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Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Barack and Michelle Obama sign book deals with Penguin Random House

Books by former president and first lady believed to have sold for tens of millions of dollars and will focus on White House years

Barack and Michelle Obama have signed book deals with Penguin Random House, the publisher announced on Tuesday.

Financial terms were not disclosed for the books, for which several publishers had competed, although the deals are likely to be in the tens of millions of dollars.

Related: The 100 best nonfiction books: No 5 – Dreams from My Father by Barack Obama (1995)

Related: Michelle Obama's American Grown: the book, like the garden, too manicured | Emma G Keller

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Australian children's author Mem Fox detained by US border control: 'I sobbed like a baby'

Author of Possum Magic was aggressively questioned over her visa status and later received an apology for her treatment by border guards

The Australian children’s book author Mem Fox has suggested she might never return to the US after she was detained and insulted by border control agents at Los Angeles airport.

Fox, who is famous worldwide for her bestselling books including Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes and Possum Magic, was en route to a conference in Milwaukee earlier this month when she was stopped.

Related: British Muslim teacher denied entry to US on school trip

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Authors angry after Susan Hill accuses bookshop of anti-Trump censorship

The novelist pulled out of an event at the Book Hive in Norwich because of its giveaway of books promoting resistance, prompting consternation from her peers

Authors including Joanne Harris, Patrick Ness and Sarah Perry have leaped to the defence of a Norwich bookseller after Susan Hill launched an extraordinary attack on it for “opposing” US president Donald Trump.

In an article pubished in the Spectator, The Woman in Black writer said she had cancelled an event to promote her latest novel, From the Heart, after discovering the shop would be giving away copies of novels by writers opposed to Trump.

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Recipe found in medieval mystic’s writings was probably for ‘drugges’

Margery Kempe was known for religious fervour, and a list in the manuscript of her pioneering autobiography has been analysed as a medicinal prescription

It is a case that has intrigued historians, psychiatrists and theologians for the last 80 years, but an academic has found what may be the oldest known attempt to diagnose Margery Kempe’s erratic religious behaviour. A recipe for medicinal sweets, written 600 years ago in the back of the medieval mystic’s memoir, has been deciphered by Dr Lara Kalas Williams – and the Exeter University-based researcher is convinced that it reveals an attempt to prescribe a cure for Kempe’s notorious fits of devotion.

Though the recipe, written in the final portfolio of the 1438 manuscript, has long been known to scholars, it had hitherto proved impossible to read. Dr Angela Clarke, the British Library’s lead curator of medieval and early modern manuscripts, suggested thermal-imaging technology be used to reveal its secrets. Kalas Williams and two colleagues, Professor Eddie Jones and Professor Daniel Wakelin, were then able to decipher the ingredients and discovered it was a cure for “flux”, defined in the Medieval English Dictionary as “a pathological flowing of blood, excretions or discharges from any part of the body, or dysentery”.

Related: Margery Kempe, the first English autobiographer, goes online

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Monday, February 27, 2017

Publishing project photographs entire Sistine Chapel

Collectors’ book contains hi-res images many of which are produced at 1:1 scale, including The Creation of Adam

The last time the entire Sistine Chapel was photographed for posterity, digital photography was in its infancy and words such as pixels were bandied about mostly by computer nerds and NASA scientists.

Now, after decades of technological advances in art photography, digital darkrooms and printing techniques, a five-year project that will aid future restorations has left the Vatican Museums with 270,000 digital frames that show frescos by Michelangelo and other masters in fresh, stunning detail.

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Waterstones chief defends decision to open unbranded stores

James Daunt denies using subterfuge to attract customers with unbranded shops in Rye, Southwold and Harpenden

The managing director of book giant Waterstones has defended the company’s decision to open three unbranded stores saying it will be good for “customers, town centres and... staff.”

Waterstones has recently opened three stores under different names, sparking accusations that they are posing as independent bookshops to get round the backlash against the homogenisation of Britain’s high streets.

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John Hurt remembered at Oscars ceremony

The late actor, star of Nineteen Eighty-Four and The Elephant Man, was honoured by the Academy in their annual In Memoriam montage

John Hurt, the celebrated British actor who was nominated twice for Academy Awards but never won, has been remembered in the In Memoriam section of the 2017 Oscars ceremony in Los Angeles.

Hurt’s nominations were for best actor for The Elephant Man in 1981, the David Lynch-directed film about a disfigured man in Victorian London, and for best supporting actor in 1979 for his role as a prison junkie in Alan Parker’s Midnight Express.

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Saturday, February 25, 2017

Will business rates hike be final chapter for high street bookshops?

Booksellers group says rise will kill off independent stores and berates Treasury for cutting tax for sector’s biggest online rival Amazon

Bookshops could be wiped off the high street as a result of changes to the business rates system, the industry has warned the Treasury.

In a letter to David Gauke, chief secretary to the Treasury, the Booksellers Association said many bookshops will be crippled by rate increases and described the tax as “archaic”.

Related: The destruction of Britain’s high streets is no accident | Simon Jenkins

Related: Small shops recoil in the face of business rates that will more than double

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Friday, February 24, 2017

Oxford Dictionaries add 'clicktivism' and 'haterade' as new words for angry times

Donald Trump’s presidency has already left its mark on the English language, according to lexicographers monitoring the most popular new vocabulary

Donald Trump’s linguistic dexterity may be questionable, but the US president’s lexicon has had an impact on the English language, which is reflected in the latest additions to oxforddictionaries.com, the online reference guide to current English. New coinages that reflect the latest wave of online political activism form a significant section of more than 300 new definitions, a sister work to the Oxford English Dictionary.

Additions including “clicktivism” (a pejorative word for armchair activists on social media), “haterade” (excessive negativity, criticism, or resentment), “otherize” (view or treat – a person or group of people – as intrinsically different from and alien to oneself) and “herd mentality” (the tendency for people’s behaviour or beliefs to conform to those of the group to which they belong) all emerged during the 2016 battle for the White House, said head of content development Angus Stevenson.

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Education publisher Pearson reports biggest loss in its history

Pre-tax losses soar to £2.6bn as group – which is is selling Penguin Random House – is hit by slump in US textbook sales

Pearson has reported a pre-tax loss of £2.6bn for 2016, the biggest in its history, after a slump at its US education operation.

The world’s largest education publisher, which in January saw almost £2bn wiped from its stock market value after issuing its fifth profit warning in two years, reported the record loss after taking a £2.55bn non-cash charge for “impairment of goodwill reflecting trading pressures in our North American businesses”.

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Thursday, February 23, 2017

25 million books are missing from UK libraries – but who's counting?

Librarians call for a national audit after inventory count of Suffolk libraries reveals 10,000-book discrepancy between physical checks and database numbers

The decline in books stocked by public libraries may be far worse than official figures indicate, with industry sources claiming that it may be many millions higher than the 25 million books recorded as missing, meaning that the number of books available to borrowers has plummeted by more than 50% since 1996.

Librarians are calling for a national audit to reveal the true extent of the problem, with the news coming as the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (Cilip) sent an open letter to chancellor Philip Hammond calling on him to increase funding for the sector, to protect it from irreparable decline as part of his strategy for economic growth.

