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fromGameSpot
39 minutes ago

Sunrise On The Reaping New Collector's Gift Edition Is Already Discounted At Amazon

One of the this year's biggest fiction releases is now available in a gorgeous new collectible hardcover edition. Sunrise on the Reaping, the fifth novel in Suzanne Collins' best-selling dystopian series The Hunger Games, received a Collector's Gift Edition on November 4. Now, less than a week later, the Sunrise on the Reaping Collector's Gift Edition is on sale for $24.74 (was $33) at Amazon.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 hours ago

The risky strategy of Booker winner Flesh pays off

Flesh renders a man's life without interiority, using others' perspectives to probe identity, fate, masculinity, and rootless modern European existence.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 days ago

Portland Book Festival: Stacey Abrams, Susan Orlean on the perils, pitfalls, and joys of writing * Oregon ArtsWatch

Writing is a creative act, an act of resistance, a way to educate readers, inspire action, and deepen understanding of self and past experiences.
#patti-smith
fromThe New Yorker
15 hours ago

Solvej Balle's Novels Rewire the Time Loop

Their twosome ruptures when Tara, who has travelled to Paris for an auction, wakes up on what should be the morning of November 19th to shimmers of déjà vu: the headlines in the newspaper look familiar; at breakfast, the same hotel guest drops the same slice of bread. A horrified Tara soon realizes that she is living in a repeating November 18th, while Thomas and the rest of the world go on without her.
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fromThe New Yorker
15 hours ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

Trees actively engineer ecosystems—manipulating water, air, soil, fire, and animal behavior—while early photography arose through hazardous, ingenious experimental techniques.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
16 hours ago

Poem of the week: Leaves by Frederic Manning

A poem contrasts serene moonlit nature with sudden, violent artillery, using imagist techniques informed by trench-war experience.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Novels I haven't finished reading are piling up by my bedside. What if that's a good thing? | Hanna Thomas Uose

Putting down books that no longer engage reflects intentional prioritization of limited attention and life time, not necessarily a failing of attention span.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 days ago

Portland Book Festival had it all: Rebecca Yarros, Nicholas Boggs, Omar El Akkad, Karen Russell, Jason De Leon, and Magha Majumdar * Oregon ArtsWatch

Big themes swirled in thoughtful, even intimate, conversations Saturday at the sold-out Portland Book Festival. Headliner Rebecca Yarros talked about how her work centers on themes of inclusion, representation, and authoritarianism, as well as about what it's been like to ride a huge wave of book sales that has altered the publishing industry in some ways. Nicholas Boggs and Mitchell S. Jackson mused about love and the creative process.
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fromIndependent
1 day ago

Matt Cooper on Ivan Yates: 'I think there is a psychological thing going back to his bankruptcy... He seems to want to blow things up when they're successful'

Matt Cooper admires Succession and frames his books on Irish business dynasties as comparable dramas to the TV series.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Hannah Goldfield on Anthony Bourdain's "Don't Eat Before Reading This"

Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential exposed the restaurant industry's unsanitary realities and popularized practical rules like never ordering fish on Monday.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The Mushroom Tapes review Erin Patterson through the eyes of Helen Garner, Chloe Hooper and Sarah Krasnostein

Erin Patterson was convicted of murdering three relatives, sentenced to life with a 33 year non‑parole period, and is appealing.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Ambition is a punishing sphere for women': author Maggie Nelson on why Taylor Swift is the Sylvia Plath of her generation

Taylor Swift's songwriting, especially on The Tortured Poets Department, shares Plath-like introspection and emotional tumult, positioning her lyrics as contemporary poetry.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Paul Yoon on the Danger of Hope

Two brothers live in a postwar shantytown; the younger narrator realizes their lives have diverged while a census job and an older woman provide stability.
fromIndependent
1 day ago

Eilis O'Hanlon: Cancel culture is in retreat, but the tide could turn again

In 2020, a prize-winning English poet and teacher who worked as a writer-in-residence with young refugees published a book about her experiences. Reviews were warm. Sales were strong. It won awards. A year later, Kate Clanchy's book suddenly came on the radar of a small number of other writers, who criticised her for some supp­posedly racist or otherwise belittling depictions of her students.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

