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Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Trump niece book blocked by New York judge but lawyer promises appeal

President’s brother, Robert Trump, is trying to stop publication of niece’s ‘revelatory’ tell-all book

An attorney for Mary Trump promised an immediate appeal on Tuesday after a judge in New York issued a preliminary injunction to stop Donald Trump’s niece publishing a book about the family.

In a statement, lawyer Ted Boutrous called the order in a New York supreme court in Dutchess county “a prior restraint on core political speech that flatly violates the first amendment” and promised an immediate appeal.

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Monday, June 29, 2020

Evaristo and Carty-Williams become first black authors to win top British Book awards

Candice Carty-Williams and Bernardine Evaristo take book of the year and author of the year categories, as publishers face criticism for treatment of black authors

Candice Carty-Williams and Bernardine Evaristo have become the first black authors to win the top prizes at the British Book awards, landing the book of the year and author of the year gongs respectively.

Carty-Williams took the book of the year accolade on Monday night for Queenie, her debut novel about a young black woman navigating life and love in London. She beat titles including Three Women by Lisa Taddeo and My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite to the award, which is judged on quality of writing, innovation of publishing, and sales.

Related: Candice Carty-Williams: ‘When I was growing up, humour was a deflection’

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Trump's brother tries again to block niece's tell-all book after failed attempt

Robert Trump takes his bid to stop publication of Mary Trump’s Too Much and Never Enough to the New York supreme court

Donald Trump’s brother is making a second attempt to block publication of the much-anticipated book by their niece Mary Trump, about “the damaged man who currently occupies the Oval Office”, shortly after his first lawsuit was dismissed.

Robert Trump’s attempt to stop Mary’s memoir Too Much and Never Enough was dismissed in a Queens county court in New York on 25 June, with surrogate court judge Peter Kelly calling the bid to stop the book “fatally defective”. However, Robert Trump filed another motion in New York State supreme court in Dutchess County on 26 June. As well as seeking to block publication, the lawsuit is looking for potential damages and for a declaration that Mary has breached the confidentiality agreement she signed in 2001, relating to litigation over her grandfather Fred Trump’s will.

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Author and festival director Caro Llewellyn appointed CEO of Melbourne's Wheeler Centre

Michael Williams stepped down in March after a decade as director of the centre for books, writing and ideas

Caro Llewellyn has written books, run writers festivals of all shapes and sizes, and seen her name appear on the Stella prize shortlist. In July, her career will take another major step – as the new head of Melbourne’s Wheeler Centre.

Llewellyn will take over from Michael Williams, who stepped down in March after a decade as director of the centre for books, writing and ideas.

Related: Alison Lester, beloved author and illustrator, is here to answer your child's questions

Related: My mother taught me the joy of reading. I remember her through books

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Sunday, June 28, 2020

Ask a children's author: author and illustrator Alison Lester wants to hear your questions – video

In Guardian Australia’s interview series, we're letting kids take control. If your child is a fan of Alison Lester’s books, with a burning query for her, please post it in the comments section of this article – or email the question (or a video of it!) to australia.culture@theguardian.com by Monday 6 July. We'll compile the best questions – and Lester’s responses – in a video out the following week.

Past episodes: 

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Alison Lester, beloved author and illustrator, is here to answer your child's questions

Her books, including My Farm, Imagine, and Magic Beach, are adored by younger readers. Now she’s answering their questions – send them in by Monday 6 July

In Guardian Australia’s series, Ask A Children’s Author, writers open themselves up to questions from their young readers – about their books, about their characters, about anything at all, really.

First up was Andy Griffiths – the author of the Bad Book series, the Bum series and, of course, the number one bestselling 13-Storey Treehouse series – who answered all manner of questions about writing, about his next book, and about whether or not his bum has ever come off.

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Michael Rosen: ‘I am only finding out now how I was saved from coronavirus’

Home at last after seven weeks in intensive care, the poet pays tribute to ‘incredible’ NHS doctors and nurses

The poet Michael Rosen is only alive because his wife, Emma-Louise Williams, and a GP friend recognised that his condition was deteriorating and took him to A&E in the nick of time, he told the Observer Magazine in an emotional interview this weekend.

Rosen, 74, who came down with coronavirus in mid-March, returned home last week after spending 48 days in intensive care at the Whittington hospital in north London. He spent a further three weeks on a rehabilitation ward, learning to walk again.

He is the kindest, most expressive, hardworking, articulate, laughter-inducing, tear-jerking poet in the business

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Saturday, June 27, 2020

Lee Child on Jack Reacher: 'I don't like him that much'

Author says he takes a hard-hearted approach to character and planned to kill him off

Jack Reacher has millions of fans all over the world, but his creator, Lee Child, has revealed he doesn’t “like Reacher that much” and originally planned to end his bestselling thriller series by having his character “bleed out on some filthy motel bathroom floor”.

Child said he had a motto about his 6ft 5in former US army military policeman: “I need to like him less than you’re going to like him.”

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Friday, June 26, 2020

Bestselling novel The Da Vinci Code to hit the stage in London

Dan Brown’s 100m-selling book is being adapted for the theatre for the first time

Renowned author Dan Brown looked on proudly at the stage, which resembled a kind of raised platform made of wood. The blackened silhouettes of the actors dazzled him with their bright blue eyes and ghostly white faces. But as he stared with the eyes located under his side-parted hair, a terrible fear gripped him gently. Was this performance about to become a critical hit? Or would the stage adaption of his novel The Da Vinci Code merely cement his reputation as a terrible writer?

