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Friday, May 31, 2019

Turkey puts novelists including Elif Shafak under investigation

Prosecutors target authors whose fiction tackles difficult subjects such as child abuse and sexual violence

Turkish prosecutors have launched investigations into writers of fiction including the award-winning novelist Elif Shafak, in what campaigners are describing as a serious threat to free speech.

The move comes in the wake of a vicious debate on social media in which novelists tackling challenging subjects – such as child abuse and sexual violence – have been accused of condoning these practices. After a page from a novel by Abdullah Şevki was shared on Twitter earlier this week, the Turkish ministry of culture and tourism said it had filed a criminal complaint against the writer.

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John Boyne hits back at critics of transgender novel

Author says it is the job of writers to put themselves into the minds of others

John Boyne, the author of The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, has hit back at those who criticised him for writing about a boy struggling to cope with the transitioning of his sibling.

Boyne’s new novel for young readers, My Brother’s Name is Jessica, was attacked on social media and the novelist was criticised for writing about an issue with which he is unfamiliar.

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Prue Leith tells chefs: ditch the drizzles and forget the foams

TV cooking judge says gimmicks are getting in the way of good flavour and texture

Please, no more foams or drizzles or jellies or glazes or froths or lollipops or sous vide meat or powdered vegetables. Just flavours that are clean, fresh and distinct, the TV cook Prue Leith has implored.

A judge for 11 years on the fussy, faddy food programme Great British Menu, Leith expressed her exasperation with restaurant trends such as 12-course tasting menus.

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Thursday, May 30, 2019

James Bond still a strong 'recruitment sergeant' for MI6, says expert

Dr Rory Cormac tells Hay festival Bond still loved by MI6 despite bearing no resemblance to a real spy

James Bond remains a powerful recruitment tool for MI6, a secret intelligence expert says – despite claims he is too posh and too violent.

Dr Rory Cormac, associate professor of international relations with a specialty in secret intelligence at Nottingham university, said MI6 loved the positive brand provided by Ian Fleming’s fictional spy.

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BBC reveals stars of its adaptation of Normal People by Sally Rooney

Daisy Edgar-Jones to play Marianne in series directed by Lenny Abrahamson and Hettie Macdonald

The stars of the BBC adaptation of Sally Rooney’s award-winning novel Normal People have been announced as filming gets under way in Ireland.

The coming-of-age book has been adapted as a 12-part series for the BBC and the streaming service Hulu and will be directed by the Oscar-nominated filmmaker Lenny Abrahamson and Hettie Macdonald.

Related: Sally Rooney: ‘I don’t respond to authority very well’

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We're too nice to Albert – he was no perfect prince, claims historian

Lucy Worsley thinks Queen Victoria’s husband manipulated her so he could rule in all but name

He is seen by many historians as the figure behind some of the greatest national projects of his time, and a loving husband who supported Queen Victoria throughout her reign. But Prince Albert gets too much positive press, historian Lucy Worsley has said.

Worsley told a packed audience of 1,700 people at Hay festival that Albert lacked emotional intelligence and manipulated Victoria for his own ends – namely becoming “king in all but name”.

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Terry Pratchett predicted rise of fake news in 1995, says biographer

Marc Burrows discovered Bill Gates interview in which the writer warned of ‘parity of esteem’ given to stories published on the net

In 1995, the internet was a world of dial-up connections and Usenet newsgroups, but according to his biographer, Terry Pratchett had already “accurately predicted how the internet would propagate and legitimise fake news”.

Marc Burrows was digging through old cuttings about the late Discworld author for his forthcoming biography when he came across an interview Pratchett had done with Microsoft founder Bill Gates in July 1995, for GQ. “Let’s say I call myself the Institute for Something-or-other and I decide to promote a spurious treatise saying the Jews were entirely responsible for the second world war and the Holocaust didn’t happen,” said Pratchett, almost 25 years ago. “And it goes out there on the internet and is available on the same terms as any piece of historical research which has undergone peer review and so on. There’s a kind of parity of esteem of information on the net. It’s all there: there’s no way of finding out whether this stuff has any bottom to it or whether someone has just made it up.”

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Amazon blamed as 'iconic' bookshops announce closure

Wenlock Books in Shropshire and Camden Lock Books in London are set to close, with owners citing business rates and online competition

Wenlock Books, an award-winning independent bookshop that has served readers in the Shropshire town of Much Wenlock since 1991, is being forced to close, with the owner placing the blame squarely on the rise of Amazon.

Anna Dreda, who won independent bookseller of the year in 2006 and founded the Wenlock poetry festival, said the decision to close had been “very, very difficult” because she has “just adored being here in the high street in my beautiful shop making wonderful connections with my customers”. But a combination of serious illness, an increasingly quiet high street and customers’ preference for online shopping are forcing her to close her doors by the end of June. Dreda has worked at the shop since 1991, and took over from the previous owner in 2003. A review of the shop in the Guardian in 2005 called it “nothing short of a gem”.

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JK Rowling to publish four short books on the history of magic

Pottermore Publishing due to release non-fiction ebooks, modelled on the curriculum followed by Harry Potter

Harry Potter fans are due to be given new insight into the “rich history” of JK Rowling’s wizarding world in a new series of four short books exploring the origins of magic.

Rowling’s Pottermore Publishing will release four ebooks next month, “bitesize” non-fiction that the publisher said will explore “the traditional folklore and magic at the heart of the Harry Potter stories”. Each is themed on a subject on the Hogwarts curriculum, with A Journey Through Charms and Defence Against the Dark Arts, A Journey Through Potions and Herbology, A Journey Through Divination and Astronomy, and A Journey Through Care of Magical Creatures all on the way.

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Historian speaks of 'constant trolling' over Jack the Ripper book

Angry reaction to story of victims’ lives is extraordinary, says Hallie Rubenhold

A historian who has told the true story of Jack the Ripper’s victims has spoken of the “offensive”, “stupid” and almost “laughable” trolling she has received from Ripperologists.

Hallie Rubenhold said she had even been compared to Holocaust denier David Irving for her book, in which she challenges the traditional narrative that the murdered women were all sex workers.

Related: The Five by Hallie Rubenhold review – the untold lives of Jack the Ripper’s victims

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'People don't expect women to be funny': Marian Keyes on Comedy women in print shortlist

Revealing the five books in contention for the inaugural prize, Keyes hit out at the internalised sexism leading readers to assume women can’t write comedy

Bestselling novelist Marian Keyes has railed against the sexist attitude that “people don’t expect women to be funny” as she announced the shortlist for the inaugural Comedy women in print prize.