"The New Coast," by Paul Yoon

We were all neighbors in one of the many settlements that had sprouted up in the city, and we had been waiting there for everything to be rebuilt. Or that was what the officials kept telling us-to stay where we were so that they could begin restoring the city. But no one seemed convinced that the city would ever be restored, and this was a big reason people came and went, looking for someplace better.
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fromenglish.elpais.com
1 day ago

The Queen Mary's' strange second life: From maritime jewel to paranormal attraction

Paul Gallico's 1937 RMS Queen Mary voyage inspired his novel The Poseidon Adventure after experiencing the ship's severe heeling.
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fromemptywheel
1 day ago

Yet More of a Lapsed Catholic's Bible Study - emptywheel

Without love, spiritual gifts, knowledge, and sacrificial acts have no value; love's enduring virtues define true moral excellence.
#portland-book-festival
fromwww.npr.org
6 days ago

Poet Kate Baer explores the beauty and tension of mid life in 'How About Now'

I always loved spending time at Midtown Scholar. It is one of my favorite bookstores in the world. It's a converted old theater with cozy wooden walls, several floors of books, a stage, a balcony filled with little tables and a coffee shop. Midtown Scholar is also one of poet Kate Baer's favorite bookstores. So on a rainy day last week, we met there to talk.
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fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

When Scarcity Blurs the Line Between Right and Wrong

At the turn of the 20th century, a young Sicilian woman who will soon marry a "rich American" presents two postcards, supposedly from the United States, to a village elder. The first depicts a man holding a wheelbarrow that contains a massive onion, so large that it dwarfs both the wheelbarrow and the man. The second postcard displays a tree that is bursting with coins, as if money is sprouting from the branches.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Fall and redemption of Becker and Wiggins shows sporting glory does not deliver purpose or meaning | Cath Bishop

Viewed through one end of the lens, the two new autobiographies from the sporting legends Boris Becker and Bradley Wiggins might seem like classic tales of the downfalls of two deeply flawed heroes who then claw their way back to redemption. But viewed through the other end of the lens, we see troubling portrayals of an extremely inhumane and, at times, unsafe world of sport where talent is no saving grace, in fact it's more of a liability.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

What links Augusta Savage and WEB Du Bois? The Saturday quiz

2 In what combat sport are competitors divided into east and west? 3 Which force is based in Aubagne, Bouches-du-Rhone? 4 In hospitals, the Bristol scale is used to classify what? 5 Which English rugby player has been immortalised as a Barbie doll? 6 What begins at Theresienwiese on the first Saturday after 15 September? 7 The River Irwell separates which two cities? 8 Which band played with red flowerpots on their heads?
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fromIndependent
2 days ago

Sinead Kissane: Andy Farrell will want final word over old boss Eddie Jones as duo renew their rivalry

Eddie Jones gained many leadership and personal lessons from his relationship with the former Saracens supremo, embracing mistakes as portals to discovery.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

For the women who gave birth in the dark': a portrait of motherhood in Gaza

A young mother in Gaza navigated motherhood amid a devastating offensive that killed tens of thousands, destroyed cities, and forced caregiving under constant danger.
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fromThe Walrus
2 days ago

Why Squirrels Drive Us Absolutely Nuts | The Walrus

Encounters with squirrels prompt varied human reactions ranging from affection to hostility, challenging people to choose responses and practical solutions like sealing entry points.
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fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

Pop Culture Is Obsessed With Female Friendships

Intense, ambivalent friendships between similar women—marked by rivalry, desire, and later regret—have become a recurring genre across contemporary literature, TV, and film.
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fromTime Out New York
3 days ago

There's a book-drop scavenger hunt going on around NYC right now

A new crime trilogy release is paired with a noir-themed, citywide scavenger hunt hiding signed copies and gift cards across New York City.
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fromwww.thenation.com
3 days ago

Zadie Smith: "I Say What I See"

Explores grief, cultural criticism, aging, intergenerational conflict, and political ethics while urging curiosity, gratitude, compassion, and honoring the dead by keeping people alive.
fromDefector
3 days ago

Here Is What Reading To My Child Has Done To My Brain | Defector

As the parent of an 18-month-old, I've been reading a lot lately. That is, if your definition of reading includes thumbing through sheets of increasingly careworn and spittle-soaked cardboard, reciting the 30 or 40 words that compose each tale from memory, and pausing innumerable times to acknowledge any shape that may evoke the holiest of trinities: ball, bug, star. At first-when I had a mere 10 months of experience in this arena-I believed that reading to my child would be straightforward, if a little repetitive.
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fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