Theatregoers in the UK are about to find out as Brown’s 2003 bestseller hits the stage for the first time next year. The book defied its critics, selling 100m copies despite being described by Salman Rushdie as “a novel so bad that it gives bad novels a bad name”.

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Thursday, June 25, 2020

Diversity in poetry on the rise – but 'resistance to inclusivity' remains

UK report finds magazines and newspapers now featuring twice as many poets and critics of colour as in 2009

The poetry world has made progress on diversity, a new report finds, but “resistance or indifference to inclusivity remains”.

Analysis of British and Irish publications found an overall improvement in the proportion of poets and critics of colour appearing in their pages. Between 2009 and 2016, the newspapers and poetry magazines published review articles by non-white critics 190 times – 4% of the total for those years. Between 2017 and 2019, non-white critics were published 201 times – 9.6% of the total.

Related: War baby: the amazing story of Ocean Vuong, former refugee and prize-winning poet

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Booker foundation vice-president removed after 'homophobia' row

Move comes after Emma Nicholson’s views on same-sex marriage were called attention to by writers, publishers and agents

Emma Nicholson has been removed from her honorary position as vice-president of the Booker Foundation after a groundswell of opposition from the literary world objecting to her allegedly homophobic views.

Lady Nicholson of Winterbourne is the widow of Sir Michael Caine, who helped establish the prestigious British literary prize. Her position as honorary vice-president of the Booker Foundation was challenged by writers led by Damian Barr, who objected to what the novelist and memoirist described as Nicholson’s “very public and very powerful homophobia”, and called for her removal from the post.

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Unfinished story by Little Women author Louisa May Alcott published for first time

Aunt Nellie’s Diary, from author’s ‘sentimental period’, features in Strand magazine with a call for writers to complete it

An early story from a young Louisa May Alcott, in which the Little Women author writes of two teenage girls vying for the attentions of a handsome young man, has been published for the first time.

Written in 1849, when Alcott was 17, Aunt Nellie’s Diary is told from the perspective of a 40-year-old woman bringing up her orphaned niece, Annie. When Annie’s friend Isabel comes to stay, Nellie becomes concerned that the girl’s attractive exterior hides a “darkness within”.

Related: Being Jo March: Little Women finally has an ending grown women deserve | Josephine Tovey

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Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Flipping hell: book designers lament Waterstones' back-to-front displays

Retailer apologises to artists as branches turn books around to help browsers read blurb

It was understandable but slightly “heartbreaking”, designer Anna Morrison said of the news that Waterstones is asking shoppers to judge a book by its back cover.

The retailer has offered its apologies to book designers after some newly reopened branches began displaying books back to front so browsers could read the blurb without picking it up.

Related: 'We're back in business': UK bookshops see sales soar

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Authors call for removal of Booker prize vice-president over 'homophobic' views

Emma Nicholson’s views on same-sex marriage raised as concern by writers and one former Booker winner

Damian Barr is leading a charge of writers, including one former Booker prize winner, who are calling on the Booker Foundation to remove the allegedly “homophobic” peer Emma Nicholson from her position as vice-president.

Lady Nicholson of Winterbourne, who voted against the same-sex marriage bill in 2013, is the widow of the late former chairman of Booker, Sir Michael Caine, who helped establish the prize. She is currently a vice-president of the Booker Foundation, and a former trustee of the prize.

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Michael Rosen home from intensive care after coronavirus

The 74-year-old children’s author tweeted ‘I’ve survived!’ after leaving hospital, having been admitted at the end of March

Michael Rosen has finally made it back home after going into intensive care with Covid-19 at the end of March.

The award-winning and popular poet and children’s author began charting his illness on Twitter in March, writing of “bed-breaking shakes” and “freezing cold sweats”, of “deep muscle exhaustion” and the “image of war hero biting on a hankie, while best mate plunges live charcoal into the wound to cauterise it”. He went into intensive care at the end of the month, with his family warning that he was “very poorly” at the time.

Home! @MichaelRosenYes pic.twitter.com/8rNyjSG275

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George RR Martin predicts penultimate Game of Thrones book will be finished 'next year'

Martin is ‘making steady progress’ on The Winds of Winter, the long-awaited sixth book in his A Song of Ice and Fire series, from isolation in his cabin

As lockdown eases around the world, George RR Martin has revealed he is currently isolating in “an actual cabin in the mountains” and hopes to finish his long-awaited fantasy novel The Winds of Winter “next year”.

Martin said he was spending “long hours every day” working on the book, which will be the sixth in his series A Song of Ice and Fire. Set in the fantasy kingdom of Westeros and its environs, peopled by warring factions, occasional dragons and direwolves, the bestselling fantasy series was adapted by HBO into the television series Game of Thrones. Although the television storyline concluded a year ago, fans have been waiting for The Winds of Winter, the penultimate book in the series before A Dream of Spring, since the publication of A Dance With Dragons in 2011.