The £2,000 award was founded by the comedian, writer and actor Helen Lederer last year, after Keyes slammed the “sexist imbalance” of the Wodehouse prize for comic fiction. The Wodehouse is the UK’s only prize for funny writing, and has been won by four women in 19 years. Keyes, part of a judging panel for the CWIP that also features comedians Katy Brand and Shazia Mirza, said that “we are all so steeped in internalised sexism that we’re not even aware that it’s there”.

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Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Debbie Harry announces first autobiography

Blondie singer says she was initially reluctant to write memoir but is already considering a second volume

Debbie Harry, who became an icon as the frontwoman of Blondie, has announced her first autobiography.

Face It will recount Blondie’s rise in New York, when the band drew together the three great music styles of the city in the late 1970s – punk, disco and rap – into their own brand of supremely successful pop. A mix of Harry-penned essays and interviews with journalist Sylvie Simmons, Face It will also feature unseen photos alongside art from fans.

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Don’t kill moles, warns former catcher Marc Hamer at Hay festival

Author says that despite animals’ tendency to dig up lawns, they should be left alone

Moles are antisocial, horribly violent, terrible parents and couldn’t care less about your garden, but a former mole catcher has called on people to leave the creatures alone.

Marc Hamer was once the only mole catcher in South Wales and for years killed them professionally and, he stressed, humanely.

Related: Going underground: inside the world of the mole-catchers

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Police cuts could see rise in miscarriages of justice, says forensic expert

Angela Gallop at Hay festival says forensic testing has become commoditised due to austerity

Austerity cuts in the police force could lead to an increase in miscarriages of justice, a leading forensic scientist has warned, as constraints on funding lead to in-house forensic teams performing more selective tests.

Speaking at the Hay festival, Angela Gallop, who worked on cases including Stephen Lawrence, the Cardiff Three, the Yorkshire Ripper and James Bulger, said she feared there could be a rise due to cognitive bias in the police force, as they were both investigating criminals and performing forensic tests themselves, instead of employing third parties.

Related: When the Dogs Don’t Bark by Angela Gallop review – how a forensic scientist solves crime

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Bannon described Trump Organization as 'criminal enterprise', Michael Wolff claims in new book

Former White House adviser says financial investigations will take down president in sequel to Fire and Fury

The former White House adviser Steve Bannon has described the Trump Organization as a criminal entity and predicted that investigations into the president’s finances will lead to his political downfall, when he is revealed to be “not the billionaire he said he was, just another scumbag”.

Related: Mueller drew up obstruction indictment against Trump, Michael Wolff book claims

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Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Han Kang buries new manuscript in Norwegian forest until 2114

Novelist presented the Future Library manuscript wrapped in a ceremonial cloth as used in South Korean rites marking birth and death

Instead of launching her latest work in a bookshop surrounded by readers, the award-winning South Korean novelist Han Kang dragged a white cloth through a Norwegian forest before wrapping it around her manuscript, which she handed over to be locked away for 95 years.

Han is the fifth writer to have been chosen for Scottish artist Katie Paterson’s Future Library art project, following novelists Margaret Atwood and David Mitchell. Paterson is asking one writer a year to contribute a manuscript on the themes of imagination and time. In 2114, 100 years after the project’s launch, its curators will cut down the 1,000 Norwegian spruces that were planted in 2014, and print the texts – unseen by anyone until then – for the first time.

Related: Into the woods: Margaret Atwood reveals her Future Library book, Scribbler Moon

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Mueller drew up obstruction indictment against Trump, Michael Wolff book claims

A new book from Fire and Fury author Michael Wolff says special counsel Robert Mueller drew up a three-count obstruction of justice indictment against Donald Trump before deciding to shelve it – an explosive claim which a spokesman for Mueller flatly denied.

Related: 'It's all explosive': Michael Wolff on Donald Trump

The Jews always flip

Related: Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House review – tell-all burns all

Related: The full text of Robert Mueller's report on Trump and Russia

The very existence of the special counsel’s investigation had … become the paramount issue of the investigation itself

Related: Trump stops ex-White House counsel Don McGahn testifying to Congress

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Monday, May 27, 2019

‘Short of imagination’: Germaine Greer scorns Leonardo da Vinci’s art

The prolific author says the Mona Lisa looks ‘half-dead’ while speaking at Hay festival

Leonardo da Vinci, the incomparable Renaissance master? Actually, he was rather sloppy, disappointing and derivative.

His greatest work, the most popular painting in the world? “The bloody Mona Lisa… this half-dead woman, this strange green-faced female.”

Related: Who was Leonardo da Vinci and what can we learn from him?

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Disrupted sleep patterns can lead to ‘deviant behaviour’, research suggests

Science journalist Linda Geddes calls for more flexi-working to fit in with early risers and night owls

Finally, workers have a new excuse for stealing pens from the office or using someone else’s milk: early risers and night owls are more likely to display “unethical and deviant” behaviour if forced to work outside their natural rhythms, and should be able to set their own hours accordingly.

Speaking at the Hay festival on Monday about light and circadian rhythms, science journalist and author Linda Geddes called for more workplaces to introduce “flexi-working” to accommodate different chronotypes, which are most often split into two groups: larks, who peak in energy and mood in the mornings, and owls, who perform best later in the day.

Related: Why the sleep industry is keeping us awake at night

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JM Barrie’s ‘Peter Pan house’ to open as children’s storytelling hub in Scotland

Barrie, who penned iconic tale of the boy who never grew up, saw Moat Brae as ‘enchanted’

The Georgian villa and terraced gardens in Dumfries where author JM Barrie played as a child, and which later inspired his best-loved work Peter Pan, will reopen this Saturday as Scotland’s first national centre for children’s literature and storytelling.

With a full-scale pirate ship, a mermaid lagoon and a Lost Boys’ treehouse, the modern-day Neverland at Moat Brae House is the result of an £8.5m, eight-year restoration project and the embodiment of a pledge to make storytelling an integral part of growing up in Scotland.

Related: 'Sensational' lost play by Peter Pan author JM Barrie published

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Sunday, May 26, 2019

Novelist Pat Barker hits out at 'fashionable' diversity schemes

Prize-winning author says she distrusts post-Brexit interest in regional and working-class voices

The Man Booker prize-winning author Pat Barker says she “distrusts” London publishing’s recent burst in diversity initiatives, calling the rise in interest in regional and working-class voices a “fashionable” move motivated by fear after the Brexit referendum.

Speaking at the Hay festival on Sunday, the Durham author said she had observed an increased appetite for authors based outside London, or from working-class and minority ethnic backgrounds, over the last three years.