Farmers' Almanac will end 200-year run with 2026 edition

The Farmers' Almanac will end print and online publication after 2026 due to financial challenges and declining readership amid digital media shifts.
fromThe Walrus
3 days ago

Hell Is a Lot of Fun in Lorna Goodison's Update of Dante's Inferno | The Walrus

"I am the way into the city of deep downpression," Canto III begins. "Let go off of all hope, all who come in here so." "Downpression," for those not in the know, is a Rastafarian term, and such Caribbean vocabulary permeates Goodison's thrilling new version of the medieval masterpiece.
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fromTravel + Leisure
3 days ago

This 'Polar Express' Train Is One of the Most Festive Ways to Celebrate the Holidays-and It Goes Through a Stunning Mountain Town

There is perhaps no better setting for a recreation of "The Polar Express" story than Durango, Colorado, a mountain town home to a vintage steam train. The steam locomotive, which was built in the early 1920s, makes the journey over the mountains between Durango and Silverton year-round. But, during the holidays, it transforms into The Polar Express for a special seasonal experience, transporting passengers to the "North Pole." This year, it's running on most days between Nov. 21, 2025, through Jan. 3, 2026.
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fromThe Local France
4 days ago

6 new French books you should read

French literary prizes offer symbolic cash but greatly boost book sales and spotlight award-winning novels like Laurent Mauvignier's La Maison Vide and Emmanuel Carrère's family saga.
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fromBoston.com
4 days ago

Reese Witherspoon visits Boston bookstore

Reese Witherspoon visited Boston, signed copies of Gone Before Goodbye at Beacon Hill Books, and spoke at Harvard Business School about Reese's Book Club.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Beasts of the Sea by Iida Turpeinen review a hypnotic tale of the sea cow's extinction

Steller's sea cow's extinction forms a throughline linking historical figures, scientific specimen collection, gendered marginalization, and emerging recognition of human-driven extinctions.
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fromVulture
5 days ago

Stories You Think You Know: Blue Cowboy and Did You Eat? ( ?)

Blue Cowboy, a solo show by David Cale, uses sly storytelling and theatrical design to subvert Western fantasies and reveal deeper, unsettling character complexities.
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
4 days ago

Around Berkeley: Comic Con, square dancing, Hungarian desserts

The Berkeley Public Library Comic Con is back for its third year! Over 30 local artists and vendors will be in attendance, and 11 workshops will be held throughout the day on insights from East Bay BIPOC cartoonists, how artists have worked in large projects such as Star Trek and Marvel, how to make your own zines and comics, and more.
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#kindle-translate
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
4 days ago

neon signs and retro rooms: ellie seymour's book maps mid-century motels across the US

The story of America's motels begins, as travel journalist Ellie Seymour reminds readers, exactly a century ago in 1925, when architect Arthur Heineman opened the Milestone Mo-Tel in San Luis Obispo, California. The term 'motel' itself was born out of necessity, as 'Milestone Motor Hotel' simply didn't fit on the rooftop sign. Offering private garages and hot showers, it catered to the rise of automobile tourism and set the blueprint for a phenomenon that would flourish after World War II.
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fromVulture
4 days ago

Death by Lightning Series-Finale Recap: A Minor Footnote

When Candice Millard wrote Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine, and the Murder of a President, she came at the story of James Garfield from a fittingly odd angle given his relative obscurity among American presidents. Millard recalls reading a biography of Alexander Graham Bell, who had invented the telephone but dedicated a tremendous amount of time and energy to developing a metal detector of sorts, called an "induction balance," for the purpose of locating the bullet lodged in Garfield's body. Millard writes that while it took her three years to complete the book, "it took only a few days of research to realize what Bell must have known - that President Garfield was not only a tragic figure, but one of the most extraordinary men ever elected President of the United States." That, in the end, became the book's driving purpose.
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fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

We Are Not One

A child-built, twelve-foot gallows functions as a deadly play structure and a gathering site used to recruit youth into the movement Together.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

CD Rose awarded the 2025 Goldsmiths prize

CD Rose won the 2025 Goldsmiths Prize for We Live Here Now, a mould‑breaking linked‑stories novel about disappearances at an art installation.
fromThe New Yorker
5 days ago