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Top 10 books about remaking the future | Peter F Hamilton

The urgent need to reorganise life on Earth is clear to almost everyone, how we do it less so. Fortunately science fiction has drawn up some good plans

There is no consensus on what constitutes a better future or how to cultivate one – such nebulous concepts can really only be interpreted through the prism of personal situation. Clean energy, universal access to medical services and education, being well clothed, well fed and having basic rights are some of the essentials any civilised individual would ask for before branching off into their own wish list. 

Right now, in the midst of lockdown, the overriding drive is, understandably, for a return to normality and the stability it brings. But there is a growing awareness that things cannot carry on as before. We are more mindful of the natural world and the effect we’ve had on it, conscious of how other people matter to us, and awake to consumerism’s unearned dominance in our lives. We need to examine the potential for more enduring and sustainable futures. And science fiction certainly spends plenty of time looking for future paradises, even if we don’t always get there.

Salvation Lost by Peter F Hamilton is out now in paperback, and Saints of Salvation is available to pre-order in hardback for October (Pan Macmillan).

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Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Trump family tries to block publication of book by president's niece – report

Court papers say Mary Trump previously signed a non-disclosure agreement and the book violates its terms, New York Times reports

Donald Trump’s family has gone to court to try to block publication of a tell-all book by the US president’s niece, Mary Trump, the New York Times reported.

According to her publisher, New York-based Simon & Schuster, Mary Trump’s book will describe “a nightmare of traumas, destructive relationships, and a tragic combination of neglect and abuse” within the Trump clan.

Related: Trump faces pressure to reset campaign after Tulsa rally caps gloomy week

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'We're back in business': UK bookshops see sales soar

First week back after shops reopened in England on 15 June saw almost 4m books sold, with Reni Eddo-Lodge’s anti-racism book still topping the charts

Almost 4m books were sold in the UK in the first six days after bookshops reopened last week – a jump of over 30% on the same week last year as desperate readers returned to browse the aisles for the first time in three months.

Bricks and mortar bookshops in England were able to open to shoppers on 15 June for the first time since they closed their doors in March, in response to the coronavirus pandemic. According to the UK’s official sales monitor Nielsen BookScan, which has not been able to report sales figures since 21 March “due to the unprecedented temporary closure of bookshops”, 3.8m print books were sold in the week to 20 June, for a value of £33m. This is up 31% in both volume and value compared to the same week last year, even with bookshops in Scotland and Wales still closed over the period. It is the highest value performance for the year’s 25th week since 2003, when Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix was released, according to the Bookseller.

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Nigerian ex-Eton pupil says he will return to accept racism apology

Novelist Dillibe Onyeama wrote book about abuse received during time at elite school

• Contains language some readers may find offensive

A Nigerian novelist who was one of Eton’s first black students says he will visit the school after the current headmaster apologised for the “appalling” racism he experienced in the 1960s and extended an invitation.

Dillibe Onyeama says he was shocked by the school’s offer of an apology, but would return as long as Eton covered the cost of his travel and accommodation. He said: “Who is going to pay for the trip? If they want to pay for the airfare, the hotel and everything else, then I would be happy to go.”

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Charles Dickens webchat: post your questions for Kathryn Hughes now

The author of acclaimed books about eminent Victorians will join us on 29 June at 1pm to discuss the subject of this month’s reading group. Post your questions in the comments below now

Reading group: Our Mutual Friend

Kathryn Hughes will join us for a webchat about Charles Dickens, the subject of this month’s reading group, on 29 June at 1pm.

Kathryn Hughes is the professor of life writing at the University of East Anglia, a fine literary critic and the author of several acclaimed books about eminent Victorians and Victorian life.

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‘Black and Asian people not seen as readers’: Bernardine Evaristo condemns books industry

In foreword to report into diversity in publishing, Booker prize-winning author rails against ‘ridiculous’ beliefs

Bernardine Evaristo, the first black woman to win the Booker prize, has hit out at “ridiculous” and “misguided” beliefs in the publishing industry, where “black and Asian people are not considered to be a substantial readership, or to even be readers”.

Evaristo, writing the foreword for the UK’s first academic study into diversity in trade fiction and publishing, released on Tuesday, said the report showed that the UK books industry “hasn’t changed fast enough to become more inclusive”. A key finding of the study was that writers of colour and their books are “either whitewashed or exoticised” to appeal to what UK publishing sees as its core audience of white, middle-class readers.

Literature transcends all perceived differences and barriers. It’s partly the point of it

Related: Black Writers’ Guild calls for sweeping change in UK publishing

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Monday, June 22, 2020

Authors quit JK Rowling agency over transgender rights

Writers had asked company ‘to reaffirm their commitment to transgender rights and equality’

Four authors represented by JK Rowling’s literary agency have resigned after accusing the company of declining to issue a public statement of support for transgender rights.

Fox Fisher, Drew Davies and Ugla Stefanía Kristjönudóttir Jónsdóttir said they could no longer work with the Blair Partnership, the London-based agency that represents all aspects of the Harry Potter author’s work, because they were not convinced the company “supports our rights at all avenues”. One other author is understood to have also quit the agency but wishes to remain anonymous.

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Sunday, June 21, 2020

Trump adviser Navarro blasts John Bolton's 'silly' China claim

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro fired back at John Bolton on Sunday, seeking to rubbish a key claim in the former national security adviser’s bombshell new book, that Donald Trump asked Chinese President Xi Jinping for help in winning re-election.