Related: The loneliness of the working-class writer | Tim Lott

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Saturday, May 25, 2019

Outrages author Naomi Wolf stands by view of Victorian poet

At Hay festival, Wolf restated belief that John Addington Symonds was deeply affected by laws against homosexuality

Naomi Wolf has said she “stands by” her latest book and denied that the presence of errors had undermined her wider argument, after historians called into question her claim that dozens of Victorian men were executed for sodomy.

The errors in Outrages were first identified this week on BBC Radio 3, when the historian Dr Matthew Sweet challenged Wolf on air when she said she had found “several dozen executions” of men accused of having sex with other men. In the book, Wolf argues that in 1857 there was a brutal turn against consensual sex between men, with an increase in executions influencing the lives of Victorian poets such as John Addington Symonds.

Related: Naomi Wolf: ‘We’re in a fight for our lives and for democracy’

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'Jim gets it': Acosta says in new book Trump war on press started as an act

  • CNN reporter credits Bannon for ‘enemy of the people’ line
  • Use of unnamed sources may reignite battle with president

Donald Trump’s war with the US press began as an act in the absence of effective Democratic opposition then spiraled out of control, according to an eagerly awaited new book by one of the chief targets of the president’s fury.

Related: 'Queen of shade': five times Nancy Pelosi got the better of Trump

Neutrality for the sake of neutrality doesn’t really serve us in the age of Trump

Related: Contempt or impeachment? Trump and Democrats locked in ultimate congressional battle

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Women are happier without children or a spouse, says happiness expert

Behavioural scientist Paul Dolan says traditional markers of success no longer apply

We may have suspected it already, but now the science backs it up: unmarried and childless women are the happiest sub-group in the population. And they are more likely to live longer than their married and child-rearing peers, according to a leading expert in happiness.

Speaking at the Hay festival on Saturday, Paul Dolan, a professor of behavioural science at the London School of Economics, said the latest evidence showed that the traditional markers used to measure success did not correlate with happiness – particularly marriage and raising children.

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Jo Brand says #MeToo is 'something we need to keep pushing at'

Speaking at Hay festival, comedian recalls a charity event where a man forced his tongue into her mouth

Jo Brand has spoken of the need to maintain the momentum of the #MeToo movement despite the fact that some people are “fed up with it already”, recalling a charity event where a man forced his tongue into her mouth.

The comedian told an audience at the Hay festival she was at a corporate charity day at Canary Wharf where “they were all pissed, it was about nine o’clock in the morning”.

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UK's first black police chief asks why he remains the only one

Michael Fuller, who led Kent force, says many women have broken into top ranks but not black officers

Britain’s first black chief constable has questioned why no one has been given the opportunity to follow his path, despite the talent available.

Michael Fuller was expressing his concerns to an audience at Hay festival, where he also asked why the Football Association had not done more to combat racism against players, and revealed he was approached to join the Masons.

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Unseen Anne Frank letters illuminate life before confinement

Translated into English for the first time, letters to grandmother and others reveal context of birthdays, boys and braces as well as the rising Nazi menace

• Anne Frank at 90: Costa-winner Bart Van Es looks at the girl behind the diary

A younger, lighter version of Anne Frank – a little girl with braces, who doesn’t want to have her hair cut and who has “no lack of companionship as far as boys are concerned” – has been revealed for the first time in English, through a series of previously unpublished letters written to her grandmother.

Part of the forthcoming Anne Frank: The Collected Works, the letters have never been published in full, or in English, before. They were written between 1936 and 1941, before Anne began the diary she kept from her 13th birthday on 12 June 1942, until the moment just over two years later when the Nazis raided the secret annexe where she had been living in hiding with her family.

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Friday, May 24, 2019

Naomi Wolf admits blunder over Victorians and sodomy executions

Death sentences in 1800s were hardly ever carried out, despite claim in author’s book Outrages

It was only published this week, but already the writer Naomi Wolf has admitted an error at the heart of her latest book. Instead of being “actually executed for sodomy” in 1859, as the writer claims in Outrages, Thomas Silver was apparently “paroled two years after being convicted”.

Silver, who was 14 when he was convicted, is just one of several cases cited in the book but according to the writer and broadcaster Matthew Sweet, the error stems from a simple misreading of a historical record and raises wider questions about the argument Wolf puts forward.

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Lady Chatterley trial: thousands raised to keep judge’s copy in UK

After an export bar was placed on the copy of DH Lawrence’s novel used in court, readers, writers and publishers have joined drive to save it for the nation

A crowdfunding appeal is bringing readers, authors and publishers together to help keep the copy of Lady Chatterley’s Lover used by the judge in the landmark obscenity trial in the UK.

The annotated copy was sold to an overseas buyer at Sotheby’s last autumn for £56,250. But last week arts minister Michael Ellis put an export bar on the book, hoping a UK buyer would be able to match the asking price. According to Hayden Phillips, who chaired a committee of experts advising the government, it is “the last surviving contemporary ‘witness’” to the 1960 trial of Penguin Books for publishing DH Lawrence’s novel, a trial Ellis called “a watershed moment in cultural history, when Victorian ideals were overtaken by a more modern attitude”.

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Send us your questions for climate activist Greta Thunberg

Got a question for the Swedish 16-year-old who started a youth climate revolution? Here’s your chance to ask her...

On 20 August 2018, Greta Thunberg, then aged 15, did not attend her first day back at school after the summer holidays. Instead, she made a sign that read “School strike for climate change” and stood in front of the Swedish parliament in Stockholm, demanding the government reduce carbon emissions in accordance with the Paris climate agreement.

Her protest sparked the international movement Fridays for Future, in which schoolchildren around the world skip class to insist their governments take urgent action to halt the ongoing climate crisis. Since then, Thunberg has given a TED talk on the subject, been named one of the world’s most influential teens by Time magazine, and been nominated for the Nobel peace prize. After she addressed the Houses of Parliament in April, MPs endorsed Jeremy Corbyn’s call to declare a climate emergency, aiming to “set off a wave of action from parliaments and governments around the globe”.

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Thursday, May 23, 2019

Oxford poetry professor contest kicks off amid growing controversy

Three candidates – Alice Oswald, Andrew McMillan and Todd Swift – issue campaign statements, as efforts to exclude Swift gather steam

Just weeks after Simon Armitage was named the UK’s next poet laureate, the contest for the country’s second most important role in poetry has begun. Voting has opened for Oxford University’s next professor of poetry, with two of the country’s best known practitioners, Alice Oswald and Andrew McMillan, both in the running.