Salman Rushdie's Literary Inspirations

"When I'm writing fiction, I tend not to read fiction. I actually don't want other people's voices to sneak into my head," Rushdie said recently. That's not to say that other writers' books aren't an important part of his process-posing questions, providing instruction, and offering models of characters. Not long ago, he joined us to discuss a handful of works that have offered guidance for his own writing, including a novella that appears in " The Eleventh Hour," his latest book,
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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone by JK Rowling audiobook review an all-star outing

Audible's full-cast unabridged Harry Potter delivers fresh, lively performances, stellar casting and immersive sound design that revitalizes the first Potter book for younger listeners.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
6 days ago

Portland Book Festival: Reginald Dwayne Betts' 'Doggerel' transforms his life into poetry * Oregon ArtsWatch

Reginald Dwayne Betts transformed incarceration into a literary and advocacy career, founding Freedom Reads to bring books and libraries into prisons.
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Other People's Fun by Harriet Lane review darkly comic tale of envy and revenge in the Insta age

Of all the seven deadly sins, envy is the last to be commodified. You can understand why unlike lust, anger or even sloth, it's not something to admit to. In his Allegory with Venus and Cupid, Bronzino depicted envy as an ugly green hag, clutching her head and howling impotently; now Instagram has allowed anyone online to gain access to images of the lifestyles of those richer, prettier and luckier than ourselves.
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fromPinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news
5 days ago

Chloe Michelle Howarth on writing queerness into 1960s Ireland

PinkNews caught up with Howarth to talk obsession, repression and writing queerness into mid-20th century Ireland... For readers new to your work, how would you pitch the new book in one or two sentences? It's a multi-perspective family drama set in rural Ireland in the 1960s. There's sapphic obsession, repression, a creeping sense of dread and a village that isn't sure what to do with the strange, wounded family who suddenly arrive [there].
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fromFuncheap
5 days ago

Cara Black's New Mystery Launch w/ Rhys Bowen (SF)

Seventeen-year-old Huguette Faure survives postwar France by reinventing herself while fleeing enemies, working for a film director, and seeking freedom from her past.
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fromGameSpot
5 days ago

Get Batman '89 Sequel Novel For Nearly 50% Off At Amazon

John Jackson Miller's Batman: Revolution continues Burton-era Gotham with discounted hardcovers, excellent audiobooks via Will Damron, Audible trial credits, and related Star Wars and Batman '89 releases.
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fromGameSpot
5 days ago

James Islington's Hierarchy Series: Save 30% On The Strength Of The Few Preorder

The Strength of the Few, second in the Hierarchy series, releases Nov 11 with hardcover discounted 30% to $23.80 at Amazon and free Prime delivery.
fromBusiness Insider
5 days ago

19 enemies-to-lovers romance books to read right now

Any avid romance reader can tell you their favorite trope. Some might point to intense tropes like love at first sight or forbidden romance, while others might choose playful arcs like fake dating or best friend's brother romances. For many, no trope is better than enemies-to-lovers, though. As they watch characters grow from loathing to all-consuming love, enemies-to-lovers readers often giggle and kick their feet at the first sign of tension between two opposing characters turning into something more than ire.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

I'm never surprised when I read about a woman murdering a man': Helen Garner on her Baillie Gifford prize-winning diaries

When Helen Garner was announced as the winner of the Baillie Gifford prize for nonfiction in London on Tuesday night, the 82-year-old Australian author was 16,000km away in Melbourne, watching the ceremony on a live stream at home on what was for her Wednesday morning. When the big moment came, she heard the winner is and then the feed froze. We were going, Oh God!'
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fromItsnicethat
5 days ago

Christine Furuya-Gossler's photographs are a powerful memento of a life cut short

Seiichi Furuya is an image maker who, over the past few decades, has become well loved for the intimate portraits of his late wife Christine Furuya-Gössler during the seven years they spent together, first as a couple, then husband and wife and later as parents. Defined by their soft mundanity and Seiichi's clear dedication to the life he and Christine had built together, his images are backdropped by the strange brutalist beauty of East Germany not long before the wall fell.
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fromianVisits
5 days ago

Book Signing Alert - The Warlock of Firetop Mountain

For people of a certain age, many a fond hour could have been spent flicking back and forth through Fighting Fantasy novels, trying to find the treasure and defeat the demons within. These written games were the precursors of the modern computer fantasy game, but the enforced slowness of flicking between the pages induced a sense of exciting anticipation as you spent a few seconds waiting for the result of your choice. You just don't get that pressing a button on a games console.
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fromThe Nation
5 days ago

Why Is Yoko Ono Still Misunderstood?