Related: Trump's Berman-SDNY disaster suggests William Barr is not so smart after all | Lloyd Green

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Friday, June 19, 2020

The Shadow of the Wind and the remarkable success of Carlos Ruiz Zafón

Although modelled on the storytelling of Dickens and Tolstoy, his enormously popular novels were sharply attuned to our times

Although all of Carlos Ruiz Zafón’s most successful books were published in the 21st century – The Shadow of the Wind, the first of the quartet on which his reputation rests, appeared in Spanish in 2001, and in English three years later – he was, at heart, a 19th-century novelist. His aim, in which he succeeded, was to emulate the narratively propulsive but socially reflective fiction of Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins and Leo Tolstoy.

Another pivotal influence was even more distant: back to the start of the 17th century and the book often regarded as the birth of the modern novel: Don Quixote, written by a compatriot, Miguel de Cervantes. It was often said in Spain that Ruiz Zafón was Cervantes’ only equal in literary impact, and the later writer’s fiction genuflected to that of his predecessor, especially in digressive style, tales within tales, and multiple subplots.

Related: Carlos Ruiz Zafón, author of The Shadow of the Wind, dies aged 55

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Pen America files brief opposing Trump's attempt to block Bolton book

‘Pen America supports first amendment right of employees to produce works that are critical of the government,’ brief said

The writers’ organisation Pen America has filed an amicus brief opposing a lawsuit brought by the Trump Organisation in an attempt to block a book by John Bolton, the president’s third national security adviser.

Excerpts of Bolton’s book, The Room Where It Happened, have been widely published since the Department of Justice filed its suit in federal court in Washington DC.

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Ian Holm, star of Lord of the Rings, Alien and Chariots of Fire, dies aged 88

The versatile actor went from the RSC and Harold Pinter to international movie stardom with roles as the hobbit Bilbo Baggins and an android in Alien

Ian Holm, the versatile actor who played everything from androids to hobbits via Harold Pinter and King Lear, has died in London aged 88, his agent confirmed to the Guardian.

“It is with great sadness that the actor Sir Ian Holm CBE passed away this morning at the age of 88,” they said. “He died peacefully in hospital, with his family and carer,” adding that his illness was Parkinson’s related. “Charming, kind and ferociously talented, we will miss him hugely.”

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Democrats and Republicans react to John Bolton's bombshell book on Trump – video

Political figures have criticised Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, John Bolton, for his new book, The Room Where It Happened, which makes a series of explosive claims about the US president.

Democrat speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, echoed Bolton in saying Trump was 'unfit' to be president but added that the Republican 'chose loyalty over patriotism'

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Carlos Ruiz Zafón, author of The Shadow of the Wind, dies aged 55

The bestselling novelist, who was frequently described as the most-read Spanish author since Cervantes, had been diagnosed with colon cancer

Carlos Ruiz Zafón, the Spanish author of internationally bestselling novels including The Shadow of the Wind, has died at the age of 55.

The novelist, who was frequently described as the most-read Spanish author since Cervantes, died on Friday at his home in Los Angeles, his publisher Planeta announced. According to Spanish language reports, Ruiz Zafón had been suffering from colon cancer for the last two years.

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The Sunken Land Begins to Rise Again by M John Harrison review – brilliantly unsettling

Harrison is fabulously alert to the spaces between things in this novel of collapsing certainties in a haunted England

Towards the end of the last century, there was a spate of haunted London novels, by Iain Sinclair, Peter Ackroyd and Chris Petit among others. Broadly psychogeographic in nature, they featured middle-aged men washed up on the outer reaches of the Thames, part of the detritus of a city ravaged by Thatcherism. In 1989, the science fiction writer M John Harrison took this mood and drove it out of London, crash-landing in the Yorkshire hills with the magnificently unsettling Climbers, a novel about an unhappy exile named Mike struggling to keep his footing among a group of temerarious local climbers.

Harrison described this real, gritty world with the same precise and estranging fluency with which he has more often mapped galactic space, using the dense idiolect of climbing to make atmosphere and geology resonate on an emotional, interior level. Some kind of breach or fault line was being cautiously staked out, a post-industrial, late-capitalist collapse in credit and confidence so amorphous and inarticulable that it would vanish altogether if apprehended too directly. 

Maybe something ancient and atavistic has awoken, or perhaps a con has been perpetuated

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Thursday, June 18, 2020

John Bolton's bad reviews don't stop him topping US book charts

The Room Where It Happened, due out later this month if attempts to block publication fail, has received stinging early notices but is already Amazon’s No 1

John Bolton’s damning indictment of the Trump presidency is topping bestseller charts in the US a week before its release, despite withering reviews describing it as “bloated with self-importance”, as the Trump administration makes a last-ditch attempt to prevent its publication.

In the teeth of a series of critical assessments from papers including the New York Times and the Washington Post, Bolton’s The Room Where It Happened is currently No 1 on Amazon’s US charts. Its sales are just ahead of another scathing take on Donald Trump, this time his niece Mary Trump’s forthcoming Too Much and Never Enough, which is subtitled How My Family Created the World’s Most Dangerous Man. Bolton’s book, which is out on 23 June, and Mary Trump’s, scheduled for 28 July, have knocked anti-racism titles by authors including Ibram X Kendi, Ijeoma Oluo and Robin DiAngelo off the top spots.

