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Friday, January 31, 2020

Rare Charlotte Brontë ‘little book’ to go on show at Haworth

Miniature book written by author as a teenager returned to UK after fundraising appeal

A rare book the size of a matchbox written by the teenage Charlotte Brontë will go on public display for the first time after a museum paid €600,000 (£505,000) to bring it back to Britain.

Curators said they wept when they finally received the book, which arrived from an auction house in Paris. It was penned by the oldest of the Brontë sisters at the family’s home in Haworth, West Yorkshire, two hundred years ago.

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Stella McCartney launches collection inspired by Jonathan Safran Foer

Designer says author’s book We Are the Weather ‘struck a chord’ with its environmental message

From the hats of Hunter S Thompson to the jewellery of Edith Sitwell, fashion has long been inspired by authors’ styles, but Stella McCartney has taken a different tack and designed a capsule collection inspired by the words of bestselling author Jonathan Safran Foer.

The book in question is Safran Foer’s We Are the Weather. Published last year, it proselytises eating less meat, specifically aiming to eat no animal products before dinner, as a way to save the planet, given that animal agriculture produces more greenhouse gas emissions than the entire transportation sector.

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Thursday, January 30, 2020

Counting and Cracking: Belvoir Street's standout hit wins Australia’s richest literary prize

First-time playwright S. Shakthidharan and associate writer Eamon Flack share the $125,000 prize, while Christos Tsiolkas won for fiction

S “Shakthi” Shakthidharan and associate writer Eamon Flack have won Australia richest literary prize, the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award, for their drama Counting and Cracking. The epic play – Shakthidharan’s first – was the standout hit for Belvoir Theatre company in 2019.

The pair will share in the $100,000 Victorian Prize for Literature on top of their $25,000 category win for drama – the same total awarded to asylum seeker, journalist and author Behrouz Boochani, who was still detained on Manus Island when he swept the awards with his debut book No Friend But the Mountains in 2019.

Related: Counting and Cracking: the story behind Belvoir Street theatre's most ambitious play to date

Related: Shame, squalor and the birth of the Christian church: Christos Tsiolkas' wild ride to Damascus | David Marr

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Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Publisher cancels tour of Jeanine Cummins' controversial novel American Dirt over safety concerns

The book gained praise before its release, but was panned by Mexican American writers for its stereotypical depictions

The publisher of Jeanine Cummins’ controversial novel American Dirt has cancelled the remainder of her promotional tour, citing concerns for her safety.

The novel about a Mexican mother and her young son fleeing to the US border had been praised widely before its 21 January release and was chosen by Oprah Winfrey for her book club. But Mexican American writers have been among those criticizing American Dirt for stereotypical depictions of Mexicans. Cummins is of Irish and Puerto Rican background.

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Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Costa prize: Jack Fairweather wins book of the year with The Volunteer

Biography of Witold Pilecki, a Polish resistance fighter who infiltrated Auschwitz, hailed as extraordinary

Former war reporter Jack Fairweather has won the Costa book of the year award for The Volunteer, his biography of a Polish resistance fighter who voluntarily entered Auschwitz in order to reveal its horrors to the world.

Fairweather’s life of Witold Pilecki, a member of the Warsaw resistance who infiltrated the concentration camp and encouraged rebellion, was hailed as “a book that needs to be read” by the chair of judges, Sian Williams.

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Graphic novel New Kid wins prestigious Newbery Medal

Jerry Craft’s story exploring ‘friendship, race, class and bullying in a fresh manner’ is the first graphic novel to win the long-running American children’s award

For the first time, a graphic novel has won the Newbery Medal, the oldest and most prestigious children’s book award in the US. The win places cartoonist Jerry Craft alongside titans of American literature including Madeleine L’Engle, Louis Sachar and Beverly Cleary.

Craft’s graphic novel New Kid follows the life of Jordan Banks, one of the only children of colour at a prestigious private school. Announcing Craft’s win, Newbery committee chair Krishna Grady called it a “distinct and timely story”. “Respectful of its child audience, it explores friendship, race, class and bullying in a fresh and often humorous manner … It is, simply put, a ‘distinguished contribution to American literature’,” said Grady, referring to the criteria of the prize, which is given by the Association for Library Service to Children. Established in 1922, the Newbery has gone to titles including L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time, Sachar’s Holes and Cleary’s Dear Mr Henshaw.

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Stephen King says Oscars are 'rigged in favor of the white folks'

Novelist clarifies controversial comments about diversity, acknowledging that while in a perfect world ‘judgments of creative excellence should be blind’, we’re not there yet

Stephen King has rowed back on his controversial comments about diversity in the Oscars, acknowledging in a lengthy essay that the awards are still “rigged in favor of the white folks”.

King provoked anger among authors and fans after tweeting earlier this month that he “would never consider diversity in matters of art. Only quality. It seems to me that to do otherwise would be wrong.” King is able to nominate films in three Oscars categories – best picture, adapted screenplay and original screenplay – and had been commenting on the lack of recognition for women and artists of colour in this year’s Oscars nominations.

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Paulo Coelho deletes draft of children's book collaboration with Kobe Bryant

Alchemist author says basketball player’s death in helicopter crash means book has ‘lost its reason’

Author Paulo Coelho has deleted the draft of a children’s book he was working on with Kobe Bryant, saying that without the basketball player’s contribution, “this book has lost its reason”.

The bestselling Brazilian author revealed on Monday that he had been writing a children’s book with Bryant, a fan of Coelho’s spiritual fable, The Alchemist. Following the NBA legend’s death in a helicopter crash on Sunday, along with his daughter and seven others, Coelho said he would delete what the pair had worked on together.

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Monday, January 27, 2020

Margaret Atwood to publish first collection of poetry in over a decade

Dearly, out in November, will be the Canadian author’s first book since The Testaments

Margaret Atwood is set to publish her first collection of poetry in over a decade, an exploration of “absences and endings, ageing and retrospection” that will also feature werewolves, aliens and sirens.