Candidates for the four-year professorship, which involves giving a public lecture every term and is currently held by Armitage, must be nominated by at least 50 Oxford graduates. Oswald, the winner of the TS Eliot, Costa and Griffin prizes, was backed by the most supporters, with 167 throwing their weight behind her, including former poet laureate Andrew Motion, novelist Mark Haddon and biographer and academic Hermione Lee.

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Judith Kerr – a life in pictures

Judith Kerr, the author and illustrator whose debut picture book The Tiger Who Came to Tea introduced generations of pre-school children to the joyful chaos of uncontrolled appetites, has died at the age of 95

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Judith Kerr, beloved author of The Tiger Who Came to Tea, dies aged 95

Author and illustrator of more than 30 books, including the Mog series based on her pet cats, arrived in England in 1936 as a refugee from the Nazis

Judith Kerr, the author and illustrator whose debut picture book The Tiger Who Came to Tea introduced generations of pre-school children to the joyful chaos of uncontrolled appetites, has died at the age of 95 .

Kerr, who dreamed up the tiger to amuse her two children, only started publishing in her 40s, and lived to see the Tiger reach its millionth sale as she turned 94. To her mild chagrin, it remained her best loved single book: “I’ve got better at drawing, obviously,” she told one interviewer.

Related: Judith Kerr: ‘I like drinking dregs of whisky from the night before’

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Wednesday, May 22, 2019

Boy Swallows Universe: Joel Edgerton and Trent Dalton team up for TV adaptation

Dalton will be executive producer for series after ‘heated international auction’ for rights

The Australian writer Trent Dalton’s multiple award-winning novel, Boy Swallows Universe, will be adapted for the small screen, following what publisher Harper Collins describes as a “heated international auction”.

Australian actor, director and writer Joel Edgerton (Boy Erased, The Gift, Loving) has signed on to co-produce the project, with Dalton – a Walkley award-winning journalist – listed as executive producer for the series.

And there I was thinking there were no more good shows to watch after GoT...Joel Edgerton Adapts Boy Swallows Universe For TV – Deadline https://t.co/nNaRvIwWYn

Related: 'Extraordinary and beautiful storytelling': Boy Swallows Universe wins ABIA book of the year

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Hillsborough survivors' words shortlisted for Forward poetry prize

Truth Street by David Cain, which combines eyewitness accounts of the 1989 disaster, is nominated for best debut in year when ‘poetry has come down from its high shelf’

A debut poetry collection made entirely from formal evidence given during the second inquest into the 1989 Hillsborough disaster has been shortlisted for one of the UK’s most prestigious poetry awards.

David Cain, a football fan since childhood who is nominated in the Forward prizes’ best first collection category, began reading the daily reports of the two-year inquest into the disaster, in which 96 people died and hundreds were injured. He found himself “repeatedly struck by the poetry of the language used by the eyewitnesses to try and describe such horrific events”.

Best collection

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Hilary Mantel's The Mirror and the Light announced for 2020

After an eight-year wait, the final book in Mantel’s Booker-winning trilogy about Thomas Cromwell finally has a release date

As one Game of Thrones ends, another begins: eight years after Hilary Mantel left her protagonist Thomas Cromwell apparently triumphant after the beheading of Anne Boleyn, he is due to strut back into the literary arena in The Mirror and the Light.

Publisher HarperCollins announced on Wednesday morning that the final novel in Mantel’s trilogy of historical novels about the life of Thomas Cromwell, will be published in March 2020. The long-awaited novel will cover the final four years of Cromwell’s life, starting with Boleyn’s execution in 1536, and moving to his own execution for treason and heresy in 1540.

Erm... grabbing lunch and saw this in Leicester Sq! That rose. That line. Oh my god is the new Hilary Mantel finally coming?!?! pic.twitter.com/5tytsBqQg7

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Natalie Portman criticises 'creepy' Moby over 'disturbing' account of friendship

Musician says in memoir the pair dated, but Portman disputes account, saying ‘my recollection is a much older man being creepy with me’

Natalie Portman has criticised Moby for a “very disturbing” account of their friendship in his new memoir Then It Fell Apart.

In the book, the musician, now 53, claims the pair dated when he was 33 and Portman was 20, after she met him backstage in Austin, Texas. He recounts going to parties in New York with her, and to see her at Harvard University, “kissing under the centuries-old oak trees. At midnight she brought me to her dorm room and we lay down next to each other on her small bed. After she fell asleep I carefully extracted myself from her arms and took a taxi back to my hotel.” He says that he then struggled with anxiety about their relationship: “It wanted one thing: for me to be alone … nothing triggered my panic attacks more than getting close to a woman I cared about.” Later, he writes: “For a few weeks I had tried to be Natalie’s boyfriend, but it hadn’t worked out,” writing that she called to tell him she had met someone else.

Related: Then It Fell Apart by Moby review – sex, drugs and self-loathing

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Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Man Booker International prize: Jokha Alharthi wins for Celestial Bodies

First female Omani novelist to be translated into English shares £50,000 prize with translator Marilyn Booth – the first time an Arabic book has won

Jokha Alharthi, the first female Omani novelist to be translated into English, has won the Man Booker International prize for her novel Celestial Bodies.

Alharthi, the £50,000 award’s first winner to write in Arabic, shares the prize equally with her translator, American academic Marilyn Booth. Celestial Bodies is set in the Omani village of al-Awafi and follows the stories of three sisters: Mayya, who marries into a rich family after a heartbreak; Asma, who marries for duty; and Khawla, waiting for a man who has emigrated to Canada.

Related: Celestial Bodies by Jokha Alharthi review – love and loss in Oman

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John le Carré and Neil Gaiman join writers warning Brexit is 'choosing to lose'

Letter to the Guardian signed by many of UK’s most celebrated authors urges voters to support the EU in Thursday’s poll – or prepare for economic damage

Some of the UK’s most garlanded novelists, including Robert Harris, John le Carré and Philip Pullman, have lambasted the promises made by Brexiters as being too unbelievable for fiction, writing: “We are the people who spend our lives making things that are not true seem believable, and we don’t think Brexit is even a good effort.”

Dozens of writers have put their names to a letter to the Guardian that urges UK voters taking part in Thursday’s European parliament elections to use their franchise to support the European Union, “unless they know what they are choosing to lose, for themselves and everyone they know, and are happy with that”.

Related: To choose Brexit is to choose to lose, say writers

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Monday, May 20, 2019

Raymond Antrobus becomes first poet to win Folio prize

The Perseverance, using the writer’s experience of deafness to explore human communication, was praised by judges as ‘exceptionally brave and kind’

Raymond Antrobus has become the first poet to win the £30,000 Rathbones Folio prize, taking the award for his “exceptionally brave and kind” exploration of the deaf experience, The Perseverance.