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Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Shaun Tan becomes first BAME author to win Kate Greenaway medal

Tales from the Inner City wins illustration prize, while Anthony McGowan takes the Carnegie medal for his novel Lark

Australian artist Shaun Tan has become the first person of colour to win the Kate Greenaway medal, while Anthony McGowan has won the Carnegie medal, the UK’s oldest and most prestigious awards for children’s books.

On Wednesday night, Tan was announced as the winner of the Kate Greenaway medal for illustrated children’s books, which was established in 1956 and has been won in the past by some of the biggest names in the genre, including Edward Ardizzone, Helen Oxenbury and Raymond Briggs.

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'Change is not happening fast enough': UK publishers promise to tackle inequality

Responding to the newly formed Black Writers’ Guild, all five of the biggest publishers say they will make more room for black authors and staff

The “big five” UK publishing houses have separately acknowledged that “change is not happening fast enough” and that they must do a lot more to address racial inequalities in the books world, highlighted earlier this week by the newly formed Black Writers Guild.

The BWG, which counts major black British authors from Malorie Blackman to Bernardine Evaristo among its members, wrote an open letter to British publishing on Monday. Coming after years of reports exposing the racial inequality in the industry, the letter called for numerous measures, including an audit of books published by black authors and of black publishing staff, and for the companies to address the lack of black executives on their boards.

Related: Black Writers’ Guild calls for sweeping change in UK publishing

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UK creative industries facing £74bn drop in income after lockdown

Report says 400,000 jobs likely to be lost across sectors including music, theatre and art

Britain is facing an irreversible “cultural catastrophe” with a projected £74bn drop in revenue for creative industries and the loss of 400,000 jobs as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Creative Industries Federation commissioned the global forecaster Oxford Economics to research the economic impact of Covid-19 on industries including music, theatre, film, TV, fashion, publishing, architecture, museums and galleries.

The creative industries GVA (gross value added) will fall by £29bn, down 25%, and revenues will drop by £74bn, or 30%.

Despite the job retention scheme, 119,000 permanent workers will be made redundant by the end of the year. An estimated 287,000 freelance roles will also be terminated.

The music industry, hit hard by the collapse in live music and performing, could lose at least £3bn in GVA, or 50% of the total, and 114,000 jobs, or 60% of the total.

Theatres face a £3bn revenue loss (61%) and the loss of 12,000 jobs (26%). The figures do not take into account the reluctance of audiences to return to venues.

The film, TV, radio and photography sectors face a loss of £36bn in revenue (57%), with 102,000 jobs at risk (42%).

Museums and galleries could lose £743m in revenue (9%) and 4,000 jobs (5%). The report says the impact would be mitigated by venues being able to open in July with physical distancing measures in place.

London is projected to experience the biggest drop in creative industries GVA with a £14.6bn (25%) fall. In relative terms, Scotland and north-east England will be hit hardest, with GVA decreases of 39% (£1.7bn) and 37% (£400m) respectively.

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Hancock blames 'Daniel Rashford' slip on Harry Potter

Minister mistakes Man United striker and schools voucher campaigner Marcus Rashford for boy wizard

The UK health secretary, Matt Hancock, has said he may have had “Harry Potter on the mind” when he mistakenly praised “Daniel Rashford” for his work on free school meals.

The Manchester United footballer Marcus Rashford has led a campaign to extend the children’s food voucher scheme into the summer holidays, which forced a change in policy with a £120m fund to feed 1.3 million children in England over the six-week break.

Good to see @MattHancock finally giving credit to footballers and Daniel Rashford in particular pic.twitter.com/b3lcqsTcP7

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Miles Franklin 2020: Tara June Winch, Carrie Tiffany and Tony Birch shortlisted for Australian writing prize

Legacy of colonialism is a key theme in books nominated for 2020’s $60,000 award

Miles Franklin alumni have dominated this year’s shortlist of Australia’s most high-profile literary award, with four previously nominated authors including Carrie Tiffany and Tony Birch repeating past success with new books.

The legacy of colonialism is a key theme in the shortlist for the $60,000 prize, which celebrates fiction “of the highest literary merit” that presents “Australian life in any of its phases”.

Related: The Unmissables: Exploded View by Carrie Tiffany – an unflinching view of abuse from inside a child's mind

Related: ‘I had to be manic’: Tara June Winch on her unmissable new novel – and surviving Andrew Bolt

The White Girl by Tony Birch (University of Queensland Press)

Islands by Peggy Frew (Allen & Unwin)

No One by John Hughes (UWA Publishing)

The Returns by Philip Salom (Transit Lounge)

Exploded View by Carrie Tiffany (Text Publishing)

The Yield by Tara June Winch (Penguin Books Australia)

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Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Trump administration sues to block publication of John Bolton's book

Officials claim book, which is critical of administration, contains classified information and would compromise national security

The Trump administration has sued to block the publication of a forthcoming book by John Bolton, the US president’s former security adviser, about his time in the White House, arguing that it contained classified information and would compromise national security.

The civil lawsuit came one day after Trump said Bolton would be breaking the law if the book were published. Trump fired Bolton last September after roughly 17 months as national security adviser.