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Clive James announces new poetry collection – Injury Time

Celebrated broadcaster, critic and poet to publish sequel to Sentenced to Life – which was seen as farewell volume after his struggle with cancer

The much-loved broadcaster, critic, memoirist, novelist and poet Clive James was not expected to live for long after his short-poem collection Sentenced to Life was published, to great acclaim, in 2015. But Picador has announced that it will publish its sequel, Injury Time, in May.

James was diagnosed with leukaemia, kidney failure and lung disease in 2010, and was not expected to live long. In 2012, the celebrated wit told a BBC interviewer: “I don’t want to cast a gloom, an air of doom, over the programme, but I’m a man who is approaching his terminus.”

Related: Clive James: ‘I’ve got a lot done since my death’

The morning comes, and through the spread of snow
In candy-coloured coats the children go.
Listen awhile and you can hear them grow.

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Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Authors, actors and musicians say Trump order 'silences essential voices'

Philip Roth, Margaret Atwood, Zadie Smith and others say ‘writers, artists, musicians and filmmakers are often at the vanguard in the fights against terror’

A group of 60 authors, actors and musicians including Philip Roth, Margaret Atwood and Zadie Smith have signed a letter that calls on Donald Trump to rescind the executive order that banned citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries and all refugees from entering the US.

Related: Artists from Muslim-majority countries deal with chaos from 'absurd' travel ban

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Tom Hanks to publish first book, Uncommon Type: Some Stories

The Forrest Gump star has turned his hand to short fiction with a collection of 17 tales, all themed around his passion for typewriters

Some first books struggle for attention, but this is unlikely to be the case with Tom Hanks’s debut, Uncommon Type: Some Stories. Due in October, the first collection from the Oscar-winning star of international box-office hits such as Forrest Gump, Saving Private Ryan and Big will comprise 17 stories.

The theme of the collection will be typewriters, with each tale involving one of these more and more scarce machines. Hanks is known – in addition to his Hollywood celebrity – for his love of typewriters, and all of the tales will in some way involve one of them.

Related: Typewriters and their owners: famous authors at work – in pictures

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US cinemas to show Nineteen Eighty-Four in anti-Trump protest

Coordinated screenings across North America set for 4 April to highlight Orwell’s portrait of a government ‘that manufactures facts’

Nearly 90 cinemas in the US and Canada are planning to show the film adaptation of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, starring the late John Hurt, in protest at President Trump’s policies. The coordinated screenings will take place on 4 April, the date that the book’s central character Winston Smith writes on the first page of his illegal diary.

Related: Peter Bradshaw on John Hurt: 'A virtual folk memory of wisdom and style'

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Walt Whitman's lost novel The Life and Adventures of Jack Engle found

Described by Whitman scholar as a ‘a fun, rollicking, creative, twisty, bizarre little book’, the discovery has been made available free online

A “rollicking” anti-lawyer revenge fantasy by Walt Whitman, which challenges previously held ideas about the American poet’s transition from prose to poetry, has been found in the archives of a Victorian New York Sunday newspaper. Though published anonymously, the book matches a detailed synopsis in the poet’s notebook for a project academics had thought abandoned.

Related: Walt Whitman revealed as author of 'Manly Health' guide

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Monday, February 20, 2017

Milo Yiannopoulos book deal cancelled after outrage over child abuse comments

Simon & Schuster pulls forthcoming autobiography, titled Dangerous, for which it had reportedly paid a $250,000 advance

Simon & Schuster has cancelled the publication of Milo Yiannopoulos’ book, and his fellow Breitbart employees have reportedly threatened to quit if he is not fired.

A statement from the publisher late on Monday said: “After careful consideration, Simon & Schuster and its Threshold Editions imprint have cancelled publication of Dangerous by Milo Yiannopoulos.”

Related: Milo Yiannopoulos disinvited from CPac after making comments on child abuse

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John Irving attacks 'intolerant' Trump in defence of political awards speeches

Writer of The Cider House Rules laments new president’s threat to LGBT and abortion rights, and says winners at next weekend’s Oscars should be free to protest

Oscar-winning novelist John Irving has taken aim at Donald Trump over the latter’s threat to LGBT and abortion rights as well as religious-based bigotry.

Irving, who won a best adapted screenplay Oscar in 2000 for the adaptation of his own novel The Cider House Rules, has contributed an essay to the Hollywood Reporter in which he considered the “protocol” over whether or not award winners should make explicitly political speeches.

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Four more Liverpool libraries face closure in fresh round of cuts

While the city council struggles to maintain services as budgets fall, mayor announces it is likely that additional branches will be wound up

Up to four libraries could close in Liverpool, as the city council takes the scalpel to budgets in the latest battle between central and local government over funding cuts. If the closures go ahead it will mean the city has lost more than half its libraries in the last two years.

The future of the as yet unnamed libraries is being considered as part of a plan to plug a £90m hole in the council’s budget over the next three years. It comes on top of cuts of £330m made since 2010, the city’s mayor Joe Anderson said. He has set up a task force to review the library service, with a view to saving £1.6m in the financial year 2018/19.

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Sexism in science has roots in Victorian whispering campaigns, claims new book

Jealous rivals’ rumours about the supposed effeminacy of popular figures such as Humphry Davy left an enduring legacy, says Dr Heather Ellis

Jealous rivals’ attempts to destroy 19th-century chemist Sir Humphry Davy’s popularity by insinuating he was gay have left a legacy that means the so-called hard sciences remain a bastion of sexism, a new book claims.

Evidence unearthed by Dr Heather Ellis for her book Masculinity and Science, published by Palgrave, from the archives of the British Science Association, shows that Davy’s popularity created enemies who tried to destroy his reputation. Popular magazines, like the John Bull, launched vicious personal attacks on the chemist’s flamboyant dress and the charismatic delivery at lectures that had brought him a wide female following.

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Moonlight and Arrival land top prizes at Writers Guild awards

Barry Jenkins’ coming-of-age tale won best original screenplay while Eric Heisserer’s sci-fi drama took best adapted screenplay at the WGAs

Moonlight and Arrival emerged triumphant from the Writers Guild of America awards, with the former winning best original screenplay and the latter best adapted screenplay.

Related: Why Moonlight should win the best picture Oscar

Related: Arrival review – Amy Adams has a sublime word with alien visitors

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Sunday, February 19, 2017

Time Travel: A History by James Gleick review – from mechanical to mental

This roving study of our enduring fascination with time travel covers well trodden ground but finds the concept constantly evolving

Are we trapped in the present, free to move in space yet unable to travel in the fourth dimension? Or is there a chance, a glimmer of a possibility, that the past and future could unfurl to our physical experience at will? Despite the punchline being apparent from the off – lest we forget, such journeys are impossible – James Gleick’s latest offering sets out to question the questions, probing how the idea of time travel emerged, gripped our imaginations and shaped our society.

Our relationship with the slippery concept of time is far from static: technology continues to shape our view, even now

Related: Sign up to our Bookmarks newsletter

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via Science fiction | The Guardian http://ift.tt/2kVtj69

Friday, February 17, 2017

First instalment of new Philip Pullman trilogy, The Book of Dust, out in October

Writers pay tribute to His Dark Materials author’s exquisite storytelling and ‘daring heresy’

It feels like a long time since the final volume in Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy, but when you think about what the writer has to achieve with a follow-up – the recreation of Lyra Silvertongue’s alternate universe, the scientific investigation of the strange matter known as “dust”, the genesis of totalitarian regimes and the answer to the question what happens when God dies – 17 years is nothing.