After jointly winning the Booker prize with Bernardine Evaristo last year for her bestselling sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale, The Testaments, Atwood’s publisher said today that the 80-year-old Canadian author’s next book would be Dearly. Out in November, the collection will be Atwood’s first book of poetry since 2007’s The Door.

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Stephen Joyce, last direct descendant of James Joyce, dies aged 87

Stephen, the executor of the Joyce estate, was known for his fierce defence of his grandfather’s legacy

Stephen Joyce, the last direct descendant of James Joyce who was known for his fierce guardianship of his grandfather’s works, has died at the age of 87 in Ile de Ré.

Stephen was the son of Giorgio Joyce, the son of James and Nora Joyce. His birth in February 1932 was marked by the Ulysses author with the poem Ecce Puer, which also mourns the death of Joyce’s father. “Of the dark past / A child is born; / With joy and grief / My heart is torn,” wrote Joyce. “A child is sleeping: / An old man gone. / O, father forsaken, / Forgive your son!”

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Philip Pullman calls for boycott of Brexit 50p coin over 'missing' Oxford comma

Critics fume over the omission of Oxford comma from phrase ‘Peace, prosperity and friendship’ as new coin enters circulation

It is a debate that has torn the nation in two, ripped friends and family apart, and entrenched deep and uncrossable lines throughout the land. Should the Royal Mint have used an Oxford comma on its Brexit 50p piece?

Three million coins bearing the slogan “Peace, prosperity and friendship with all nations” are due to enter circulation from 31 January, with Sajid Javid, chancellor of the exchequer, expressing his hope that the commemorative coin will mark “the beginning of this new chapter” as the UK leaves the European Union.

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Friday, January 24, 2020

Sydney bookstore says it was targeted by pickup artists from 'dating coaching' company

Kinokuniya apologises to customers who felt harassed and warns clients from such companies are not welcome

A commercial “dating coaching” company has been using a popular Sydney bookstore for its clients to test out predatory “pickup” techniques.

In an open letter published online, Kinokuniya Sydney said it had been made aware the unnamed dating coaching company “has been using our store to give their clients practical experience, much to our dismay”.

Related: 50 years of pickup artists: why is the toxic skill still so in demand?

today a dude tried some classic ‘the game’ pickup artist lines on me at a bookstore, andstarted out w ‘can you help me with a recommendation, what was your fave book of 2019’. so i said @clementine_ford’s fight like a girl. he looked a bit flustered but persevered

And to anyone who has felt harassed we offer our deepest apologies. We have contacted the company we know is involved and requested they not enter the store again.

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Publishers defend American Dirt as claims of cultural appropriation grow

Jeanine Cummins’s novel, acclaimed by Oprah Winfrey, Stephen King and others, also faces scathing criticism from Latinx writers

Jeanine Cummins’s British publisher, Headline, is standing shoulder to shoulder with the American press that published her divisive thriller, declaring that it is proud to publish her in the UK. As the backlash continues over her novel about migration from Mexico to the US, the imprint acknowledged the book has “sparked debate about the legitimacy of who gets to tell which stories”.

American Dirt, the high-octane story of a Mexican mother who crosses into the US with her son, was published this week. It was acquired for a seven-figure sum by Flatiron Books in the US, and received effusive pre-publication praise from authors including Stephen King and Don Winslow. It went on to land a film deal and win selection from Oprah’s Book Club – a surefire guarantee of bestsellerdom.

Related: Jeanine Cummins on her explosive new novel, American Dirt

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Story of woman who heads south takes prize for 'evoking spirit of the north'

Judges of the £10,000 Portico award hail Jessica Andrews’ Saltwater for showing northern identity as ‘a place within us’

Jessica Andrews has won the £10,000 Portico prize, which goes to the book deemed to “best evoke the spirit of the north”, for her story of a girl from Sunderland who feels like an outsider when she goes to university in London.

Andrews sat down to write her debut novel, Saltwater, at the age of 24, fearing that the stories of the working-class people she loved were “slipping away”. Told in fragments, exploring mother-daughter relationships and a shifting class identity, it follows Lucy as she moves south to a new life she finds overwhelming, eventually leaving London.

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Helen Mirren 'profoundly moved' by reconstruction of Anne Frank's room

Oscar-winning actor presents documentary retracing life of Jewish teenager killed by the Nazis

She has performed on countless film sets, but Dame Helen Mirren was “profoundly moved” by the latest one: a reconstruction of the claustrophobic Amsterdam apartment in which Jewish teenager Anne Frank hid for two years from the Nazis with her family until she was arrested in 1944 and sent to her death in a concentration camp.

The Oscar-winning actor is presenting a documentary, to be released in cinemas on Monday, in which Frank’s life is retraced through the pages of her diary, a classic of war literature.

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Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Terry Jones, Monty Python founder and Life of Brian director, dies aged 77

Jones, who was diagnosed with dementia in 2015, was the main directing force in Python’s films, as well a prolific creator of TV documentaries and children’s books

Terry Jones, founder member of Monty Python and director of three of Python’s celebrated feature films, has died aged 77, his agent said. In 2016, Jones and his family revealed he had been diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia a year earlier, and he became a public face of the illness – appearing at a Bafta Cymru awards ceremony to highlight its effects and being interviewed in conjunction with longtime friend and collaborator Michael Palin in 2017.

After Python, Jones worked on a huge variety of projects. With Palin, he created the successful TV series Ripping Yarns and forged a post-Python directorial career with Personal Services, Erik the Viking and The Wind in the Willows. He made a series of TV documentaries (specialising in medieval history), wrote nearly 20 children’s books, and contributed a string of comment pieces for the Guardian and Observer denouncing the “war on terror”.

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Extract from Hunger Games prequel sparks anger among fans

The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes returns to Panem, but gives dictator Coriolanus Snow a starring role

Suzanne Collins’s prequel to The Hunger Games will focus on the early life of her villain Coriolanus Snow, the tyrannical president of Panem, an extract from the forthcoming novel has revealed.

Publisher Scholastic has announced a world record first printing of 2.5m copies for The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, due to be published in May. But the preview has prompted unease among fans, after it showed that Collins has chosen to tell the story through a younger version of Snow – the dictator who loomed over her Mockingjay trilogy.