Related: Bolton book claims Trump committed other ‘Ukraine-like transgressions’

Related: Bolton book claims Trump committed other ‘Ukraine-like transgressions’

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Book by Trump's niece will detail 'trauma, neglect and abuse' within the family

Publisher says book by Mary L Trump describes Trump’s childhood as ‘a nightmare of traumas and destructive relationships’

New details have emerged about a book by Donald Trump’s niece, which its publisher says will “explain how her uncle became the man who now threatens the world’s health, economic security, and social fabric”.

According to the publisher, the book will describe “a nightmare of traumas, destructive relationships, and a tragic combination of neglect and abuse” that explain the inner workings of “one of the world’s most powerful and dysfunctional families”.

Related: Trump reportedly to take legal action to block John Bolton's tell-all book

Related: Mommy dearest: a psychiatrist puts Donald Trump on the couch

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Reni Eddo-Lodge becomes first black British author to top UK book charts

Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race wins landmark ranking in the wake of worldwide Black Lives Matter protests

Reni Eddo-Lodge has become the first black British author to take the overall No 1 spot in the UK’s official book charts.

Eddo-Lodge’s Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race topped Nielsen BookScan’s UK top 50 in the week to 13 June, making her the first black British author to take the top slot since Nielsen began recording book sales in 2001.

Related: Why I’m no longer talking to white people about race

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Kazuo Ishiguro announces new novel, Klara and the Sun

British novelist to publish first book since his Nobel win, about an ‘Artificial Friend’ who wants to find a human owner

Kazuo Ishiguro’s first novel since he won the Nobel prize for literature, about an artificial being called Klara who longs to find a human owner, will be published in March 2021.

The Remains of the Day author, who won the Nobel in 2017 for novels that the award said “uncovered the abyss beneath our illusory sense of connection with the world” and were driven by a “great emotional force”, will publish Klara and the Sun on 2 March, his UK publisher Faber announced on Tuesday afternoon.

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Monday, June 15, 2020

National Trust buys romantic landscape of Lorna Doone novel

Nine acres in Exmoor includes buildings, rivers and moorland linked to 19th-century tale

It is a place of wooded valleys, tumbling rivers and rugged moorland that was immortalised in the 19th-century novel Lorna Doone, a twisty tale of romance, murder and outlaws by RD Blackmore.

The National Trust announced on Tuesday it had bought nine acres of land in Doone country, including farmhouses and cottages, and is hoping to encourage more visitors to explore this tucked-away area of Exmoor.

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Bloomsday to Zoomsday: James Joyce celebration goes online

Locked down fans of Ulysses from Brazil to Canada and Ireland are finding ways to continue the annual events commemorating the novel

https://facebook.com/events/s/bloomsday-in-lisbon-2020/2908786285913756/?ti=iclJames Joyce fans aren’t put off by the 800-odd pages of Ulysses, so perhaps it isn’t surprising that a little thing like a global lockdown can’t dampen their spirits either.

Bloomsday is an annual celebration marked around the world on 16 June, in honour of the day in 1904 when Leopold Bloom wandered the streets of Dublin in Joyce’s novel. But with fans prevented from walking in Bloom’s footsteps through the Irish capital on the anniversary, breakfasting out a la Bloom on “the inner organs of beasts and fowls”, or attending packed pub readings of Ulysses, they are instead turning to virtual celebrations, from Buenos Aires to Oslo.

Related: Bloomsday quiz: how well do you know your Joyce?

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Black Writers’ Guild calls for sweeping change in UK publishing

More than 100 authors join new body calling for the industry to address deep-seated inequalities in output and personnel

More than 100 writers including Booker winner Bernardine Evaristo, Benjamin Zephaniah and Malorie Blackman have called on all major publishing houses in the UK to introduce sweeping reforms to make the overwhelmingly white industry more inclusive at all levels.

As black authors top the bestseller charts in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests spurred by the killing of George Floyd, the newly formed Black Writers’ Guild (BWG), which counts among its members some of Britain’s best known authors and poets, has written an open letter airing concerns that “British publishers are raising awareness of racial inequality without significantly addressing their own”.

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Donald Trump's niece Mary set to publish explosive book about her family

Too Much and Never Enough, due in August, is expected to detail her role as primary source for exposé of the president’s tax affairs

Donald Trump’s niece, Mary Trump, will publish a “harrowing and salacious” book about the president this August, according to reports.

The Daily Beast revealed on Monday that Mary Trump, the daughter of Donald Trump’s late brother Fred Trump Jr, will release Too Much and Never Enough with Simon & Schuster on 11 August. The timing, a few weeks before this year’s Republican National Convention, means any revelations could be particularly damaging for the president. The book is expected to lay out how she was a primary source for the New York Times’ Pulitzer-winning investigation into Donald Trump’s “dubious tax schemes” during the 1990s and will share “harrowing and salacious” stories about the US president.

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National Book Critics Circle: president and five board members resign amid claims of racism

Departures at predominantly white publishing group follow email exchanges that were made public in screenshots on Twitter

The president and five other board members of the National Book Critics Circle have resigned, amid allegations of racism and violations of privacy.

Related: US books world rocked by racism rows

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Friday, June 12, 2020

Fictional portrait of Jo and Edward Hopper wins Walter Scott prize

£25,000 award for the year’s best historical novel goes to Christine Dwyer Hickey’s The Narrow Land, which depicts the artists’ marriage

Irish author Christine Dwyer Hickey’s exploration of the marriage of the American artists Edward and Jo Hopper has won the £25,000 Walter Scott prize for historical fiction.