The Jamaican-British spoken-word poet, who was diagnosed as deaf at the age of six, was up against seven other books. The prize is intended to reward “the best work of literature of the year, regardless of form”, and this year’s shortlist included Diana Evans’s Women’s prize-shortlisted novel Ordinary People, and Ashleigh Young’s collection of essays Can You Tolerate This?. But in the end, judges said the Antrobus’s poems, which move from his childhood diagnosis to his late father’s alcoholism, edged ahead of close contender Mary Anne Sate, Imbecile, a verse narrative by Alice Jolly.

Related: Generation next: the rise – and rise – of the new poets

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Sunday, May 19, 2019

'Staggeringly silly': critics tear apart Jacob Rees-Mogg's new book

AN Wilson describes The Victorians as ‘a dozen pompous schoolboy compositions’

Adoring colleagues on the right of the Conservative party hang on Jacob Rees-Mogg’s every word in the House of Commons, considering him one of Brexit’s foremost rhetoricians.

But as his new book about eminent Victorians has been released, the literary world has begged to differ, with critics gleefully mauling the title as “staggeringly silly” and “absolutely abysmal”.

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Saturday, May 18, 2019

Lunacy: how science fiction is powering the new moon rush

Fifty years after the first moon landings, a new generation of space travellers, from Xi Jinping’s taikonauts to Jeff Bezos, are racing to colonise our nearest neighbour. Is reality catching up with sci-fi?

The moon is rising again above the horizon of the imagination, waxing into worldly relevance. Fifty years after Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin first stepped on to what Aldrin called the “magnificent desolation” of the Sea of Tranquility, the possibility of a human return to their dusty stamping ground is greater than it has been at any time since the Apollo programme reached its end just three years later.

The robot vanguard has already set forth. Later this year India will attempt to become the fourth nation to land a probe on the moon; an Israeli attempt to get there failed in April, but its backers plan to try again. China has landed two robot rovers on the moon’s surface in the past five years. One visited the near side, the familiar pockmarked face seen from Earth; the other went to the overflown-but-never-before-visited far side. The Chinese space agency has talked of sending humans in their wake, perhaps in the early 2030s.

China, or any other country, can put a man or woman on the moon with far less effort than it took the US in the 1960s

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via Science fiction books | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2YB22cM

Tom Gauld on life as a sci-fi writer – cartoon

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via Science fiction books | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2VLYEPa

Friday, May 17, 2019

Romance novelists pledge to confront abortion 'taboo' after Alabama ban

State senate’s near-total abortion ban prompts demand for genre to treat issue as ‘a normal part of life, not a moral lesson’

Dip into the fast-moving world of romantic fiction and it quickly becomes clear that very few of the fictional couples enjoying mind-blowing sex have any idea how to use a condom. The number of novels that use an unplanned pregnancy as a major plot point is almost as staggering as the sex they contain.

Take The Greek’s Pregnant Cinderella, in which a hotel maid is “utterly pleasured” by a Greek tycoon but “discovers her midnight mischief had nine-month consequences!” Or Her Forgotten Lover’s Heir, where “brooding Pietro Agosti is stunned when his sizzling fling with vibrant teacher Molly Armstrong results in her pregnancy”. Was it really that much of a surprise?

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Thursday, May 16, 2019

Guy Gunaratne wins Dylan Thomas prize for 'urgent' London novel

British-Sri Lankan’s debut In Our Mad and Furious City, set on a housing estate during riots sparked by the murder of a British soldier, wins £30,000 award

Debut novelist Guy Gunaratne has won the £30,000 Swansea University International Dylan Thomas prize for In Our Mad and Furious City, an “urgent, timely and compelling” account of life on a London housing estate during city-wide riots.

The British-Sri Lankan writer, 35, who is also a human-rights documentary film-maker, was also longlisted for the 2018 Man Booker prize and won this year’s Jhalak prize for the novel. It is set over the 48-hour period after a British soldier is murdered by a black man, and told through the voices of “those with elsewhere in their blood”.

Related: In Our Mad and Furious City by Guy Gunaratne review – grime-infused tinderbox debut

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David Cameron's book to be published in September

Former PM reportedly wanted to hold off until after Brexit but book could now precede it

David Cameron’s autobiography will be published in September, his publisher has announced.

Cameron sold the rights to his memoir to William Collins, an imprint of HarperCollins, for a reported £800,000 in 2016 and promised to give a frank account of his time in Downing Street.

We are pleased to announce that @WmCollinsBooks – an imprint of HarperCollins UK – will publish former Prime Minister David Cameron’s autobiography this autumn. FOR THE RECORD will be released on Thursday 19th September, in hardback, ebook and audio. pic.twitter.com/IQU5lZyslX

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Latin, Hebrew … proto-Romance? New theory on Voynich manuscript

Researcher claims to have solved mystery of 15th-century text but others are sceptical

Some say it is a medieval medical manual written in abbreviated Latin and aimed at well-to-do women. Not true, say others: it was written in Hebrew by an Italian physician and clearly shows Jewish women having ritual baths.

Nonsense, others believe: the text was written in Old Turkish, in a poetic style. Or it may have origins in Old Cornish. Or in the Aztec language of Nahuatl, or in Manchu.

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Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Stan Lee's business manager charged with elder abuse of Marvel creator

Keya Morgan, the memorabilia dealer who became close to the comics magnate, is accused of ‘false imprisonment, forgery and fraud’

Stan Lee’s former business manager has been charged with five counts of elder abuse against the co-creator of The Avengers and Spider-Man, who died last year aged 95.

The Los Angeles superior court has issued an arrest warrant against Keya Morgan, a New York memorabilia dealer who became a close companion to Lee, for charges including false imprisonment, forgery and fraud. These date back to June 2018, when Lee’s attorney first applied for a restraining order against Morgan following an incident that May in which police and a social worker were called to Lee’s home in Los Angeles to perform a welfare check. Morgan was reported to have dialled 911 and tried to get the visiting police arrested, saying they were impostors and trespassing on Lee’s property. He was then arrested and charged with filing a false police report.

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George RR Martin scorns 'absurd' claims he's finished writing Game of Thrones

Actor Ian McElhinney, who played Ser Barristan Selmy in HBO’s adaptation, claimed last month that the author had ‘struck an agreement’ with the TV channel

George RR Martin has rebuffed the rumour that he has secretly finished the final two books in his Song of Ice and Fire series, after a Game of Thrones actor made the claimlast month.