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Agency by William Gibson review – a world in an instant

This dazzling vision of politics and power across alternate timelines is both observation and warning

William Gibson has never believed that science fiction predicts the future: it only ever talks about the present. His most recent novel, 2014’s The Peripheral, introduced us to an ecopolitical disaster called “the jackpot” and a world subsequently run by the loose, shadowy group known as “the klept”. Thanks to the development of massive quantum computing, these oligarchs, the history of whose money is deeply implicated with the history of gangster capital, amuse themselves in 2136 by discovering – or perhaps it might be better described as creating – their own precursors, the broken remains of alternate timelines. These abandoned pasts, stubs of futures that might have been, are recognisable as versions of the world we live in now. They’re not exactly colonies – no money is made, no extractive capitalism takes place. Instead, members of the klept run them like computer games, or meddle like the old gods on Olympus, manipulating culture and geopolitics at will. They are a leisure space for multi-trillionaires: the reference to the political meddling of our own billionaires is clear and self-explanatory.

Agency, the second novel of the series, begins with the classic Gibsonian unboxing scene. Verity Jane, “app whisperer” by trade, and new recruit to a startup called Tulpagenics, takes home some of the company’s product, comprising a pair of mysterious glasses, a headset and a phone; and, trying it out, is instantly placed in communication with a sophisticated artificial intelligence called Eunice or UNISS. “Is it real?” she asks her new boss, surprised. That, he tells her, is exactly what she has been employed to determine. Instead, Eunice bustles into Verity’s life, fixing it and messing it up at the same time, employing everyone Verity knows, from ex-lovers to ex-employers, for what seems at first to be a project of self-understanding. The AI wants to know how she knows things, why she does things, why she’s been switched on. But nuclear war is looming in Verity’s stub, which in 2016 began to diverge in two important ways from our own, and we realise that there’s a lot more to Eunice than meets the eye (even her own). Soon she has vanished, leaving Verity caught up in a carefully assembled tangle of secret operators – including “trust networks” (those ramified interpersonal connections that in Gibson’s work often maintain and extend digital cottage industries and the communities based around them), tech barons, masters of the gig economy and algorithmic sub-Eunices – in service of a plan to which none of them is privy.

Agency’s author now finds himself referenced by prime-ministerial fixer Dominic Cummings

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American Dirt: why critics are calling Oprah's book club pick exploitative and divisive

Latino writers say Jeanine Cummins’ novel uses stereotypes and exploits the suffering of Mexican immigrants

American Dirt, the third novel by Jeanine Cummins, begins with a group of assassins opening fire on a quinceañera cookout. We watch Lydia’s entire family get killed, one by one. Only Lydia and her eight-year-old survive.

The scene is one of many depictions of graphic violence in American Dirt and it has sparked an intense conversation about “pity porn” and writing about the Mexican immigrant experience.

Related: A romance novelist spoke out about racism. An uproar ensued

This makes a convincing case for why "American Dirt" is problematic--and backs it up with a lot of examples from the text itself. If you don't know this culture (as I don't), listen carefully to the people who do. https://t.co/HWY3lsGgvh

Hello, fellow book lovers! My next @oprahsbookclub selection is “American Dirt” by @jeaninecummins. From the first sentence, I was IN. pic.twitter.com/uonqIa3QRK

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Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Ballet Shoes gets 21st-century update from Carrie Hope Fletcher

Noel Streatfeild’s children’s classic about orphaned sisters preparing for a life on the stage is being reimagined by the writer, actor and internet star

Ballet Shoes, Noel Streatfeild’s classic tale of three adopted girls hoping for – or dreading – a life on the stage, is to be reimagined for the modern era by writer and actor Carrie Hope Fletcher.

Endorsed by Streatfeild’s estate, Fletcher’s novel will, like Ballet Shoes, follow three adopted children. But while Ballet Shoes’ Pauline, Petrova and Posy Fossil are brought together when they are adopted by the eccentric elderly palaeontologist they know as Great Uncle Matthew, Fletcher’s children are found by the eccentric pebble collector Great Aunt Maude. They live in a rickety old London theatre, rather than the home on the Cromwell Road inhabited by the Fossils, and Fletcher has also made one of them – the ballet dancer of the three – a boy.

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Saturday, January 18, 2020

Rent rises force revered LGBT bookshop out of Paris's gay district

Les Mots à La Bouche’s move from the Marais shows loss of cultural heritage, activists say

In the window of France’s best-known gay bookshop, above the display of Lucian Freud art books, opera singer Maria Callas’s memoirs and a history of the Pride movement, a poster warns in giant red letters: “Cultural heritage in danger.” An urgent note on the door adds: “We need your help!”

Les Mots à La Bouche, a 40-year-old Paris institution, is the top LGBT bookshop in France and considered one of the best in the world – a focal point of Paris’s historic gay neighbourhood in the Marais district. But as property speculation in central Paris reaches dizzying heights – it is estimated that at certain times of year there are more Airbnb rentals than residents in the Marais – the bookshop is being forced out by rising rents.

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Friday, January 17, 2020

Jack Reacher series author Lee Child 'quits and lets brother step in'

Child had initially been searching for a way to kill off the popular character

The author of the Jack Reacher series of novels is retiring and handing over the writing duties to his brother, according to a report.

Lee Child said he has been searching for a way to kill off the title character, portrayed on film by Tom Cruise, for years but has ultimately decided his fans deserve to see him live on in books which will now be written by Andrew Grant.

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Sci-fi magazine pulls story by trans writer after 'barrage of attacks'

I Sexually Identify as an Attack Helicopter by Isabel Fall reworked a transphobic meme, but author asked to withdraw it after angry reception

A science fiction story that repurposed the transphobic meme “I Sexually Identify as an Aattack Helicopter” as its title has been removed from the magazine Clarkesworld following a “barrage of attacks” on its transgender author.