The first instalment of The Book of Dust will be out in October and stands alongside Pullman’s epic first trilogy. Pullman has said it will begin and end with Lyra, the heroine of the previous books, and will feature other familiar characters. Speaking this week on Radio 4’s Today programme, he said the story reflected the vision of William Blake; “his idea of a fiercely reductive way of seeing things: it’s right or wrong; it’s black or white. He said that was far too limiting and we should bring out truer human vision when we see things, surround them all with a sort of penumbra of imagination and memories and hopes and expectations and fears and all these things. It’s an attack on the reductionism, the merciless reductionism, of doctrines with a single answer.”

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Miffy creator Dick Bruna has died aged 89

The Dutch artist and illustrator, whose much-loved children’s books about a cartoon rabbit sold more than 80m books, has died aged 89

Audio slideshow: Dick Bruna – Miffy and me

The Dutch artist and children’s author Dick Bruna, whose much-loved cartoon rabbit Miffy has sold more than 80m books since her creation in 1955, has died aged 89.

Bruna devised the character to entertain his infant son after seeing a rabbit in the dunes while on a seaside holiday. He went on to relate the bunny’s adventures in more than 100 books sold worldwide. Bruna wrote and illustrated more than 200 books over his career.

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Neil Gaiman announces Neverwhere sequel, The Seven Sisters

Author says the new fantasy novel has been inspired by his work with UN refugee agency and ‘the shape London is in now’

Neil Gaiman, whose latest book Norse Mythology is set to top the bestseller lists this weekend, has announced his next project: the sequel to another hit, Neverwhere, more than 20 years after it was first published.

Neverwhere tells the story of Richard Mayhew, an ordinary young man drawn into the fantastical landscape of London Below, an otherworldly city populated by real landmarks and legends personified, including the Old Bailey, the Black Friars and the Angel, Islington – among which the lost, homeless and dispossessed of London move. The idea came from a chat with Gaiman’s friend, the comedian and actor Lenny Henry, who suggested the concept of tribes of homeless people living beyond the notice of “ordinary” people in London.

Related: Neil Gaiman webchat – your questions answered on Terry Pratchett, Norse gods, and his marriage

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Mick Jagger wrote a 'masterpiece' memoir that has never been published

Rolling Stones manager has denied publisher John Blake permission to put out manuscript that includes tales of the singer buying a mansion while high on acid

Mick Jagger wrote a 75,000-word memoir in the early 80s, which remains unpublished, according to the publisher John Blake. Writing in the Spectator, Blake says that three years ago he was handed “a pristine typescript Mick had written”, after he had become tired of the number of books written about Jagger and the Rolling Stones.

Blake says the book features stories of Jagger buying his Hampshire mansion, Stargroves, while tripping on acid and having to punch a horse between the eyes to slow it down when he decided to try “the life of a horse-riding country squire”. The book, Blake says, “is a little masterpiece”.

Related: The Rolling Stones: 'We are theatre and reality at the same time'

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Thursday, February 16, 2017

All-white Carnegie medal longlist provokes anger from children's authors

Philip Pullman, Alex Wheatle and Alan Gibbons among authors speaking out against ‘appalling’ exclusion of acclaimed books by leading BAME writers

Philip Pullman has added his voice to critics of the Carnegie medal, one of the UK’s most prestigious children’s book awards, after an exceptional year for books by black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) novelists failed to make a dent on its longlist. Writers of colour, led by Alex Wheatle and Sunny Singh, have called for a boycott of the award.

Related: Carnegie and Kate Greenaway awards announce 2017 longlists

Related: David Olusoga and Gary Younge head inaugural Jhalak prize shortlist

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Carnegie and Kate Greenaway awards announce 2017 longlists

The UK’s most prestigious children’s book prizes reveal finalists, provoking anger among some that the Carnegie choices include no BAME authors

A host of star names – including JK Rowling, Frank Cottrell Boyce, Chris Riddell and Philip Reeve – are ranged against virtual unknowns on the longlists for the UK’s oldest and most prestigious children’s book awards. However, the Carnegie choices immediately provoked anger in some quarters that not one of the BAME authors nominated has been included.

The 20 books on the longlist for the 80-year-old CILIP Carnegie medal include Mal Peet’s final novel, Beck, which was published posthumously after friend and fellow novelist Meg Rosoff completed it, while children’s laureate Riddell is longlisted for the Kate Greenaway medal, now in its 60th year, for his illustrated books.

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Marcel Proust on film: discovery of what could be the only existing footage – video

Canadian university professor Jean-Pierre Sirois-Trahan has found what is believed to be the first, and possibly only, footage of French writer Marcel Proust. Discovered in the Canadian National Cinema Centre archives, the black and white film is of a wedding cortège in 1904, and gives a brief glimpse of a man wearing a bowler hat and pearl-grey formal suit, descending a flight of stairs – believed to be Proust. No other footage is known to exist of the In Search of Lost Time author

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Agnieszka Holland: Pokot reflects divided nature of Polish society

Renowned director says she did not intend to create a political film, but that the plot mirrors her country’s male authoritarianism

The three-times Oscar-nominated film director Agnieszka Holland has said her first foray into murder mystery had accidentally turned into an allegory of the divided society her native Poland has become under its populist nationalist government.

Holland said she and the author Olga Tokarczuk – whose novel Drive Your Plough Over the Bones of the Dead inspired Holland’s latest film, Pokot (Spoor) – had not set out to create a political film, but that they had inadvertently ended up telling a story about a male authoritarian agenda that attacked women’s rights and environmental protection, thereby reflecting the wider reality.

Related: Pokot (Spoor) review – Miss Marple meets Angela Carter in the trackless Polish forest

Related: Agnieszka Holland: light in the darkness

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Canadian professor discovers what could be only footage of Marcel Proust

Black-and-white film shows man who could be French writer at wedding of daughter of one of Proust’s close friends, says Jean-Pierre Sirois-Trahan

A Canadian university professor claims to have found the only existing moving picture of French writer Marcel Proust.

The black-and-white footage of a wedding cortège filmed in 1904 shows a brief glimpse of a man in his 30s with a neat moustache, wearing a bowler hat and pearl-grey formal suit, descending a flight of stairs on his own. Most of the other guests are in couples.

Exclu @juliencdt : ce serait le premier gif de Marcel Proust. https://t.co/HbrI3F5nKD http://pic.twitter.com/Enna00Gga4

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Wednesday, February 15, 2017

UK school denies Juno Dawson visit was cancelled because she is transgender

Head teacher at St Mary’s in Preston says ‘complex themes’ of new novel Martha and Me necessitated caution but gender was never a consideration

A Catholic comprehensive school has rebutted claims that it cancelled a visit by a bestselling children’s author at the last minute because she is transgender, saying that teachers had been misinformed about the suitability of her latest book for pre-teens.

Last week, Juno Dawson said St Mary’s Catholic high school in Preston had pulled its invitation 48 hours before she was due to speak as part of a promotional tour for her new novel, Martha and Me. The book tells the story of Fliss, who discovers the wartime journal of her grandmother Margot while staying with her in south Wales.

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Tuesday, February 14, 2017

JK Rowling lands cunning blow in Twitter war against Piers Morgan

Author tweets Morgan’s previous effusive praise for her - only for him to criticise the post apparently unaware he had written it

The Twitter war raging between Piers Morgan and JK Rowling appears to have reached its zenith with the Harry Potter author clocking up a notable victory against her social media nemesis.