Speculation began spreading online after actor Ian McElhinney, who played Ser Barristan Selmy in the HBO adaptation, made the claim on 29 April at a fan convention in Russia. “George has already written books six and seven … but he struck an agreement with David and Dan, the showrunners, that he would not publish the final two books until the series has completed,” he told the audience at EPIC Con 2019.

Related: George RR Martin: ‘When I began A Game of Thrones I thought it might be a short story’

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Chelsea Manning announces 'intimate' memoir

Her role in exposing US Iraq war secrets saw her jailed for seven years, and she promises ‘a book about trials, tribunals, struggles, difficulties’ and her love life

Chelsea Manning will reveal the details of how and why she decided to send hundreds of thousands of classified military documents to WikiLeaks, in a memoir due early next year.

The as-yet unnamed book will see Manning write about what publisher The Bodley Head described as her “challenging childhood” and her “struggles as an adolescent”. It will also delve into why she decided to join the army, as well as how, when she was working as an intelligence analyst for US forces in Iraq in 2010, she smuggled out 720,000 classified military documents on the memory card of her digital camera and sent them to WikiLeaks.

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Monday, May 13, 2019

Sally Rooney trumps Michelle Obama to book of the year title

Despite the former first lady’s memoir Becoming rapidly outselling Rooney’s Normal People, British book award judges give top prize to Irish writer

Sally Rooney’s Normal People has taken the top prize at the British book awards, beating Michelle Obama’s widely-tipped autobiography Becoming and last year’s Man Booker winner Anna Burns’s Milkman, to win the title of book of the year.

The 28-year-old Irish novelist’s second book, which charts the protracted on-off love affair between two young people over several years, landed the top prize at the awards, also known as the Nibbies or “Bafta’s of the book trade” on Monday night. While Rooney’s novel was nominated a number of awards, including the Man Booker, Folio and Dylan Thomas prizes, it has only picked up a couple of titles, including the Costa novel award and Waterstone’s book of the year.

Related: Normal People: how Sally Rooney’s novel became the literary phenomenon of the decade

Related: Michelle Obama: how the former first lady soared to 'rock star' status

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Ondaatje prize: Aida Edemariam wins for vivid biography of her grandmother

Guardian journalist’s The Wife’s Tale takes the £10,000 Royal Society of Literature award for a work best evoking ‘spirit of a place’

Aida Edemariam’s The Wife’s Tale, a biography of her grandmother who was born in northern Ethiopia more than 100 years ago and married at the age of eight, has won the £10,000 RSL Ondaatje prize.

Given to a work of literature that best evokes the “spirit of a place”, the Royal Society of Literature award counts Edmund de Waal’s The Hare With Amber Eyes and Alan Johnson’s This Boy among its former winners. Edemariam, a Guardian journalist, beat titles including Sarah Moss’s conjuring of iron age Northumberland, Ghost Wall, and Adam Weymouth’s travelogue, Kings of the Yukon, to this year’s prize.

Related: The Wife’s Tale by Aida Edemariam review – portrait of a mother goddess

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Judge's copy of Lady Chatterley's Lover temporarily barred from leaving UK

Marked-up novel used in landmark 1960 obscenity trial sold to overseas buyer last year

A copy of Lady Chatterley’s Lover used by a judge at the book’s landmark 1960 obscenity trial, with all the rude bits carefully and dutifully marked up by his wife, has been temporarily stopped from leaving the UK.

The arts minister, Michael Ellis, has placed an export bar on a copy of the DH Lawrence novel taken in to court by Sir Laurence Byrne. The government now hopes a UK-based buyer will be able to match the £56,250 asking price.

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Susan Sontag was true author of ex-husband's book, biography claims

Sontag: Her Life says she wrote Freud: The Mind of the Moralist by Philip Rieff, whom she married at 17

A new biography of Susan Sontag is set to claim that the American writer was the true author of her first husband Philip Rieff’s seminal work Freud: The Mind of the Moralist.

Out in September, Sontag: Her Life by Benjamin Moser lays out textual and anecdotal evidence that Sontag was not only the unofficial co-author of the 1959 analysis of Freud, which has long been known. Then in her 20s, the celebrated writer and filmmaker collaborated on the book with the sociologist Rieff, whom she married at the age of 17, just 10 days after attending one of his lectures.

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Saturday, May 11, 2019

Dutch family in cash plea to save ancestor’s tulip fever paintings

Crowdfunding appeal launched to keep €750,000 volume on display in Netherlands

Each of the 104 pages in Nicolaes Tulp’s book of tulips contains a watercolour painted by the artist Jacob Marrel, with a record of the market values of the bulbs at the height of 17th-century tulip mania, the world’s first speculation bubble.

The catalogue bears testament to a period in the 1630s when the Netherlands was the richest country in the world and single tulip bulbs would sell for more than 10 times the annual income of a skilled worker. However, the market crashed dramatically in 1637.

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Did Ernest Hemingway copy his friend’s ideas for Cuban classics?

Some of the novelist’s best-loved work bears ‘striking resemblance’ to that of an unknown journalist

One was a Cuban newspaper reporter working to support his family andwriting fiction in his spare time. The other was one of the world’s most famous novelists on the planet, a larger-than-life Americanwho came to Havana in search of inspiration.

New research shows that Enrique Serpa, a little-known Cuban author, wrote in a way that sparked the creative genius of Ernest Hemingway, who wrote some of his most celebrated works while living in Cuba in the middle of the twentieth century. Professor Andrew Feldman, a US academic, said there were strong parallels between Serpa’s stories and works later written by Hemingway, including To Have and Have Not and The Old Man and the Sea. Although “not a plagiarism situation”, the stories were “incredibly similar, a striking resemblance in terms of themes and style”.

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Friday, May 10, 2019

Simon Armitage named UK's poet laureate

West Yorkshire writer speaks of parents’ pride and his desire to ‘give something back’ as he succeeds Carol Ann Duffy

The West Yorkshire poet Simon Armitage, a former probation officer who describes his writing as “no-brow”, has been appointed as the UK’s 21st poet laureate.

Armitage, who received a phone call from Theresa May offering him the position on Thursday, said his parents cried when he told them the news – he had made them particularly nervous in 1994, when he gave up his day job to become a full-time poet.