Isabel Fall’s story, which was published in Clarkesworld earlier this week and quickly went viral, opens as the narrator describes how they “sexually identify as an attack helicopter”. “I decided that I was done with womanhood, over what womanhood could do for me; I wanted to be something furiously new,” Fall writes. “To the people who say a woman would’ve refused to do what I do, I say – Isn’t that the point?”

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Wordsworth treasures donated to poet's Lake District home

Collection includes family Bible and two portraits that have never been put on display

A treasure trove of newly discovered items belonging to William Wordsworth, one of England’s greatest poets, have been gifted to his Lake District home by his descendants.

The collection includes two portraits that have not been seen for generations and have never before appeared on public display. They were donated to the English Romantic poet’s home, Rydal Mount, near Ambleside.

Related: Poem of the week: from The Prelude by William Wordsworth

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Sci-fi magazine pulls story by trans writer after 'barrage of attacks'

I Sexually Identify as an Attack Helicopter by Isabel Fall reworked a transphobic meme, but author asked to withdraw it after angry reception

A science fiction story that repurposed the transphobic meme “I Sexually Identify as an Aattack Helicopter” as its title has been removed from the magazine Clarkesworld following a “barrage of attacks” on its transgender author.

Isabel Fall’s story, which was published in Clarkesworld earlier this week and quickly went viral, opens as the narrator describes how they “sexually identify as an attack helicopter”. “I decided that I was done with womanhood, over what womanhood could do for me; I wanted to be something furiously new,” Fall writes. “To the people who say a woman would’ve refused to do what I do, I say – Isn’t that the point?”

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Sally Rooney's 'radical' novel Normal People to hit TV screens in 2020

As the trailer for BBC 12-parter is released, the production team discuss ‘unique project’

If Sally Rooney is the “Salinger for the Snapchat generation”, then it seems only fitting the TV adaptation of her novel that garnered the title should be radical, risque and boundary-pushing.

The team behind the small-screen version of Normal People, the Oscar-nominated director Lenny Abrahamson and the producer Ed Guiney, believe complex dramas about young people are increasingly in demand, and the show will sit in a similar space to Sky Atlantic’s Euphoria and Netflix’s Sex Education.

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

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'Ghost poetry': fight over Samuel Beckett's Nobel win revealed in archives

Papers revealing the Swedish Academy’s deliberations over the Waiting for Godot author reveal fierce disputes over his ‘nihilism’

Fifty years after Samuel Beckett won the Nobel prize for literature, newly opened archives reveal the serious doubts the committee had over giving the award to an author they felt held a “bottomless contempt for the human condition”.

Announcing that the Waiting for Godot author had won the laureateship in 1969, the Swedish Academy praised “his writing, which – in new forms for the novel and drama – in the destitution of modern man acquires its elevation”.

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Thursday, January 16, 2020

JRR Tolkien's son Christopher dies aged 95

Youngest son of Lord of the Rings author was responsible for editing and publishing much of his father’s work

Christopher Tolkien, the son of Lord Of The Rings author JRR Tolkien, has died aged 95, the Tolkien Society has announced.

The society, which promotes the life and works of the celebrated writer, released a short statement on Twitter to confirm the news.

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Missouri could jail librarians for lending 'age-inappropriate' books

Bill would allow parents to decide whether children should have access to controversial books, with heavy penalties if libraries disobey

A Missouri bill intended to bar libraries in the US state from stocking “age-inappropriate sexual material” for children has been described by critics as “a shockingly transparent attempt to legalise book banning” that could land librarians who refuse to comply with it in jail.

Under the parental oversight of public libraries bill, which has been proposed by Missouri Republican Ben Baker, panels of parents would be elected to evaluate whether books are appropriate for children. Public hearings would then be held by the boards to ask for suggestions of potentially inappropriate books, with public libraries that allow minors access to such titles to have their funding stripped. Librarians who refuse to comply could be fined and imprisoned for up to one year.

Related: Librarians to the rescue! A brief history of heroic bibliophiles

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Anthony Bourdain's final book to be published this year

World Travel: An Irreverent Guide, which the late chef and television host was working on when he died, is due out in October

The final book by renowned chef, travel writer and television host Anthony Bourdain will be published in October, more than two years after he killed himself.

World Travel: An Irreverent Guide, an illustrated collection of Bourdain’s reflections on his favourite places to visit and dine around the world, has been finished by his longtime assistant Laurie Woolever and will be published on 13 October. Alongside Bourdain’s tips on “what to eat … and, in some cases, what to avoid”, the book will also contain writing by members of his family and friends.

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Dead Astronauts by Jeff VanderMeer review – gloriously innovative

Space quest, climate polemic and literary experiment collide in a challenging and visionary epic

A genuinely innovative artwork requires time to fulfil its effect. Jeff VanderMeer’s Dead Astronauts is one such work – bewildering, perplexing, original – and I would recommend that readers allow it the concentration it demands. The opening third poses as a quest narrative, a fantastical variant of the classic western: three battle-scarred gunslingers set out across an ecologically ravaged landscape in pursuit of an enemy. Our heroes are Grayson, a black woman and sole survivor of a disastrously failed mission to explore deep space; Chen, an indentured worker bound in perpetuity to an invasive corporation known only as the Company; and Moss, whose name was once Sarah, now a complex, composite organism who has been partially absorbed into the structure of the worlds they move through. The enemy they seek to defeat is the Company itself, and more specifically its agent, a deranged Dr Moreau-type biologist named Charlie X. The three are helped along their journey by Charlie’s failed experiments: the blue fox, the duck with the broken wing, the leviathan called Botch, a hive-mind of salamanders.

This kind of formal innovation is pure catnip, an indication that as a mode of expression the novel is still vigorous

It wasn’t Charlie X’s fault, in a way, even though it was all his fault. Charlie X just thought in the old way. Plants couldn’t feel pain, animals were objects to be manipulated as products or resources … and it mattered little if the pure part of beauty was blood. It had become a death cult, under a veneer of what was inevitable and necessary, and anything else was illogical.