Morgan appeared to score a spectacular own goal in his Twitter confrontation with Rowling on Tuesday, criticising a flattering description of the author that it transpired he had written.

Related: Fantastic beefs and where to find them: JK Rowling at war with Piers Morgan

Just been sent this! Could the writer let me know who he is? I'd love to thank him! #Valentines http://pic.twitter.com/OQtbxPD6AL

Priceless #humblebrag BS. Nobody plays the celebrity game more abusively or ruthlessly than you, Ms 'Intensely Private Billionaire'. https://t.co/5ysnfefa3d

Oh my god. Oh my god. Oh my god. He doesn't realise. This is the best day of my life. http://pic.twitter.com/fl0lFPHXf5

Relax, quarter-wit, I knew what it was. Just surprised I put her as high as 97th. https://t.co/HCzx4Ius4E

Have @piersmorgan and @jk_rowling finished yet? It's like North Korea playing Iran at football. Devil's own job knowing who to cheer for.

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Philip Pullman unveils epic fantasy trilogy The Book of Dust

Author’s new novel series is set in London and Oxford and overlaps with hugely popular His Dark Materials

Philip Pullman has ended years of speculation by announcing that The Book of Dust, his epic fantasy trilogy, which will stand alongside his bestselling series, His Dark Materials, will be published in October around the world.

Set to come out on 19 October, the as yet untitled first volume of The Book of Dust will be set in London and Oxford, with the action running parallel to the His Dark Materials trilogy. A global bestseller when the first volume, Northern Lights, was published in 1995, Pullman’s series has sold more than 17.5 million copies and has been translated into 40 languages.

Related: Philip Pullman on the 1,000 causes of Brexit

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Milo Yiannopoulos delays memoir to add details of protests against it

Far-right British Breitbart controversialist says it would be absurd for his book not to cover ‘the insanity’ surrounding its publication

Publication of rightwing controversialist Milo Yiannopoulos’s memoir Dangerous has been delayed until June, so that he can include details of the controversy surrounding his book deal and the recent student protests that resulted in cancelled speaking events.

In a statement, Yiannopoulos said he had asked his publisher to postpone the launch, originally scheduled for March, to enable him to write about “the craziness and rioting” at three sites in the US: the Berkeley and Davis campuses at the University of California, and the Seattle campus at the University of Washington.

Related: Two nights on Milo Yiannopoulos's campus tour: as offensive as you'd imagine

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Ukraine publishers speak out against ban on Russian books

Latest skirmish in conflict with hostile neighbour will threaten domestic book trade, say leading figures from the industry

Ukrainian publishers have reacted angrily to their government’s ban on importing books from Russia, claiming it will create a black market and damage the domestic industry.

The ban, passed by Ukraine’s parliament, is the latest front in the battle between Kiev and Moscow that has been running since Russia annexed Crimea and pro-Russian forces seized power in parts of eastern Ukraine in 2014. Books from Russia account for up to 60% of all titles sold in Ukraine and are estimated to make up 100,000 sales a year.

Related: Ukraine prepares to ban 'anti-Ukrainian' Russian books

Related: Ukrainian librarian under house arrest takes case to court of human rights

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Monday, February 13, 2017

Edinburgh international book festival may be forced to move

Spokesman says that while the annual festival may have to relocate from usual spot in Charlotte Square, ‘we are sure we can come up with a solution’

Edinburgh international book festival has moved to quash fears for its future, after it emerged that it may be forced to move from it historic home in Charlotte Square. The festival, which attracts 230,000 visitors every August, has been based at the world heritage site since its inception 33 years ago.

A spokeswoman for the festival confirmed that talks about a move into nearby George Street were ongoing, following a request from the Committee of the Charlotte Square Proprietors that it reduce its impact on the gardens. She denied that the request posed a threat to the future of the event, which in the past has attracted some of the biggest literary names in the world, including JK Rowling, Toni Morrison and Margaret Atwood. “We don’t know what will happen at this stage, but we are a creative bunch of people and are sure we can come up with a solution that can work,” she said.

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Hi-tech library project spawns book promoting 'new ways to work with readers'

A Place Free of Judgement presents work with young readers in local libraries, and one worldwide broadcast, to encourage the next generation of borrowers

A project to reimagine libraries involving zombies, young people, a group of tech-savvy artists and a nine-hour interactive broadcast beamed around the world, has sparked a book that organisers hope will inspire library authorities.

The book, A Place Free of Judgement, is a collaboration between the performance art group Blast Theory and the writer Tony White, who put together a series of events under the same title in local libraries in Worcestershire and Staffordshire last year. Groups of young people were trained over six months in presentational, audiovisual and writing skills before taking control of their local library for a broadcast to a worldwide audience via an interactive live stream.

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Sunday, February 12, 2017

Thieves steal £2m of rare books by abseiling into warehouse

Gang avoid motion-sensor alarms in west London to make off with 160 items, some dating to 15th and 16th centuries

Antiquarian books worth more than £2m have been stolen by a gang who avoided a security system by abseiling into a west London warehouse.

The three thieves made off with more than 160 publications after raiding the storage facility near Heathrow in what has been labelled a Mission: Impossible-style break-in.

Related: Rare book experts join forces to stop tome raiders

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Saturday, February 11, 2017

Terry Pratchett docudrama is a fittingly imaginative tribute | Frank Cottrell Boyce

Back in Black’s inventive life story eschews the usual talking heads to focus on the author’s devoted fans – of whom I am one

A couple of minutes into Back in Black, there’s a shot of Terry Pratchett’s head, outlined in twinkling lights hovering over his own memorial service at the Barbican Centre in London. It looks like a satellite photograph of some new country. As Auden said of Edward Lear: “He became a land.” And here are its people.

One of the charms of this docudrama is that it largely eschews the usual talking heads in favour of Discworld fans. Even the famous faces that do appear – Neil Gaiman, Pratchett’s consigliere Rob Wilkins, the illustrator Paul Kidby – first entered Pratchett’s orbit as fans. Whether it was the life-changing offer he made to collaborate with the young Gaiman on Good Omens, or the blessing to Stephen Briggs’s attempts to map Ankh-Morpork, or simply Tipp-Exing over an old dedication in a secondhand copy of one of his books so he could “unsign” it for its new owner, Pratchett showered his fans with favours like a Highland clan chief. It’s a clan with its own code of honour: to “be a bit more Terry” is to be kinder, more tolerant.

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via Science fiction | The Guardian http://ift.tt/2lw7bmF

Margaret Atwood: Handmaid's Tale sales boosted by fear of Trump

  • Author sees ‘bubbling up’ of ‘puritan values’ towards women’s issues
  • 1985 dystopian novel follows Orwell’s 1984 up bestseller charts

Margaret Atwood has said worries about women’s issues after the US election have made her book The Handmaid’s Tale the latest dystopian novel to shoot back up bestseller lists.