Related: Poet laureate: the highest office in poetry | Simon Armitage

Related: Simon Armitage: making poetry pay | Aida Edemariam

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The best recent science fiction and fantasy – review roundup

One Word Kill by Mark Lawrence; Sunfall by Jim Al-Khalili; The Ice House by Tim Clare; Big Cat by Gwyneth Jones; Smoke in the Glass by Chris Humphreys

After publishing a string of fantasy novels, Mark Lawrence rings the changes with One Word Kill (47North, £4.99), a short and punchy science fiction novel set in the mid-1980s featuring quantum physics, role-playing games and meditations on life and death. Nick Hayes is just 15 when he’s told he has an aggressive form of leukaemia – the disease that killed his father – and only a 50% chance of surviving for five years. Lawrence hooks the reader on the first page with the line: “But as it turned out, I would die even before February ... ” The novel shuttles between Nick’s hospital visits, school life and weekly Dungeons & Dragons sessions, which serve as his escape from an overwhelming reality. Things become very strange, however, when events in the role-playing game start to mirror those in the real world, and a mysterious stalker offers Nick the chance to survive – at a cost. With scalpel-sharp prose, surprising plot twists and some acute social observations, Lawrence blends youth culture in the 80s, the immersive camaraderie of RPG culture and exhilarating speculations on the nature of quantum mechanics. One Word Kill is the first novel of the Impossible Times trilogy.

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via Science fiction books | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2vW6p5z

Thursday, May 9, 2019

It Chapter Two: trailer for horror sequel released on internet

First footage emerges of followup to blockbuster hit adapted from Stephen King’s novel, set almost thirty years after the events of the original

The trailer for the much anticipated sequel to the blockbuster horror film It has been released.

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Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Watchmen trailer: HBO reveals first look at superhero series

The network hopes to follow the end of Game of Thrones with another blockbuster series, an adaptation of the cult graphic novel

The final Game of Thrones episodes might be bringing HBO record ratings but they are also the last gasps of the network’s biggest show, leaving a rather worrisome hole in need of filling.

Related: What's the next Game of Thrones? All the contenders for fantasy TV's crown

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Top 10 end-of-the-world novels

Fresh from writing his own first sci-fi thriller, physicist and broadcaster Jim Al-Khalili chooses favourite books that tackle the Earth in peril

Having written a number of popular science books, I decided three years ago to try my hand at fiction. How hard could it be, I reasoned arrogantly. Well, harder than I thought. But I enjoyed writing Sunfall because it’s precisely the sort of book I enjoy reading, even though lacking zombies, vampires or teenagers with superpowers, I guess Netflix won’t be buying the rights.

I’ve always been a fan of near-future “hard sci-fi”. I prefer the science to be believable, and grew up on the books of Arthur C Clarke, Isaac Asimov and Larry Niven. So, when it came to writing my own sci-fi thriller, I felt I was very well placed to put in a lot of science and get it right. Setting the story two decades from now means I can make a reasonably reliable prediction of what the world might be like and extrapolate the science and tech of today into a plausible future.

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via Science fiction books | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2VnwJow

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Writing at risk of becoming an 'elitist' profession, report warns

Though the average writer earns £10,000 a year, mean household earnings are more than £81,000 – a result bestselling author Kit de Waal calls problematic

Writing is in danger of becoming an elitist profession, with many authors being subsidised by their partners or a second job in order to stay afloat, according to new statistics.

The full findings from the annual Authors’ Licensing and Collecting Society report into author earnings paint a more nuanced picture than the headline results from last summer, which revealed that median earnings for professional writers had fallen to less than £10,500 a year. While the average professional writer earns £10,000 a year, the mean earnings for a writer’s household were more than £81,000 a year, and median household earnings were at £50,000 per annum. “Most writers supplement their income from other sources, such as a second job or household earnings contributed by a partner”, according to the report, which analysed answers from more than 5,500 professional writers.

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Dickens novel that joined Captain Scott on doomed expedition goes on display

Book read by Scott’s men over 60 nights while hiding in an Antarctic ice cave forms part of new Charles Dickens exhibition

A copy of David Copperfield that Captain Scott’s men read aloud every night while they were trapped in an Antarctic ice cave forms part of a new exhibition revealing the international side of the quintessentially English author Charles Dickens.

Stained with black fingerprints from the seal blubber lamps that were used to light the ice cave, the 1910 edition of the Dickens novel still bears a faint whiff of smoke and fish. It was one of three books that a group of Scott’s men used for entertainment while they were stranded in the ice cave for seven months; they read aloud a chapter a night for 60 nights to keep up morale. Geologist Raymond E Priestley, who was part of the group, wrote of how “we were very sorry to part with” David when the story came to an end.

They looked forward to reading it every night. A doctor prescribed them two chapters a night when they were feeling particularly sad

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Saturday, May 4, 2019

New details of Harper Lee true crime book revealed as briefcase mystery solved

Author Casey Cep reveals discovery of ‘brimming’ cache of research by the novelist into Alabama preacher suspected of a string of murders

A long-rumoured briefcase containing research materials for the beginnings of a true crime book by Harper Lee has been found, confirming that the To Kill a Mockingbird author made a substantial start on a book that some believe exists somewhere in her estate.

Writing in the Guardian Review about her new book Furious Hours, which details her hunt for Lee’s manuscript, author and journalist Casey Cep reveals the breakthrough that occurred in 2017. Cep is one of just a few individuals who have read the only known chapter of Lee’s unpublished book, The Reverend, about the case of Reverend William Maxwell. A preacher in Alexander City, Alabama, Maxwell was suspected of murdering two of his wives, his brother, a nephew, a neighbour and one of his step-daughters, but was never found guilty.

Related: Up in smoke: should an author's dying wishes be obeyed?

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Friday, May 3, 2019

Tanks for the amusing subtitles | Brief letters

Science fiction | Lost in translation | Ship gender | Black squirrels | Funeral songs

Sarah Ditum’s article on Ian McEwan’s Machines Like Me (Looking to the future, Review, 20 April) covers a range of fiction that took a different approach to sci-fi, including works by Ursula K Le Guin and Margaret Atwood. Arguably the most salient treatment of emotional entanglements with non-human persons is Marge Piercy’s Body of Glass (1993), with tales of two parallel relationships, one with a golem in 16th-century Prague, the other with a robot in the 21st-century USA.
Dr Felicia Hughes-Freeland
Chichester, West Sussex

• Re odd subtitles (Letters, 1 May), I am reminded of the story of the French version of Sam Peckinpah’s Cross of Iron. After a lengthy battle sequence with no dialogue, someone sticks their head over the parapet and sees a column of armoured vehicles. “Tanks!” he cries. The subtitles rendered this as “Merci!”
Paul Dormer
Guildford, Surrey

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via Science fiction books | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2Vd3kx7

Hunt for next poet laureate still on as Imtiaz Dharker says no to job

Pakistani-born British poet declines ‘huge honour’ as speculation switches to remaining contenders to succeed Carol Ann Duffy

The acclaimed poet Imtiaz Dharker has turned down the poet laureateship, the highest honour in British poetry, citing a need to focus on her writing – and despite reports that she was set to be named as the next holder of the position.