Then come diagrams of creatures that look like autopsies or recipes. Some almost whimsical. A plant that becomes a sea anemone that becomes a squid. Others like levels of hell. Bear-men and men like bears. Scenes of slaughter you pass quickly. More “instructions” in sentences and paragraphs in a language you don’t understand. Spanish in high school and some knowledge of Russian, so you know other alphabets. But this matches nothing you’ve ever seen.

Related: Are we alone? SF is as sure a guide as any

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Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Oh what a night! Twitter brings £1,000 worth of orders to empty bookshop

Petersfield Bookshop had no customers for first time in 100-year history – until sad tweet garnered 1,100 new followers

An independent bookshop that failed to sell a single book on a rainy day this week has been inundated with customers after publishing pictures of its empty aisles on social media.

The Petersfield Bookshop in Hampshire sent a melancholy tweet revealing it had not welcomed one paying customer, probably for the first time in its 100-year history.

...Tumbleweed...

Not a single book sold today...

£0.00...

We think think this maybe the first time ever...

We know its miserable out but if you'd like to help us out please find our Abebooks offering below, all at 25% off at the moment.... pic.twitter.com/Cn5uhYWw88

What a night! We have been completely overwhelmed in a good way.

We have 1,100 new followers.

We have loads of online book orders.

We have over 300 messages, many asking after books. We will answer all as soon as we can, please bear with us

Thank you all so much!

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Trump 'abused' and 'harassed' Kirstjen Nielsen over border, new book reveals

The president browbeat the former homeland security secretary for refusing to break the law, according to A Very Stable Genius

Donald Trump “abused”, “harassed” and “pestered” his homeland security secretary over immigration policy, demanding that the US border be closed, a new book reveals.

And when the then secretary, Kirstjen Nielsen, warned the president that shutting down the border would be illegal, the then attorney general, Jeff Sessions, approved the radical measure – despite it being against the law.

Related: Spare us the self-serving excuses, Kirstjen Nielsen. You were the worst | Richard Wolffe

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Audible settles copyright lawsuit with publishers over audiobook captions

Seven publishers had sued the audiobook giant last July, claiming that its audio-to-text service Captions was unauthorised

After months of back and forth, Audible has settled in a copyright lawsuit with major publishers over its plan to introduce captions to their recordings, a proposal that the publishing houses argued was simply reading.

In July, the audiobook company owned by Amazon announced Captions, an additional function for the existing app that would allow customers to read the text as it was read, as well as looking up words and translating them. Captions had been slated to launch in September 2019.

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Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Warhammer TV series in pipeline as Games Workshop sales soar

Fantasy-figure seller’s shares hit record high as franchise goes from strength to strength

Games Workshop is hoping to replicate the success of hit fantasy TV shows such as The Witcher with a new series based on its Warhammer 40,000 tabletop game.

As the high-street fantasy-figure seller’s shares hit an all-time high, the company said a series based on the Eisenhorn books, set in the game’s dystopian universe, was in development. The novels follow the adventures of the Imperial Inquisitor Gregor Eisenhorn as he scours the galaxy for heretics and demons.

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'Why would I close the door to a queer person?' LGBTQ fantasy comes of age

Futuristic and fantastic fiction has long remained stuck in the past when it comes to sexuality. But a new generation is catching up

We hunger for happiness in queer stories. Many critically acclaimed novels about LGBTQ life have explored and challenged homophobia: James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room, Alice Walker’s The Color Purple, and Alan Hollinghurst’s The Swimming-Pool Library are all classics, with more recent examples including 2019’s On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong and I Wish You All the Best by Mason Deaver. There are moments of joy in all of these books, but undeniably queerness is paired with homophobia. Now, though, a new spate of science-fiction and fantasy novels are quietly and gracefully opting instead to imagine worlds where homophobia does not exist.

Fantasy’s default mode still tends to be a faux-medieval past matched with archaic sexual and social codes, while sci-fi authors often imagine brave new worlds where a man will happily have sex with an alien, but not another man. However, many writers are solving one of the largest blocks for queer romance by simply doing away with homophobia in their fictional universes. In 2019 alone, we had Ann Leckie’s The Raven Tower, with a trans protagonist whose trans-ness is interrogated as important but not other; Tamsyn Muir’s Gideon the Ninth, starring the best cast of lesbians the world has ever seen; Arkady Martine’s A Memory Called Empire, which makes space in its epic sci-fi plot for a romance between two women; and Jennifer Giesbrecht’s The Monster of Elendhaven, in which the central gay couple break every norm – except their universe’s rules on sexuality, because there aren’t any.

A fantasy editor said, ‘I love this book, but in order for me to publish it in my line, Alec has to be a girl.’

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Monday, January 13, 2020

British-Trinidadian dub poet Roger Robinson wins TS Eliot prize

Judges praise A Portable Paradise for finding evidence of ‘sweet, sweet life’ in the bitterness of everyday experience

Roger Robinson, the British-Trinidadian dub poet, has won the prestigious TS Eliot prize on his first nomination for his collection A Portable Paradise.

The only poetry award judged solely by established poets, the £25,000 TS Eliot prize has been described by the former poet laureate, Sir Andrew Motion, as “the prize most poets want to win”.

Related: Intolerance is rising in Europe, but can writers find hope? – books podcast

Published with permission of Peepal Tree Press.

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Watergate reporter Bob Woodward writing follow-up to Trump book Fear

The Watergate reporter Bob Woodward is writing a follow-up to Fear, his 2018 bestseller on the Trump White House – and this time, the president has decided to talk.

Related: Impeachment: Trump fumes as Pelosi prepares to send articles to the Senate

Related: Fear review: Bob Woodward's dragnet descends on Donald Trump

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Saturday, January 11, 2020

William Gibson: ‘I was losing a sense of how weird the real world was'

The writer who invented ‘cyberspace’ – and possibly the most influential living sci-fi author – on the challenges of keeping up with a reality even stranger than fiction

In 2016, William Gibson was a third of the way through his new novel when Donald Trump was elected president of the United States. “I woke up the day after that and I looked at the manuscript and the world in which the novel was set – a contemporary novel set in San Francisco – and I realised that that world no longer existed. That the characters’ emotional basis made no sense; that no one’s behaviour made any sense. Something of this tremendous enormity had just happened and I felt really lost – and sort of mournful. I was losing this book.”