Related: Margaret Atwood: ‘All dystopias are telling you is to make sure you’ve got a lot of canned goods and a gun’

Related: 'It will be called Americanism': the US writers who imagined a fascist future

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Do we still need Doctor Who? Time travel in the internet age

From HG Wells to the Doctor and beyond … how technology caught up with science fiction

Can you recall when you first heard of time travel? I doubt it. Nowadays, time travel is in pop songs and TV advertising. From morning to night, children’s cartoons and adult fantasies invent and reinvent time machines, gates, doorways and windows, not to mention time ships and closets, Back to the Future DeLoreans, and those special London police boxes. Animated cartoons have been time travelling since 1925: in Felix the Cat Trifles with Time, Father Time agrees to send the unhappy Felix back to a faraway era inhabited by cavemen and dinosaurs. In a 1944 Looney Tunes episode, Elmer Fudd dreams his way into the future – “when you hear the sound of the gong it will be exactly AD2000” – where a newspaper headline announces “Smellevision Replaces Television”. In The Simpsons, Homer accidentally turns a toaster into a time machine.

Two generations of TV watchers have been schooled in temporal paradox by Doctor Who, and when one Doctor gives way to the next, as will happen in the next series, the reincarnation generates almost as much speculation as the royal line of succession. Who will follow Peter Capaldi? She will be a Time Lord, after all.

When you write about time travel, you either pay homage to The Time Machine or dodge its shadow

We inhabit virtual worlds as avidly as the real one – in virtual worlds time travel could not be easier

Related: Relativity v quantum mechanics – the battle for the universe

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Friday, February 10, 2017

SS-GB's dystopian parallel universe – a drama for our time

The BBC TV adaptation of Len Deighton’s novel about a Nazi-occupied Britain forces viewers to wonder: would we resist?

From the opening shot of SS-GB, it is clear this is a world that is both familiar but also arrestingly alien. There are the rolling hills of the South Downs, the dome of St Paul’s and opulent columns of Buckingham Palace – with a difference: they are all emblazoned with swastikas.

The series is the newest ambitious, big-budget drama from the BBC. Based on the bestselling novel by Len Deighton, SS-GB envisions a world in 1941 in which the Nazis won the Battle of Britain and now have full control of the UK. It is, according to the creators, “the ultimate post-truth drama – what could be more fitting for this moment in time?”

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Faber CEO speaks out after winning indie publisher of the year

Head of venerable press says his sector has important role in the defence of free speech and champions the revival of literary fiction and traditional books

Faber & Faber’s chief executive has called for publishers to oppose crackdowns on free speech and the rise of so-called fake news. Stephen Page made his comments after the publisher of TS Eliot, Kazuo Ishiguro and Costa book of the year winner Sebastian Barry scooped the Frankfurt book fair independent trade publisher of the year award.

“Publishing has a part to play in this fight. We are about freedom of expression, making the public aware and [providing] education. These are things that matter very much now,” said Page.

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Doris Lessing’s library: A life in 4,000 books

From Sophocles to pseudoscience, each of Doris Lessing’s 4,000 books played a role in shaping her mind and her work. In the wake of her death in 2013, Nick Holdstock was invited to catalogue the overflowing accumulation of a 60-year career

When Doris Lessing was eight she was sent to a convent school where the nuns stopped her reading the classics. They thought Walter Scott, Robert Louis Stevenson and Rudyard Kipling unsuitable for a girl her age. Though many children would have been cowed by this stipulation, Lessing was undeterred. She wrote to her parents, asking them to tell the nuns she had their permission. As she later explained in her autobiography, “What was my own, where I belonged, was the world of books, but I had to fight for it.”

Four months after Lessing’s death in November 2013, I was asked to come to her house in West Hampstead, London, because the executors of her estate had a problem. Her house contained more than 4,000 books that had to be inventoried in order for the estate to be settled. I agreed to help – I wanted to know what sort of reader Lessing had been, whether she folded page corners, highlighted passages, wrote in the margins or on blank pages. I thought that learning what she read, and how, would shed light on her work.

I wanted to know what sort of reader she had been, if she folded page corners, highlighted passages, wrote in margins

I found 19 copies of Lessing’s Nobel prize acceptance speech in a box under the bath

Part of the attraction of ideas like ESP and cosmic waves is that they expand our notion of what’s possible

Each book had played a role in shaping the mind and work of Lessing, but they weren’t a record of her thoughts

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Thursday, February 9, 2017

Ukrainian librarian under house arrest takes case to court of human rights

Natalya Sharina, who has been confined to her flat since 2015, faces what her lawyer says are absurd charges of anti-Russian extremism and embezzlement

Natalya Sharina, a Ukrainian librarian held under house arrest in Russia since October 2015, has taken her case to the European court of human rights in Strasbourg. Since her arrest in 2015, the Russian authorities have extended the order for Sharina, director of the Ukrainian Literature Library in Moscow, to be detained at home repeatedly, despite calls for her release.

Related: Moscow library of Ukrainian literature raided by 'anti-extremist' police

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Raymond Briggs's 'captivating' work wins lifetime achievement award

Despite having insisted that ‘my lifetime hasn’t ended yet’, The Snowman author declares the BookTrust prize ‘an incredible honour’

Raymond Briggs, author of Fungus the Bogeyman and The Snowman, has been awarded a lifetime achievement award by children’s books charity BookTrust, despite the famously irascible artist and writer protesting last December that he regarded such honours as a “funny title, because come on, my lifetime hasn’t ended yet”.

Chosen by a panel of six judges that included children’s laureate Chris Riddell and How to Train Your Dragon creator Cressida Cowell, the award was given to Briggs in recognition of his body of work and “outstanding contribution” to children’s literature.

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Portrait of 'real' Mr Darcy unlikely to set 21st century hearts aflutter

Experts believe Jane Austen’s ideal Darcy would bear little comparison to the one played by Colin Firth in BBC’s 1995 series

A dispiriting portrait of the “real” Mr Darcy, showing Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice hero as a pale, slope-shouldered, weedy character, thin of mouth and chin with his hair powdered white, has been created by a panel of experts through studying contemporary fashions and social history.

Their conclusions have been embodied in a portrait by the illustrator Nick Hardcastle, unlikely to set many 21st century hearts aflutter.

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Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Gemma Arterton and Eva Green cast in Virginia Woolf lesbian romance

Green is to play Woolf and Arterton is cast as Vita Sackville-West in Vita & Virginia, a film about the writers’ years-long relationship

Eva Green and Gemma Arterton have been cast in the lead roles of Vita & Virginia, film about the romantic relationship between Bloomsbury Group novelist Virginia Woolf and writer-gardener Vita Sackville-West.

Directed by Chanya Button and adapted from Eileen Atkins’ play, the production was announced last July. Now it has been revealed that Green (last seen in Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children), will play Woolf and Arterton (due to appear in the wartime romcom Their Finest) will play Sackville-West.

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Waterstones children's prize shortlists reflect readers' search for hope in anxious times

Book awards highlight titles providing optimistic perspectives on tough social problems that experts say are hitting youngsters’ mental health

Announcing the shortlists for its children’s book prizes, Waterstones has attributed high anxiety levels among young people for the notable increase in “optimistic stories that equip children with confidence to master a future that can feel very uncertain”.

A January survey by the Prince’s Trust found that 58% of 16- to 25-year-olds said political events had made them fear for their futures, with 41% more anxious than a year ago, while on Monday, research by children’s charity the NSPCC revealed its Childline support service was contacted every 11 minutes by children suffering from mental health problems last year.

The vicarious experience of reading about another young person going through difficulties is very helpful to them

Related: Book an appointment: doctors to prescribe novels in new scheme

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Do Charles Darwin's private letters contradict his public sexism?