Yoko Ono's life and work reveal her artistic primacy, resilience shaped by early trauma, influential performance art, and enduring cultural impact beyond John Lennon.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
6 days ago

Portland Book Festival: Poems in Mai Der Vang's 'Primordial' amplify the human via a rare animal * Oregon ArtsWatch

Mai Der Vang's Primordial centers the elusive saola as a totem linking Hmong history, memory, ecology, and maternal experience.
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fromBusiness Insider
5 days ago

I did the 'Throne of Glass' tandem read and gained a new appreciation for one of Sarah J. Maas' most controversial books

Reading Empire of Storms and Tower of Dawn simultaneously synchronizes timelines, deepens character development, and increases emotional impact and enjoyment of both books.
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fromwww.npr.org
6 days ago

Some heavy hitters John Irving and Salman Rushdie among them have new books out

Six notable new novels and story collections offer varied storytelling, including returns to previous settings, intimate family vignettes, and acclaimed literary voices.
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fromPractical Ecommerce
6 days ago

Notable Business Books in 2025

Business books on Facebook, NVIDIA, AI, entrepreneurship, Shopify, China, and inclusive workplaces earned bestseller status, industry awards, and shortlist placements across major 2025 lists.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Tom's Crossing by Mark Z Danielewski House of Leaves author returns with a 1200-page western

Tom's Crossing is a deliberately arcane, 1,200-plus-page epic novel that follows 16-year-old Kalin's perilous quest to save two horses after his friend Tom's death.
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fromInsideHook
6 days ago

The 10 Books You Should Be Reading This November

November books examine technology abuses and startup cults, environmental crises and recoveries, crossword history, dream work, and candid music and personal memoirs.
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fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

The Man Who Rescued Faulkner

Malcolm Cowley discovered and promoted major American writers across decades, elevating American literature and reviving neglected authors.
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fromKqed
6 days ago

An Erotically Charged Love Triangle Is the Heart of Lily King's New Novel

A coming-of-age novel traces intense first love, friendship ruptures, and emotional devastation from college to middle age.
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fromThe Walrus
6 days ago

What's Missing in Margaret Atwood's New Memoir | The Walrus

Fictional narratives create substitute selves (narrators and implied personas) that distance the real person, while memoir demands the flesh-and-blood person's direct presence.
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fromFuncheap
6 days ago

'Billy Bragg: A People's History' U.S. Book Launch (Vallejo)

Billy Bragg will hold the only U.S. launch for his book 'Billy Bragg: A People’s History' on Sunday, November 30 at 5:30 pm in Vallejo, CA.
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fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 week ago

Portland Book Festival: In 'So Far Gone,' Jess Walter takes a road trip into the 'reality gap' * Oregon ArtsWatch

A reclusive ex-environmental reporter retreats off-grid and embarks on a bizarro road trip to find his missing daughter and rescue his grandchildren from a radical church.
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fromThe Local France
6 days ago

Laurent Mauvignier wins France's top literary award for family saga

Laurent Mauvignier won the Goncourt for La Maison Vide, a 750-page family saga spanning more than a century inspired by his family's stories.
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fromYoga Journal
6 days ago

This Y2K Memoir Is Your New Favorite Yoga Book

A memoir-driven presentation of yogic philosophy emphasizes self-inquiry, accessible teaching, and personal transformation through story-based reflections.
fromFuncheap
6 days ago

Discover Bay Area Butterflies w/ Local Author (SF)

Following an HIV diagnosis in 2000, thespian-turned-lepidopterist Liam O'Brien leaned into his passion for butterflies as a source of wonder. After decades of observing, counting, and (responsibly) capturing these scaled winged beauties, he became an ambassador for the species. In his debut book Butterflies of the Bay Area and (Slightly) Beyond: An Illustrated Guide, O'Brien chronicles 135 varieties of butterfly with vim and vivid hand-painted illustrations to introduce readers to the breadth and beauty of butterfly biodiversity of this region.
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fromwww.esquire.com
6 days ago

Jack Reacher' Author Lee Child and Andrew Child on Their Thirteenth Thriller Exit Strategy,' and What's Next