The great chronicler of the future had been overtaken by events. This had happened once before. Gibson had been 100 pages into Pattern Recognition – the first of his novels set in a near contemporary version of reality – when the Twin Towers fell, forcing him to rewrite that novel’s world and the backstories of its characters. His future had to catch up with the present.

If someone claiming to be from the future had shown me Boris Johnson I’d have told him to fuck off

Every fiction about the future is like an ice-cream cone, melting as it moves into the future

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From Nick Cave's suit to Iced Vovos with Kevin Rudd: how Authors for Fireys is funding bushfire relief

Cave is offering a signed copy of The Sick Bag Song and one of his suits while Benjamin Law auctioned off dinner with himself and David Marr

Nick Cave, Kevin Rudd, Cheryl Strayed, Peter Carey, Jeff VanderMeer, Benjamin Law and dozens of other authors are auctioning signed copies of their books, one-of-a-kind memorabilia and the opportunity to pick their brains as part of a Twitter-based auction to raise money for bushfire relief.

I'm beside myself to announce that we have a last-minute auction from writer/muso NICK CAVE for #AuthorsForFireys. Yes that's right! He's donated a signed copy of The Sick Bag Song (a great insight into the way he works) + one of his suits! *swoon* Get onto it! cc @mrbenjaminlaw pic.twitter.com/88zzBvYi6l

And Andy takes the lead! https://t.co/4x0G3AAfkr

Related: Beautiful gestures: the good news stories coming out of Australia's bushfires

I’m jumping into #AuthorsForFireys with an illustrated The Ocean at the End of the Lane signed by @neilhimself and dedicated by me to the winning bidder ❤️ AND a limited ed. print of Ocean, signed by Neil and myself. Bids in AUD below... Show your love for our fireys please! pic.twitter.com/qyX0Vea7Lo

Here we go folks… #AuthorsForFireys
Highest bid for our volunteers wins:
’Not for the Faint-Hearted’ & ‘PM Years’
Signed Kevin07 shirt
Autographed handballs
Signed Apology text
➕Your choice: we play handball or chat over tea & Iced Vovos
Bid in replies. Ends 11pm AEST. https://t.co/Q7w3NAEOaZ pic.twitter.com/Fh8enTNfnD

Related: Terror, hope, anger, kindness: the complexity of life as we face the new normal

#AuthorsForFireys bidders, the official master spreadsheet of 400+ auctions is up on the fundraiser website now!

Many thanks to @EmilyGale @msmisrule @kmjgardiner @AnnaWhateley for compiling it#AuthorsForFirieshttps://t.co/s6GE7WC184 https://t.co/reJuaNVwZo

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Friday, January 10, 2020

Peter Dutton's office referred complaint accusing Bruce Pascoe of falsely claiming to be Indigenous to AFP

Allegation about Dark Emu author was made in a letter to Home Affairs by Aboriginal businesswoman Josephine Cashman

The Australian federal police has received a complaint via the office of the home affairs minister, Peter Dutton, that accuses the acclaimed author and historian Bruce Pascoe of benefitting financially from incorrectly claiming to be Indigenous.

Related: Dark Emu's infinite potential: 'Our kids have grown up in a fog about the history of the land'

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Neil Gaiman leads Hampshire writers protesting library cuts

Proposals to close 14 of the county’s 52 public libraries are symptoms of a society turning its back on culture and community, say authors

Hampshire’s most famous literary resident, Jane Austen, must be spinning in her grave at the council’s mooted plans to close up to 14 of the county’s 52 libraries, according to local authors protesting the move.

Hampshire county council, which currently runs 48 libraries and supports a further four community-managed branches, said on Thursday that it is facing an anticipated budget shortfall of £80m by April 2021, and must cut £1.76m from its library budget. To this end, it is consulting on proposals that include closing up to 14 libraries, including the withdrawal of support from four community-managed sites, or reducing opening hours across the board.

Related: Neil Gaiman and Chris Riddell on why we need libraries – an essay in pictures

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Don Winslow and Stephen King offer $200K if White House holds a press briefing

Writers promise charity donations if press secretary agrees to ‘do her job’ and field journalists’ questions after 300-day hiatus

Bestselling novelists Stephen King and Don Winslow have offered to donate $200,000 (£153,000) to a children’s hospital if the White House press secretary, Stephanie Grisham, will hold a press conference.

White House press briefings used to be a regular affair, but the last one was held more than 300 days ago, according to CNN, by Grisham’s predecessor in the role, Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Instead, Donald Trump prefers informal huddles with reporters, with his spokespeople appearing on sympathetic television channels to put their points across. Grisham told Fox and Friends in September that “a lot of reporters were doing [press briefings] to get famous”, and there were no plans to bring the briefing back in the near future.

Related: 'Mexico's drug problem is America's': crime legend Don Winslow – books podcast

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The best recent science fiction and fantasy – review roundup

The God Game by Danny Tobey; The Conscientious Objector by Stephen Palmer; Fate of the Fallen by Kel Kade; The Shadow Saint by Gareth Hanrahan; and The Glass Breaks by AJ Smith

Danny Tobey’s second novel, The God Game (Gollancz, £16.99), is a fast-paced satirical techno-thriller examining the fault lines of morality within a group of five Texan teenagers. Grieving the death of his mother and negotiating a fraught relationship with his father, 17-year-old Charlie finds himself drawn into a dangerously compelling online game with a controller that calls itself God. Charlie and his nerdish friends become the playthings of an artificial intelligence that sends them out on missions in the real world. Tempting them with cash and other rewards, the AI gradually inveigles the group into committing morally dubious acts, leading to betrayal and even the threat of death. Tobey brilliantly captures the immersive, claustrophobic atmosphere of the malign game and its addictive allure for a collection of flawed and needy characters. Slick, pared-down prose and short chapters propel the reader towards a disturbing climax.