He declared that women’s brains were “analogous to those of animals”, but conducted scholarly personal correspondence with women, new book reveals

Charles Darwin may have held less hostile views about women than previously thought, according to a new book out this month. Drawing on letters between the father of evolutionary science and the women he knew, the book reveals close ties between the scientist, his family and leading feminist figures in the 19th century, including medical pioneer Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and social reformer Josephine Butler.

Darwin and Women by Samantha Evans is the latest book to come out of the Darwin Correspondence Project, which was started at Cambridge University in 1974 and is due to finish in 2022, when letters between the pioneering naturalist and his circle will be made available online for free.

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Judy Garland allegedly 'sexually harassed by munchkins' on Wizard of Oz set

Forthcoming memoir by Garland’s ex-husband Sid Luft claims teenage star was groped by the actors

In the key scene in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz, Judy Garland skips down the yellow brick road with her dog Toto and hundreds of helpful munchkins. But the reality of the shoot was far less happy, according to a newly discovered memoir by Garland’s former husband.

“They would make Judy’s life miserable on set by putting their hands under her dress,” wrote Sid Luft in the forthcoming posthumous book, Judy and I: My Life With Judy Garland. “The men were 40 or more years old. They thought they could get away with anything because they were so small.”

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Top 10 books about the apocalypse

Weaponised flu, hoax bombs that start exploding, totalitarian America and brain-thirsty zombies – here’s a flood of fictional world endings – and one that’s real

The apocalypse – the literal end of the world – has long captured humanity’s dark imagination. Is it because the end of life on Earth is so impossible to comprehend, or that it feels so frighteningly close at hand? I personally enjoy the terrible dread of dropping into a world near enough to my own that the path it takes to destruction is unsettlingly familiar. However, I also seek out the more personal, poetic explorations of the concept of “apocalypse”, when what is popped is the intimate bubble of our own reality.

Apocalypse films and TV shows keep me on the edge of my seat, heart giddily racing – The Walking Dead, where the horrors perpetrated by the living outpace the deeds of the (un)dead; World War Z and 28 Days Later occupy their own space in my psyche. But as captivating as these flicks may be, it’s the apocalypse in literature that really mesmerises with its ability not only to detail the poignant, terrifying elements of The End both internally and externally, but for its potential to explore it as metaphor. Perhaps the reason we are so curious about the big apocalypse is that so many of us have sustained our share of tiny ones.

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Blink-182's Tom DeLonge to publish book about UFOs

Former band member’s forthcoming non-fiction book, Sekret Machines: Gods, is ‘designed to shake people up, to make them question their assumptions’

In the wake of a complicated public split from a famous pop-punk group, many musicians might make their first step into book publishing a tell-all autobiography. Not for former Blink-182 member Tom DeLonge, whose book about UFOs will be out on 7 March.

DeLonge co-wrote the non-fiction book, Sekret Machines: Gods, with the occult expert Peter Levenda. It is based on interviews with intelligence officers, scientists, engineers and military officials. According to a press release, it will be “an eye-opening investigative journey to the heart of the UFO phenomenon”, as well as transcending “the speculation of journalists, historians and others whose conclusions are often either misinformed or only tease around the edges”.

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Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Stella prize 2017: 'urgent national issues' dominate longlist of Australian women writers

Racism, offshore detention and violence against women among themes explored in longlist which includes Julia Baird, Maxine Beneba Clarke and Julia Leigh

Julia Baird, Maxine Beneba Clarke, Julia Leigh and recently deceased writers Georgia Blain and Cory Taylor are among 12 authors whose books have been longlisted in the 2017 Stella prize, celebrating Australian women writers.

The list was whittled down from more than 180 entries by a panel of judges, including author and academic Brenda Walker, literary critic Delia Falconer, bookseller Diana Johnston, editor Sandra Phillips and writer Benjamin Law.

Related: Julia Baird: Queen Victoria would have been a 'nasty woman' in Trumpian terms

Related: Leah Purcell wins Australia's richest literary prize for reimagining of The Drover's Wife

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Vandals sentenced to read books about racism and antisemitism

A judge in Virginia has ordered teenagers who covered a historic school with offensive graffiti to study 35 titles including Native Son and The Color Purple

Alice Walker’s The Color Purple, Arthur Miller’s The Crucible and Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner are among a list of 35 books a group of five vandals have been ordered to read, after they were found guilty of covering a historic African American schoolhouse with racist, antisemitic and obscene graffiti.

A judge sentenced the teenagers to read the books, as well as watching 14 films, visiting two museums and writing a research paper to encourage “a greater appreciation for gender, race, religion, and bigotry” (sic) after they were caught vandalising the Ashburn Colored School in Virginia, broadcaster WUSA reported.

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Orwell and Atwood books given away to encourage readers to 'fight back!'

A mystery benefactor in San Francisco has given away bulk copies of Nineteen Eighty-Four and The Handmaid’s Tale to bolster resistance to the new US regime

George Orwell, Margaret Atwood and Erik Larson have been recruited in the resistance against US president Donald Trump by a mystery benefactor in San Francisco, who has paid for copies of the three authors’ most famous dystopian works to be given away with the exhortation: “Read up! Fight back!”

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, 50 copies of the Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four were bought on Friday night from Booksmith, located in the famous hippy district Haight-Ashbury. The books were snapped up quickly after they were placed on a table with a sign that read: “Read up! Fight back! A mystery benefactor has bought these copies of ‘1984’ for you if you need one.”

We're out of free copies of 1984, but we have The Handmaid's Tale and In the Garden of Beasts up for grabs. #resist #thanksmysterybenefactor http://pic.twitter.com/a9AVkeZSzx

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New Salman Rushdie novel depicts Obama and Trump's US

The Golden House, due out in September, portrays the life of a young film-maker amid the political upheavals of recent US history

Promising to be the “ultimate novel about identity, truth, terror and lies”, a new novel by Salman Rushdie dramatising the last eight years of US politics has been announced by his publisher for release in September.

According to publisher Jonathan Cape, The Golden House, Rushdie’s 13th novel, follows “a young American filmmaker whose involvement with a secretive, tragedy-haunted family teaches him how to become a man”. Starting with the inauguration of Barack Obama in 2008, the book will include current and recent political and social events, including the rise of the ultra-conservative Tea Party; the Gamergate scandal, which saw the widespread online harassment of female gaming journalists framed as a debate about media ethics; the debate over identity politics; and, perhaps most urgently, “the insurgence of a ruthlessly ambitious, narcissistic, media-savvy villain sporting makeup and coloured hair”.

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Exploring Doris Lessing’s library – I wanted to say: ‘Here is a book she loved’

From Sophocles to pseudoscience, each of Doris Lessing’s 4,000 books played a role in shaping her mind and her work. In the wake of her death in 2013, Nick Holdstock was invited to catalogue the overflowing accumulation of a 60-year career

When Doris Lessing was eight she was sent to a convent school where the nuns stopped her reading the classics. They thought Walter Scott, Robert Louis Stevenson and Rudyard Kipling unsuitable for a girl her age. Though many children would have been cowed by this stipulation, Lessing was undeterred. She wrote to her parents, asking them to tell the nuns she had their permission. As she later explained in her autobiography, “What was my own, where I belonged, was the world of books, but I had to fight for it.”

