazmine Hughes is taking on a new role, in which she will be writing full time for the paper and for the New York Times Magazine.

    At The Believer Logger, Niela Orr writes about Whitney Houston’s friendship with Robyn Crawford. Reviewing Crawford’s memoir, A Song for You, Orr observes: “In its resistance to tell all, the book is a marvelous document of the closet, of bi-erasure, romantic longing, unrequited love, queer subtext, and textual elusiveness.”

    The Wall Street Journal reports on a new generation of audio content, as publications scramble to create listenable

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  • Shruti Swamy
    August 12, 2020

    Actions in journalism are distinct from solidarity statements; Shruti Swamy in conversation with Kiese Laymon

    At the Engaged Journalism Lab, a guide to how journalists and those who fund them can act in solidarity with marginalized communities.

    At the New York Times, A. O. Scott looks at Edward P. Jones’s intricate body of fiction, which is deeply tied to specific, real locations in Washington, D. C., and does not pander to white readers. “It might go without saying — though nothing really does — that a white reader enters Jones’s world from a different angle,” Scott writes. “What comes as news to me may strike you as a gentle reminder of something you always knew. What I feel as revelation you might

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