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John le Carré wins $100,000 prize for 'contribution to democracy'

Spy author, who rarely accepts honours, says he will give the Olof Palme prize money to Médecins Sans Frontières

John le Carré has been named the latest recipient of the $100,000 (£76,000) Olof Palme prize, an award given for an “outstanding achievement” in the spirit of the assassinated Swedish prime minister.

Related: 'My ties to England have loosened': John le Carré on Britain, Boris and Brexit

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Thursday, January 9, 2020

Trump announces plan to acquire a book – about himself

President said Thursday – while announcing a rollback of environmental regulations – that he plans to read Donald J Trump: An Environmental Hero

Donald Trump is going to acquire a book.

The book in question, as Gizmodo reported on Thursday, is titled Donald J Trump: An Environmental Hero, by Edward Russo. And the shocking news emerged as the president announced a rollback of environmental regulations at the White House, taking an ax to the environmental review process required for infrastructure projects. The move, which he pitched as a way around “endless delays” to various projects, poses a new threat to the climate and is likely to face legal challenges.

Related: The presidential library: 10 books Trump recommended this year

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‘People are so happy we exist’: indie bookshops grow despite retail slump

After decades of decline, the sector has recorded three years of expansion. Some of the newest booksellers explain how they’re bucking the book market

James Ashmore admits that he and his wife Louise “had a good five minutes of just smelling all the books” when the stock arrived for their new independent bookshop, Read., in Holmfirth, West Yorkshire.

“It’s like when you get a book for Christmas, but we got 35 boxes which we cracked open. It was brilliant,” he says. “It was so tempting to just sit down and read them, but putting them on shelves was one of the best things. Books are so gorgeous to look at.”

High street closures in 2019

Related: Unputdownable! The bookshops Amazon couldn't kill

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Wednesday, January 8, 2020

A Case of Exploding Mangoes 'targeted by authorities after Urdu translation'

Mohammed Hanif reports that his Pakistani publisher was raided not long after his 2008 satire became available in the national language

Copies of a decade-old, Booker-longlisted satire about the death of Pakistan’s military dictator General Zia ul-Haq has been seized in a raid on the offices of its Pakistani publisher just weeks after it was finally translated into Urdu, according to its author Mohammed Hanif.

Hanif, a British Pakistani journalist and author, attributed the raid to “some people claiming to be from the ISI”, Pakistan’s military spy agency the Inter-Services Intelligence directorate. They “barged into my Urdu publisher Maktaba Daniyal offices [and] confiscated all copies of Urdu translation of A Case of Exploding Mangoes,” Hanif said on Twitter, adding that they also threatened the publisher’s manager, demanded information about his whereabouts and threatened to return the next day to get lists of booksellers selling the novel.

Related: Mohammed Hanif: ‘To write about politics in Pakistan, you have to go abroad’

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Haunts of the Black Masseur author Charles Sprawson dies aged 78

The author of ‘the best book about swimming ever written’ had been suffering from vascular dementia

Charles Sprawson, author of the cult swimming classic Haunts of the Black Masseur, has died at the age of 78.

The news was announced by Sprawson’s friend and fellow author Alex Preston, who called him “a majestic writer, a brilliant mind, a great friend”, and Haunts of the Black Masseur “the best book about swimming, perhaps the best book about any sport, ever written”.

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Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Elizabeth Wurtzel, journalist and author of Prozac Nation, dead at 52

Writer of bestselling memoir about clinical depression died from metastatic breast cancer on Tuesday

Elizabeth Wurtzel, journalist and author of bestselling memoir Prozac Nation, has died at the age of 52.

Writer David Samuels, Wurtzel’s friend since childhood, told the New York Times that Wurtzel had died from metastatic breast cancer in Manhattan on Tuesday. Wurtzel, who tested positively for the BRCA genetic mutation, was an vocal advocate for BRCA testing in her journalism, all the while maintaining a defiant attitude in the face of pity. Writing in the Guardian in 2018, she noted: “I hate it when people say that they are sorry about my cancer. Really? Have they met me? I am not someone that you feel sorry for. I am the original mean girl. I now have stage-four upgrade privileges. I can go right to the front. But it’s always been like this. I am a line-cutter. Which is to say, I was precocious. I was early for history.”

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John Boyne defends work from criticism by Auschwitz memorial

After airing his worries about ‘Holocaust genre’ fiction, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas author has been accused of ‘perpetuating dangerous myths’ himself

The Auschwitz-Birkenau Holocaust memorial museum has said that John Boyne’s children’s novel The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas “should be avoided by anyone who studies or teaches the history of the Holocaust”, after the author criticised the spate of recent novels set in the concentration camp.

The museum made the comment after Boyne criticised the current ubiquity of novels with names such as The Tattooist of Auschwitz, The Saboteur of Auschwitz, The Librarian of Auschwitz and The Brothers of Auschwitz. Boyne had tweeted: “I can’t help but feel that by constantly using the same three words, & then inserting a noun, publishers & writers are effectively building a genre that sells well, when in reality the subject matter, & their titles, should be treated with a little more thought & consideration.”

Related: The Tattooist of Auschwitz attacked as inauthentic by camp memorial centre

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Romantic fiction awards cancelled after racism row prompts mass boycott

The 2019 Rita awards for romance writing have been pulled after more than 300 books were withdrawn from competition in protest

The US’s most prestigious awards for romance writing, the Ritas, have been cancelled after a host of judges and entrants pulled out over an ongoing racism row involving the industry’s largest trade group, the Romance Writers of America.

As of Tuesday morning, more than 300 books had been withdrawn from the contest by authors who were critical of the RWA’s recent decision to discipline romance author Courtney Milan over her public criticism of passages in Kathryn Lynn Davis’s Somewhere Lies the Moon. Milan, a longtime critic of racism in the romance industry, had called Davis’s novel a “racist mess” for its depictions of Chinese women; Davis and her fellow romance novelist Suzan Tisdale responded by filing formal ethics complaints with the RWA, alleging Milan was a “bully” who had hurt their careers.