Four months after Lessing’s death, in November 2013, I was asked to come to her house in West Hampstead, London, because the executors of her estate had a problem. Her house contained more than 4,000 books that had to be inventoried in order for the estate to be settled. I agreed to help – I wanted to know what sort of reader Lessing had been, whether she folded page corners, highlighted passages, wrote in the margins or on blank pages. I thought that learning what she read, and how, would shed light on her work.

I wanted to know what sort of reader she had been, if she folded page corners, highlighted passages, wrote in margins

I found 19 copies of Lessing’s Nobel prize acceptance speech in a box under the bath

Part of the attraction of ideas like ESP and cosmic waves is that they expand our notion of what’s possible

Each book had played a role in shaping the mind and work of Lessing, but they weren’t a record of her thoughts

Continue reading...

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As celebrity books boom, professional authors are driven out of full-time work

Novelist Donal Ryan is the latest name forced to seek an income outside books, while children’s writers complain that stars from other media monopolise advances

Despite scoring three bestsellers in five years and a clutch of awards, The Spinning Heart author Donal Ryan has been forced to return to his day job in the Irish civil service in order to pay his mortgage.

Ryan has become the latest casualty of tumbling incomes for writers. Despite receiving advances and signing a deal to write three more books with his publisher, the Irish novelist said he had found it impossible to earn a living wage as a full-time writer. “You need to have something else on the go,” he told the Irish Sunday Independent. “You could take a chance and scrape a living through bursaries and writing books, but I’d get too stressed out. It just isn’t worth it. I have two kids in school and I have a mortgage to pay.”

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Monday, February 6, 2017

Faber announce details of new KLF book, 2023: A Trilogy

The new title by the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu is described as a ‘utopian costume drama, set in the near future, written in the recent past’

Faber have announced details of a new book by the KLF – otherwise known as the Justified Ancients of Mu Mu (the Jams) – described as a “utopian costume drama, set in the near future, written in the recent past”.

There is little information regarding this mysterious trilogy, entitled 2023, but the publisher’s website includes lyrics from the Jams’ 1987 track All You Need Is Love by Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty: “Well we’re back again / They never kicked us out / twenty thousand years of / SHOUT SHOUT SHOUT,” it reads.

Related: The KLF are back (sort of) – and it’s exactly what 2017 needs

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David Olusoga and Gary Younge head inaugural Jhalak prize shortlist

History and reportage line up against fiction and a children’s book in contention for new award honouring UK BAME authors

David Olusoga and the Guardian’s Gary Younge head a list of six authors shortlisted for the inaugural Jhalak prize, launched last year specifically for writers of colour.

The two nonfiction heavyweights are competing against a children’s author, two novelists and a short-story collection in a list the judges said showcased “the variety, scope, depth, and literary excellence” of work by black, Asian and minority ethnic writers (BAME) in Britain.

Related: Calling all BAME writers: entries open for the 2017 prize

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30 years of Culture: what are the top five Iain M Banks novels?

These gritty space operas combine extravagant, high-tech invention with real human drama. Thirty years after they began appearing, here are some of the best

Our first image of Iain M Banks’s Culture universe is a man drowning in sewage: a stark precedent for what was to come. And 30 years after its first publication, Consider Phlebas remains a novel grimily opposed to the shiny rocketships and derring-do of most space opera. Banks broke the genre apart, and with a little inspiration from M John Harrison and Ursula Le Guin (and some outright theft from Larry Niven), he created a series of space opera novels that remains unmatched.

But for all his mastery of high-octane action sequences, and the sheer invention of his Big Dumb Objects, Banks’s science fiction – credited to M Banks, his fiction going without the middle initial – has lasted because his deft balance of galactic scope with human-scale stories. Stories of loss, grief, rebirth and self-discovery are the core of the best Culture novels. He did not write sci-fi and literary novels – he was a master of storytelling that combined both.

Related: Iain M Banks: Science fiction is no place for dabblers

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Saturday, February 4, 2017

Dodie Smith’s classic bohemian romance hopes to capture hearts in musical revival

Coming-of-age novel I Capture the Castle is adapted for the stage

One of Britain’s most popular romantic novels, Dodie Smith’s coming-of-age classic I Capture the Castle, beloved of writers including JK Rowling and Joanna Trollope, is to be adapted as a musical this spring. After working on the project for more than five years, British director Brigid Larmour has revealed details of her plan to bring the offbeat love story to the stage.

“When it was first suggested to me for musical adaptation, I said, no – we can’t do big musicals. Then I read it and fell for it,” Larmour told the Observer.

Related: 'A story with sex and money at its heart': Evie Wyld on I Capture the Castle

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Family feuds, war and bloodshed – England’s medieval Game of Thrones

Research shows how an 800-year-old conflict known as the Anarchy still marks England’s landscape

England’s first civil war raged for almost 20 years – and outdid Game of Thrones for violence and treachery. Indeed, the 12th-century conflict was so intense it changed the landscape of the nation for decades, according to newly published archaeological research.

Fortified villages and churches appeared across the country. Rivals to the king’s mints made coins in different territories. And a network of castles – to hold back rebels – was constructed.

Related: Game of Thrones has hacked our history | Suzannah Lipscomb

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Friday, February 3, 2017

George Saunders and Jarvis Cocker help turn 'freak of publishing nature' into hit

The Conversational Lexicon, an Oslo bookshop’s fundraising encyclopedia ‘freed from factual accuracy’, has drawn starry international contributions

A “subjective encyclopedia”, described by its creators as a “freak of publishing nature” designed to save a struggling Norwegian bookshop from closure, has proved a hit after a host of well-known names including Jarvis Cocker, George Saunders and Jonathan Lethem contributed entries.

Written in Norwegian, Swedish, Danish and English, The Conversational Lexicon was the brainchild of bookseller Pil Cappelen Smith and Andreas Cappelen and was a last-ditch bid to stop their Oslo shop, Cappelens Forslag, from closing. The plan has paid off: each print run of the work, first published in 2014, has sold out and the future of the bookshop secured. The latest edition has just gone on sale.

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Ursula Le Guin rebuts charge that science fiction is 'alternative fact'

Replying to newspaper claim that SF has much in common with the variant accounts of reality offered by Trump staff, author says ‘a fact has no alternative’

Science fiction has nothing in common with the Trump administration’s “alternative facts”, distinguished sci-fi novelist Ursula Le Guin said this week.

The hugely influential author dismissed claims of a relationship between the two after the Oregonian newspaper published a letter that said that the “alternative facts” of the US president and allies including press secretary Kellyanne Conway – who first coined the phrase – had much in common with sci-fi and fantasy writing.

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The best recent science fiction, fantasy and horror novels – reviews roundup

Under a Watchful Eye by Adam Nevill, The Core of the Sun by Johanna Sinisalo, Sherlock Holmes and the Shadwell Shadows by James Lovegrove, The Iron Tactician by Alastair Reynolds, Gilded Cage by Vic James, Defender by GX Todd

Adam Nevill’s riveting ninth novel, Under a Watchful Eye (Pan, £12.99), ventures into the heartland of British horror so successfully charted by the likes of MR James and Arthur Machen. Horror writer Seb Logan is struggling with his latest novel when he becomes reacquainted with his old university friend Ewan Alexander, now a shambling down-and-out alcoholic who stalks and then moves in with Logan. Alexander is obsessed with the work of the horror writer and con man ML Hazzard, leader of a mystical cult investigating astral travel who, through Alexander, wishes Logan to do his bidding. Nevill charts Logan’s descent into the eldritch realm surrounding Hazzard and his cult with subtlety, drip-feeding doses of horror to great effect, ramping up the tension to an edge-of-the-seat denouement. You don’t read an Adam Nevill horror novel: you live it.