Set in 1950, Dwyer Hickey’s The Narrow Land follows Michael, an orphan who has survived a concentration camp, as he is sent to spend the summer on Cape Cod with a boy called Richie and his mother. While there, the boys form an unlikely friendship with the Hoppers.

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US books world rocked by racism rows

Questions over the response of the Poetry Foundation and the National Book Critics Circle to BLM protests have sparked a wave of resignations

The US literary establishment is in turmoil after a wave of resignations from the Poetry Foundation and the National Book Critics Circle over their responses to Black Lives Matter protests.

The Poetry Foundation, established in 2003 after a multimillion dollar donation from the philanthropist Ruth Lilly, had been harshly criticised in a letter from almost 2,000 people, including the award-winning poet Ocean Vuong and many other writers, over its brief response to BLM on 3 June. The Poetry Foundation and Poetry magazine “stand in solidarity with the black community, and denounce injustice and systemic racism”, said the statement, and “as an organisation we recognise that there is much work to be done”.

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Blam! Dennis the Menace and Roger the Dodger to teach British pupils about money

Bank of England and Beano team up in primary school course on financial literacy

Dennis the Menace and the Bash Street Kids could soon be teaching primary children how to manage their pocket money, thanks to an educational tie-up involving the Bank of England and Beano comics.

A 12-lesson course on financial literacy, called Money and Me, will be introduced to English, Scottish and Welsh school curriculums from July, teaching children between the ages of five and 11 the basics of money and how the economy works.

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Michael Rosen returns to Twitter after long battle with coronavirus

Beloved author of We’re Going on a Bear Hunt was in intensive care for 47 days, but as his recovery continues he has resumed tweeting

Michael Rosen has returned to Twitter, as the former children’s laureate continues to recover from Covid-19, thanking his family for meeting the “terrible strain” with “love and care 24 hours”.

Rosen, author of much-loved children’s poems including Chocolate Cake and Don’t, and books including We’re Going on a Bear Hunt, went into intensive care at the end of March, when his family let his followers know he was “very poorly”. He left ICU 47 days later, when his wife, Emma-Louise Williams, told well-wishers that after a long and difficult period, his recovery was continuing on the ward. “He has done so well to get through this but please don’t expect him back here yet,” she wrote on Twitter, where Rosen is known for his energetic commentary on politics, education and language.

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The best recent science fiction, fantasy and horror – review roundup

A Cosmology of Monsters by Shaun Hamill; Stormblood by Jeremy Szal; Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia; Eden by Tim Lebbon; and We Ride the Storm by Devin Madson

Billed as literary horror and with an endorsement from Stephen King, Shaun Hamill’s first novel, A Cosmology of Monsters (Titan, £8.99), won considerable praise on its 2019 US publication. The novel opens with a disturbing first line (“I started collecting my older sister Eunice’s suicide notes when I was seven years old”) and continues in the same tone for more than 400 pages. Set in small-town Texas, it follows the fortunes of the Turner family, who maintain a haunted house open to paying visitors. Narrator Noah Turner chronicles the history of his disturbed clan from the 1970s to the 2000s, during which time they are plagued by Lovecraftian monsters from another dimension. Hamill examines the family members’ tortured reactions to the hauntings as they are beset by tragedy after tragedy: cancer, suicide, disappearances and deaths. It’s a grim ride, by turns moving and harrowing, and not for the faint-hearted.

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JK Rowling: MPs condemn Sun front page as enabling domestic abusers

Newspaper’s front page ‘irresponsible and dangerous’, says MSP, with others joining criticism

Anti-domestic violence campaigners have led criticism of the front page of Friday’s Sun newspaper which has an interview with JK Rowling’s first husband under the headline: “I slapped JK and I’m not sorry”.

A sub-heading describes it as a “sick taunt”. The paper’s treatment of the story was condemned as giving voice to an alleged perpetrator of domestic abuse.

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Thursday, June 11, 2020

Garth Nix answers your questions: on JRR Tolkien, gaming and pronouncing characters' names – video

In an ongoing series, Guardian Australia is getting kids and young adults to do the hard work instead of us – by interviewing their favourite authors. Here, the author of the Old Kingdom/Abhorson, Seventh Tower and Keys to the Kingdom fantasy series opens up about queer representation, perfectionism and his writing tips – and answers curly questions that have been bothering some fans. Nix’s next book, The Left-Handed Booksellers of London Hardcover, will be released in September. Stay tuned to find out who our next author will be

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Merriam-Webster to revise racism definition after woman’s campaign

Kennedy Mitchum, who asked dictionary to update definition, said racism is ‘prejudice combined with social and institutional power’

In a blow to arguments that end with “well, this is the dictionary definition of racism”, the dictionary definition of racism is being revised.

Editors at Merriam-Webster confirmed on Wednesday that they will revise the word’s definition after a campaign by a 22-year-old Drake University graduate, Kennedy Mitchum.

Related: Mothers of black Americans killed by police speak out: ‘Nothing's changed’

Definition of racism

1: a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race

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Black US authors top New York Times bestseller list as protests continue

Michelle Alexander and Ijeoma Oluo among those on list, marking first time top 10 entries are primarily titles on race issues

Black American authors, including Michelle Alexander and Ijeoma Oluo, have surged to the top of the latest New York Times’ bestseller list, marking the first time the top 10 entries on the “combined print and ebook non-fiction list” are primarily titles that focus on race issues in the US.

