On the occasion of the reissue of her 2012 debut novel, Glaciers (Tin House), author Alexis M. Smith discusses climate change, war, and how we can (maybe) save the planet.
An Iowa school district asked ChatGPT to find books in its collection that had sexual content, Fort Worth ISD closes libraries for inventory after board removes three titles, "Heartstopper" books pulled in Mississippi, and John Green's Fault in Our Stars may return to YA section in Indiana.
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Penguin Random House launches a new banned-books resource. Booklists highlight Women in Translation Month. None of This Is True by Lisa Jewell tops the August LoanStars list. LibraryReads and LJ offer read-alikes for Lion & Lamb by James Patterson and Duane Swierczynski. Interviews arrive with Alice Hoffman, Pidgeon Pagonis, Kai Cheng Tho, Jenn Shapland, Karan Feder, Drew Gilpin Faust, Laura Meckler, and more.
Libraries are constantly becoming more versatile when it comes to offering patrons a broad spectrum of services. They have made extra efforts in delivering high-quality customer service to suit a new generation of library users.
Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman wins the 2023 Arthur C. Clarke Award. The longlist is released for the Laurel Prize, honoring the best collection of environmental or nature poetry. Authors call on Justice Dept. and FTC to investigate Amazon’s alleged monopoly in the bookselling industry. NYT profiles Skyhorse Publishing. Washington Post runs an obituary for the late scholar Nechama Tec, a Holocaust survivor who authored Defiance.
Independent book publishing is thriving, and it’s not hard to see why. Indie presses meet a need for an eclectic array of works—sometimes too niche for corporate publishing—that cater to a broad range of interests and tastes.
After That Night by Karin Slaughter leads holds this week. Bolu Babalola wins the 2023 TikTok Book of the Year award for Honey and Spice. Alice Oseman and Holly Parker also garner awards. People’s book of the week is A Council of Dolls by Mona Susan Power. September’s LibraryReads list is out, featuring top pick The September House by Carissa Orlando. Amy Winehouse: In Her Words publishes next week. Plus, Disney+’s Percy Jackson And The Olympians gets a trailer.
Author Michael Lewis, whose book inspired The Blind Side film, speaks out on the root cause of the family’s rift. Meanwhile, NYT examines Michael Oher’s version of the story, via his two memoirs. Plus book reviews, book news, and Page to Screen, which includes an animated version of a 16th-century Chinese novel, a spin-off of Frankenstein, and a true-crime thriller about an Irish Republican Army unit undercover in London.
Nora Fussner's debut novel, The Invisible World, is a starred horror selection. "Akin to Jac Jemc’s The Grip of It but unlike any ghost-hunting novels before it, this is a masterpiece of innovative storytelling and psychological horror." 1923: The Crisis of German Democracy in the Year of Hitler’s Putsch, by Mark William Jones, is a starred history title. "What sets this book apart from other titles on the subject is the author’s focus on regional political and economic differences within Germany and his research on the early deportations of Jews from Bavaria and the consequent impact. A relevant title for readers of world history." And Amos Oz: Writer, Activist, Icon, a new biography by Robert Alter, is a starred literature title. "Through his elevation of the richness of the Hebrew language, Oz’s legacy will continue to be valued; Alter’s biography is a highly recommended contribution to that legacy."
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