Related: Fifty shades of white: the long fight against racism in romance novels

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Monday, January 6, 2020

Jonathan Coe wins Costa fiction prize for ‘perfect’ Brexit novel

Middle England’s EU referendum story secures the 2019 novel award and goes up against first fiction, poetry and biography for Costa book of the year

Jonathan Coe’s portrait of a Britain torn apart by the Brexit referendum, Middle England, has won the Costa novel award, described by judges as the perfect fiction for these times.

Moving from 2010 to 2018, Middle England features characters including a married couple divided over the EU vote, and an enthusiastic new member of a group called Students for Corbyn. On Monday night, Coe’s state-of-the-nation novel beat books by Sophie Hardach, Rowan Hisayo Buchanan and Joseph O’Connor to the £5,000 prize.

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Sunday, January 5, 2020

What Miss Bennet did next: today’s writers put a fresh twist on Austen

Two centuries after the original novels, authors are still coming up with new scenarios for Jane’s characters – and for the writer herself

Jane Austen’s books are constantly adapted for television and film; her world has spun off into an entire cottage industry where people dress up as her characters and attend Regency-style balls. Now that obsession is set to reach new heights with a host of novels that draw inspiration from the author’s life and fiction.

Coming in the first half of this year are: Gill Hornby’s Miss Austen, reimagining the author through the eyes of her sister Cassandra; Janice Hadlow’s The Other Bennet Sister, asking us to consider Pride and Prejudice’s Mary in a different light; and Helen Moffett’s Charlotte, picking up the story of that same novel’s Charlotte Lucas. All of them are attempts to recreate the Austen universe for different times by means of lesser-known characters, both fictional and real.

It’s a testimony to the power of the original novels that readers feel moved to create something of their own.

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Saturday, January 4, 2020

White romance novelist in racism row says she was 'used'

Kathryn Lynn Davis says in Guardian interview trade association ‘encouraged’ her to file a complaint against Courtney Milan

A white romance novelist’s ethics complaint against the author Courtney Milan for calling her book a “racist mess” led to the censure of Milan and sparked an uproar across the publishing world. Now the novelist, Kathryn Lynn Davis, says that her original complaint about the professional harm she suffered was not accurate.

In an interview with the Guardian, Davis said she was “encouraged” by the administration of Romance Writers of America (RWA), a trade association for romance writers, to file a formal complaint against Milan, an influential former board member and diversity advocate. She now feels she had been “used” to secure a political outcome that she had never intended.

Related: Fifty shades of white: the long fight against racism in romance novels

I did not agree with what [Milan] was saying and to apologize for something I did not agree with didn’t make sense to me

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2020 in books: a literary calendar

Sally Rooney’s screenplay, Hilary Mantel’s final Thomas Cromwell novel … what to look out for this year

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Friday, January 3, 2020

Wartime Albert Camus letter lays bare his Vichy-era anguish

Letter found in Gen Charles de Gaulle’s archives written when France was under Nazi control

As France marks the 60th anniversary of the death of Albert Camus on Saturday, a previously unpublished letter written by the Nobel prize winning author during the Nazi occupation, expressing his anguish and uncertainty for the future of the country, has emerged.

In the missive, found in the archives of France’s wartime leader Gen Charles de Gaulle, Camus detailed his fears that the mass killing of so many able-bodied compatriots was also destroying the “lively and vibrant ideas” that would guarantee his country’s future.

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French prosecutors open rape inquiry into author Gabriel Matzneff

New book describes sexual relationship between Matzneff and 14-year-old girl

Paris prosecutors have opened a rape investigation into the author Gabriel Matzneff, a day after the publication of a book detailing his sexual relationship with a girl of 14 more than three decades ago.

The case has attracted huge interest in France, which is only now beginning to scrutinise decades of what are seen by some as permissive attitudes towards sexual exploitation and paedophilia.

Related: French publishing boss claims she was groomed at age 14 by acclaimed author

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Thursday, January 2, 2020

TS Eliot’s hidden love letters reveal intense, heartbreaking affair

‘I tried to pretend that my love for you was dead, though I could only do so by pretending myself that my heart was dead,’ the poet wrote to Emily Hale

TS Eliot’s love letters to scholar Emily Hale, the great poet’s muse and source of “supernatural ecstasy” for more than 30 years, were released on Thursday amid fevered speculation and under tight security at an elegant library on the campus of the Ivy League’s Princeton University.

The Nobel laureate’s correspondence to Hale, whom he met when both were studying at Harvard University in 1912, has long been the fascination of Eliot scholars but remained hidden, on both the poet and Hale’s wishes, for 50 years after Hale’s death in 1969.

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MC Beaton, multimillion-selling author of Agatha Raisin novels, dies aged 83

Fiercely intelligent Scottish writer, who also created detective Hamish Macbeth, did not take kindly to her ‘cosy crime’ reputation

MC Beaton, the prolific creator of the much loved fictional detectives Agatha Raisin and Hamish Macbeth, has died after a short illness at the age of 83.

The news of her death on 30 December was announced by her son, Charles Gibbons, who said that “the support of her fans and the success she enjoyed in her later years were a source of great pride and satisfaction to her, and for that I will be eternally grateful”.

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Wednesday, January 1, 2020

TS Eliot’s intimate letters to confidante unveiled after 60 years

Collection of 1,131 letters may shed light on poet’s relationship with Emily Hale

A trove of more than 1,000 letters from Nobel laureate TS Eliot to his confidante and muse Emily Hale is unveiled this week having been kept in sealed boxes at a US university library for 60 years.

The collection promises to offer an intimate insight into the poet’s life and work, and on the extent of his relationship with Hale, a source of speculation for decades.

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Arts Council boss vows more funding for those at early stages of career

Sir Nicholas Serota says east of England and libraries could also be priorities in 10-year plan

More artists, writers and composers at an early stage of their careers should get public money from Arts Council England, the body’s chairman, Sir Nicholas Serota, has said.

The east of England could also benefit from extra investment in the coming years and libraries are set to get more help to play a larger role in their communities.

Related: No more DCMS? Why Nicky Morgan staying as boss does not mean business as usual

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