Jack Reacher novels, begun by Lee Child and now continued by his brother Andrew, remain engaging, adventurous, and commercially successful.
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fromFuncheap
6 days ago

Hayley Kiyoko's YA Novel Debut + Signing (UC Berkeley)

Hayley Kiyoko presents new YA novel at UC Berkeley on Nov 6, 7:00 PM; ticket includes one copy and admission, with signing and photos afterward.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Introducing Shuffalo, Our New Word Game

Shuffalo is a daily New Yorker anagram game that adds a letter after each solved word, escalating to eight-letter puzzles and an optional nine-letter bonus.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

A young woman's dissociation intensifies into paranoid breakdown amid ordinary routines; a nail-salon owner observes and reveals working-class alienation with dark humor.
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fromAnOther
1 week ago

Chris Kraus: "To Grow Up in America Damages People for Life"

Chris Kraus's novel maps a working-class upbringing onto national upheaval, linking personal history, cultural notoriety, and a senseless 2019 Minnesota murder.
fromGameSpot
1 week ago

Hayao Miyazaki's Nausicaa Manga Box Set Gets Huge Price Cut At Amazon

Hayao Miyazaki's Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind Box Set is on sale for an excellent price at Amazon. Normally $80, the 1,104-page, slipcased collection is discounted to only $47.89. Nausicaa is Miyazaki's only manga series, and the hardcover box set collects the complete story arc. Amazon's current price essentially matches the best deal we've seen all year ($47.61)--and that deal didn't stick around for long. Amazon estimates orders placed today will ship within one to three weeks.
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Book of Lives by Margaret Atwood review the great novelist reveals her hidden side

Margaret Atwood's autobiography spans 85 years, offering a sharp, funny, and engaging life portrait rooted in a nature-filled childhood and steady literary output.
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Lily King's new novel constructs an erotically charged love triangle

Earlier this month, I kept picking up and putting down Lily King's new novel, Heart the Lover. I love King's writing but the opening section was hard for me to take not in a grisly Cormac McCarthy or scary Stephen King kind of way but in an "Ugh, I remember being that girl, that age" kind of way. Heart the Lover opens in a college class of the 1980s.
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fromIndependent
1 week ago

'Dear DJ, I wanted to let you know there are no hard feelings and I forgive you': How the web of deceit spun by Carey unravelled

In Eimear Ní Bhraonáin's new book 'The Dodger', she finds some sympathy from the victims of the Kilkenny hurling legend's scams
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fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Queen Esther by John Irving review a disappointing companion to The Cider House Rules

So we approach a new Irving with caution but still a small flame of hope, which burns hotter when we learn that Queen Esther a mere 432 pages returns to the world of The Cider House Rules. That 1985 novel is one of Irving's very best, set largely in an orphanage in St Cloud's, Maine, run by Dr Wilbur Larch and his protege Homer Wells. In The Cider House Rules, Irving wrote about abortion and belonging with colour, comedy and an all-encompassing empathy.
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fromFortune
1 week ago

This learning habit AI can't automate is still giving executives an edge | Fortune

Successful executives build disciplined reading habits to improve judgment, strategic thinking, and leadership through daily focused reading and diverse, scheduled long-form study.
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fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

A Bulgarian Novelist Explores What Dies When Your Father Does

A son keeps vigil at his dying father's bedside, observing the stages of physical decline and the intimate, painful rituals of caregiving and grief.
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fromItsnicethat
1 week ago

Mauled To Death is a strangely hilarious taxonomy of the fan culture around Darth Maul

A photo-zine compiles Darth Maul cultural ephemera to reveal fandom's commercial proliferation and nostalgia-driven consumer culture.
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fromNature
1 week ago

Sex, drugs and the conscious brain: Francis Crick beyond the double helix

Francis Crick's scientific career extended far beyond the double helix, shaping molecular biology, developmental and evolutionary biology, visual neuroscience, and studies of consciousness.
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The Stubborn Myth of the Literary Genius

If you close your eyes and picture an artistic genius, chances are that the portrait will be framed by a Romantic ideal that took shape 200 years ago: an artist dedicated solely to his (almost always his) muse and transgressive appetites, breaking his era's rules both moral and artistic, remaking society with his art. But this vision of genius is a poor fit for many great artists, and it tends to obscure what makes them and their work special.
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