“I had to weigh the privacy I need to write poems against the demands of a public role. The poems won,” Dharker, who was born in Pakistan and grew up in Glasgow, said. “It was a huge honour to be considered for the role of poet laureate and I have been overwhelmed by the messages of support and encouragement from all over the world.”

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Thursday, May 2, 2019

Greta Thunberg's speeches to be rushed out as a book

No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference is being published in June, with a family memoir due to come later in 2019

The collected speeches of 16-year-old Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, who began the worldwide school strike for the environment in 2018, will be released as a book next month after a publishers’ auction.

Penguin, which is also rushing out a handbook from Extinction Rebellion, won an auction for No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference, a selection of 11 of Thunberg’s key speeches, all written by her. It will be published on 6 June as a £2.99 paperback. The first speech in the book was given three weeks after Thunberg’s first climate strike in August 2018, the most recent in the UK parliament last month.

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Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Could spell trouble? Scrabble rule change allows use of 'OK'

Risking the wrath of purists, the board game’s official arbiters have approved use of the two-letter initialism along with thousands of other new words

Hold on to your tiles: the first new Scrabble words in four years are being added to the official list of accepted words, including – heretically for some purists – the two-letter word “OK”.

The new edition of Collins Official Scrabble Words adds 2,862 words to the existing 276,000, allowing players who have pored over the new list to rack up an impressive 20 points if they manage to put down “yowza”, 22 if they can fit “genderqueer” anywhere, or 12 for “fleek”.

zomboid: resembling a zombie (21 points)

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'The London book of our lifetime': Guy Gunaratne wins Jhalak prize

In Our Mad and Furious City, which was spurred by the murder of Lee Rigby and nominated for the Man Booker prize, takes the award for writers of colour

Guy Gunaratne has won the Jhalak prize for writers of colour for his Man Booker prize-nominated debut In Our Mad and Furious City, a novel that unfolds over 48-hours on a London council estate and was praised by judges as “timely and important”.

Gunaratne, who worked as a journalist and documentary film-maker before turning to writing, grew up in north-west London with Sri Lankan parents. In Our Mad and Furious City, which is set during a summer of unrest that begins when an off-duty soldier is murdered by a black man, was spurred by the murder of Lee Rigby.

Related: Onjali Rauf: ‘My mother said publishing was a white world, but I should always try’

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Will Eaves wins Wellcome book prize for fictionalised take on Alan Turing

Murmur, which depicts the mathematician’s ordeal after he was convicted for having a gay lover, is hailed by judges as ‘a future classic’

Will Eaves’s fictionalised account of the chemical castration of Alan Turing, Murmur, was hailed as “a future classic” as it won the £30,000 Wellcome book prize on Wednesday night, only the third novel to win the award for science-related writing.

Published by Charles Boyle’s one-man-band press CB Editions, Murmur was up against both fiction and non-fiction for the prize, which goes to the book that best “illuminate[s] the many ways that health and medicine touch our lives”. It beat titles including Thomas Page McBee’s memoir Amateur, about becoming the first transgender man to box at Madison Square Gardens, and cardiologist Sandeep Jauhar’s Heart, a history and memoir of the organ.

Related: Murmur by Will Eaves review – inside the mind of Alan Turing

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Imperialism: a look at the book behind the Corbyn furore

John Atkinson Hobson’s work is a signature text on colonialism, but is inseparable from his antisemitism

In his 1902 book Imperialism, the radical journalist John Atkinson Hobson called out the “house of Rothschild” as an example of the “single and peculiar race” of men whose monetary manipulations lay behind the curse of the rampant colonialism of the era. Nowhere in the book did Hobson refer specifically to Jews, but his kneejerk antisemitism was a common feature of political rhetoric in the period. Just the previous year, the rightwing, anti-immigration campaigner Arnold White wrote of a Jewish conspiracy at the heart of the British political establishment in his bestselling Efficiency and Empire. Similarly, Keir Hardie, one of Labour’s first MPs, spoke out in 1900 against Jewish financiers.

But Hobson’s range was narrower. Without naming him, Hobson’s actual target was Nathan Rothschild, head of the banking family, and a prominent public figure in Edwardian Britain. A former MP, ally of Benjamin Disraeli, and the first practising Jew to join the House of Lords, Hobson’s readers would have known immediately at whom Hobson’s invective was directed. Undoubtedly, Lord Rothschild was up to his ears in British imperialism; one of his best friends was Cecil Rhodes, and he helped bankroll the British South Africa Company, which smashed and grabbed its way across the continent in the 1890s.

Related: Jewish leaders demand explanation over Corbyn book foreword

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Jewish leaders demand explanation over Corbyn book foreword

Before becoming Labour leader he called 1902 book containing antisemitic tropes ‘brilliant’

Jewish leaders have written to Jeremy Corbyn to express “grave concern” and demand an explanation after it emerged he wrote a glowing foreword for a century-old political tract that includes antisemitic tropes.

The book, Imperialism: A Study, written by John Atkinson Hobson in 1902, claimed European finance was controlled by “men of a single and particular race”. Corbyn described the book as “brilliant” and “very controversial”, the Times first reported.

Related: Jeremy Corbyn is either blind to antisemitism – or he just doesn’t care | Jonathan Freedland

It wld be reductive to categorise JA Hobson as only an anti-Semitic thinker. Like too many on the Left, he did make a racist & ugly alignment of ‘Jewish finance’ with imperialism. But he was also an important figure, worthy of study, within the 20th century liberal tradition.

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Calling BAME writers: entries open for 2019 short story prize

The hunt is on for up-and-coming writers who could scoop this year’s £1,000 Guardian/Fourth Estate prize

A Chinese villager with no arms becomes a Paralympian swimming champion; a dapper elderly Jamaican spends New Year’s Eve in a south London police cell under suspicion of domestic abuse; a Nigerian son takes his father to a euthanasia centre in a Britain with no time for invalids. These three very different tales – respectively by Yiming Ma, Lisa Smith and Abiola Oni – are all previous winners of the Guardian/ Fourth Estate BAME short story award, showing just how vigorous and various the short story can be as a showcase for up-and-coming talent.

The hunt is now on for the fourth winner of the £1,000 prize, which is open to black and minority writers aged over 18 and based in the UK or Ireland. Among this year’s judges is Niki Chang, a literary agent based at the Good Agency, set up to seek out writers of colour at a time when the publishing industry is struggling to increase its diversity. She will be joined by 4th Estate publishing director Helen Garnons-Williams, novelist Michael Donkor, author and broadcaster Emma Dabiri and me.

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