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Michael Palin takes travel writing prize, hymning genre's open worldview

Honoured for his outstanding contribution to the genre, Palin says travel writing offers an international perspective ‘completely different’ to the US’s new outlook

In a week when the new administration of president Donald Trump in the US has closed the door to travellers from seven Muslim countries, veteran traveller and broadcaster Michael Palin has praised the ability of travel writers to challenge preconceptions and help others understand “why people are so angry”.

Speaking as he was honoured for his outstanding contribution to travel writing with the Edward Stanford award, Palin said: “You have got to understand why people are angry, why people do ridiculous brutal things. Not just Islamic terrorists, I mean, why do so many Americans shoot people in schools? We have to understand where these things come from and travel writing hopefully opens doors, when doors are being closed rather abruptly at the moment.”

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Terry Pratchett docudrama reveals moment author realised he was 'dead'

BBC2’s Black in Black draws on author’s notes from incomplete biography to chart his descent into ‘haze of Alzheimer’s’

Sir Terry Pratchett’s unfinished autobiography reveals his descent into the “haze of Alzheimer’s” and the moment the esteemed novelist realised he was “dead”, according to a new docudrama.

Terry Pratchett: Back in Black, to be broadcast on BBC2 on 11 February, draws on the author’s notes for the incomplete autobiography, which became his last work before his death in March 2015 aged 66.

Related: Books to give you hope: Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett

Related: Sir Terry Pratchett remembered by his daughter, Rhianna Pratchett

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Library cuts reflected in 30% drop in adult visitors over a decade

Campaigners say fall in adult visitors over 10 years shows ‘it’s time to stop talking about the dismantling of library services and instead to demand action’

Severe cuts to public libraries have taken a toll on visitor numbers, which show a drop of almost a third over 10 years, according to the latest government data.

Despite ministerial pledges to halt the decimation of library services, the report from the Department for Culture, Media and Sport found that the number of adults who had visited a public library in the 12 months to the end of September 2016 fell to 33.8%, from 48.2% 10 years earlier.

Related: Library campaigners present 'innovative agenda' to rescue struggling sector

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Thursday, February 2, 2017

Bey-trayed! Zoë Foster Blake reveals pregnancy with Beyoncé parody

Australian author posts picture of herself in a veil and lingerie as US singer releases ‘I Have Three Hearts’ photo album

The Australian author Zoë Foster Blake has announced she is pregnant by parodying Beyoncé in an impressively speedy Instagram post, as the singer released her pregnancy photo album.

Foster Blake, an author and the founder of Go-To skincare, posted a photo of herself in a veil and lingerie kneeling in front of a photoshopped flower arrangement that mimicked Beyoncé’s Instagram announcement that she is pregnant in twins.

Related: Decoding Beyoncé's pregnancy pic: a remix of rococo and Flemish influences

Goddesss Bey. . #Beyoncé • #Beyonce • #BeyHive • #Twins • #Pregnant

Bey X Blue. . #Beyoncé • #Beyonce • #BeyHive • #BlueIvy • #Beautiful

venus has flooded me,

second planet from the sun,

I wake up on her foamy shore.

she wants to take me to meet my children.

i’ve done this before i’m still nervous.

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Mechanical silver swan flies nest in Bowes for Robots exhibition

An 18th-century automaton, described by Mark Twain as exuding ‘living grace’, to be star attraction at Science Museum

A robotic swan that entranced Mark Twain and generations of other viewers will be a star attraction at the Science Museum’s Robots exhibition when it opens next week.

The banal truth behind the piece – the nuts and bolts, levers and cogwheels that for almost 250 years have powered a lifesize silver swan to play music and catch a golden fish out of a crystal stream – has been laid bare in a workroom at the west London museum.

Related: The charisma droids: today's robots and the artists who foresaw them

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Hillary Clinton to deliver verdict on Trump in new book

Failed presidential candidate will publish collection of essays inspired by quotations she has used to help endure testing times

It was one of the toughest presidential races in recent history and one that would have completely flattened many candidates, but Hillary Clinton is to reveal how she survived her bruising encounters with Donald Trump in a series of essays to be published worldwide this autumn.

The as yet untitled book will be a collection of essays inspired by quotations she has used to get through a life blighted by battles with political opponents, the media and her husband’s high-profile sexual scandals. It will also include her thoughts on the 2016 election campaign and Trump himself, her publisher Simon & Schuster said.

Related: Hillary Clinton's book is exactly as 'safe' as female politicians are forced to be | Jessica Valenti

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Colm Tóibín appointed chancellor of Liverpool University

The author of Brooklyn said he would ‘use all my energy’ in the role, to help champion benefits of higher education

Novelist Colm Tóibín has been appointed chancellor of the University of Liverpool. The author, who won the 2009 Costa novel of the year with Brooklyn, accepted the role because of the part universities play promoting ideas and connections, which, he said. mattered now more than ever.

“The ways in which divisions are occurring in Europe mean we must insist that the life of the mind – reading, studying and thinking – remains free, remains something that connects us,” said Tóibín. He added: “I think in the next few years the connections that universities make will be important and I hope to be involved in that and to use all my energy to help in any way.”

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Wednesday, February 1, 2017

New George RR Martin story The Sons of the Dragon due out this autumn

Tale relates the bloody history of Game of Thrones royalty the Targaryen family and will be published in anthology The Book of Swords

Game of Thrones author George RR Martin has revealed details of a new short story set in his Westeros universe, focused on the bloody and incestuous Targaryen family history.

The Sons of the Dragon will be published in a fantasy anthology called The Book of Swords in October. Chronicling the reigns of the second and third Targaryen kings, Aenys I and Maegor the Cruel, the story will also explore what happened to their families, friends and enemies during their time in power.

Related: Game of Thrones: how will Winds of Winter regain the suspense stolen by the show?

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Libraries minister promises to act if councils cannot justify cuts

Addressing the inaugural meeting of the All Parliamentary Group for Libraries, Rob Wilson said ‘robust evidence’ must be provided before budgets are hit

Local authorities will face government action if they cannot justify library cuts, libraries minister Rob Wilson told librarians, peers and MPs at a packed meeting in the House of Lords to mark the launch of the All Parliamentary Group for Libraries (APPG).

In his strongest statement yet, Wilson said: “Councils really need to make these decisions based on robust evidence rather than being ad hoc and reactive.” He added: “I also expect councils to consider a full range of funding and delivery options before making significant cuts.”

Related: Library campaigners present 'innovative agenda' to rescue struggling sector

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Johnny Depp spent $3m blasting Hunter S Thompson's ashes from cannon, ex-managers claim

Counterclaim against Depp’s mismanagement suit alleges actor in ‘financial turmoil’, with catalogue of spending including $30,000 a month on wine

Former managers for the actor Johnny Depp have alleged he spent $3m firing the late author Hunter S Thompson’s ashes from a cannon.

“All I’m doing is trying to make sure his last wish comes true,” said Depp at the time. “I just want to send my pal out the way he wants to go out.” Depp played gonzo writer Thompson in the 1998 movie Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas – the two men remained friends until Thompson’s death in 2005.

Related: Johnny Depp thanks fans for trust at People's Choice awards

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