The new listings come in the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd, a 46-year-old African American man who died when white Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin forcibly kneeled on his neck for more than eight minutes,.

This is striking: "On the most recent New York Times list of best-selling nonfiction in e-books and print, five of the Top 15 titles address racism. . .The week before, there were none."https://t.co/ZGBZHFo4XD

#1 on the NYT bestseller list this week. This was certainly not expected more than two years after publication. I wish that we had bestseller lists this full of Black writers all of the time & not just in times like this, but I'm proud to be in this list with so many of my peers. pic.twitter.com/ZmzWIbuhlW

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Why is JK Rowling speaking out now on sex and gender debate?

What are implications of Harry Potter author’s detailed essay expressing views on transgender law reform?

The Harry Potter author has published a 3,600-word essay which sets out in more detail than before the development of her already well-known stance on sex and gender debates. In it, she reveals for the first time her own experience of serious sexual assault and domestic violence which, Rowling explains, she felt compelled to write about after reading of the Scottish government’s latest progress towards reform of gender recognition laws.

Related: JK Rowling reveals she is survivor of domestic abuse and sexual assault

Related: Eddie Redmayne joins Daniel Radcliffe in opposing JK Rowling's trans comments

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Jane Austen museum under threat due to coronavirus

The heritage site where author wrote all her novels says it could be forced to close for ever because all of its operational budget comes from visitors

The house where Jane Austen completed all six of her novels and lived for the last eight years of her life, is at risk of closing before the end of the year due to the financial pressures of lockdown and is launching an appeal to secure its future.

Lizzie Dunford, director of Jane Austen’s House Museum, in Chawton, Hampshire, said it receives no regular public funding and is dependent on visitors and supporters. When the doors were closed on 20 March due to the coronavirus pandemic, the museum, which employs 16 staff and has 50 volunteers, lost all its income.

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National Theatre announces final free streams including Small Island

The NT’s popular online initiative continues with the ambitious 2019 adaptation of Andrea Levy’s Windrush novel and four more shows

The momentous stage adaptation of Andrea Levy’s Windrush novel Small Island is among the last batch of productions to be streamed by the National Theatre in its popular online programme for audiences during lockdown. The epic 2019 show, adapted by Helen Edmundson and staged by the National’s artistic director Rufus Norris, will be available from 18 June for one week.

The play opened in the National’s huge Olivier theatre just weeks after Levy’s death from cancer and a year on from the government’s apologies for the Home Office’s mistaken decision to classify thousands of long-term British residents as illegal immigrants. The scandal forced many out of their jobs and homes and led to detention and deportation. The Guardian’s Michael Billington called Small Island “a landmark in the National Theatre’s history: a tumultuous epic about first-generation Jamaican immigrants playing to a genuinely diverse audience.”

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HG Wells' The Time Machine reviewed - archive, 11 June 1895

11 June 1895 The time traveller’s revelations are unlikely to excite regret on the part of his readers at having been born 802,000 years too soon

The influence of the author of The Coming Race is still powerful, and no year passes without the appearance of stories which describe the manners and customs of peoples in imaginary worlds, sometimes in the stars above, sometimes in the heart of unknown continents in Australia or at the Pole, and sometimes below the waters under the earth. The latest effort in this class of fiction is The Time Machine, by HG Wells (W Heinemann, pp 152, 1s 6d). By means of a marvellous piece of mechanism the inventor could either travel back through time or travel forward for thousands of years.

Related: Travel in time with HG Wells … inside his favourite library

Related: HG Wells’s prescient visions of the future remain unsurpassed

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Wednesday, June 10, 2020

JK Rowling says she is survivor of domestic abuse and sexual assault

Author reveals experiences in essay after facing criticism over her comments on trans issues

JK Rowling has revealed her experience of domestic abuse and sexual assault for the first time, in a lengthy and highly personal essay written in response to criticism of her public comments on transgender issues.

In a 3,600-word statement published on her website on Wednesday, Rowling described in more detail than ever how she became involved in an increasingly bitter and polarised debate around the concept of gender identity.

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Eddie Redmayne joins Daniel Radcliffe in opposing JK Rowling's trans comments

Actor who played a transition pioneer in The Danish Girl says Fantastic Beasts author’s position on sex ‘erases the identity and dignity of transgender people’

Fantastic Beasts star Eddie Redmayne has joined Harry Potter lead actor Daniel Radcliffe in criticising JK Rowling’s recent comments about trans people.

In a statement to Variety magazine, Redmayne said: “Respect for transgender people remains a cultural imperative, and over the years I have been trying to constantly educate myself.”

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Black British authors top UK book charts in wake of BLM protests

Bernardine Evaristo and Reni Eddo-Lodge take No 1 slots in wake of anti-racist demonstrations, as Waterstones staff ask chain to support cause

Bernardine Evaristo and Reni Eddo-Lodge have become the first black British women to top the UK’s fiction and nonfiction paperback charts, in a week where black authors lined up to slam British publishing as a “hostile environment”, and as bookshop chain Waterstones is being urged by staff to donate to the Black Lives Matter movement in the wake of soaring sales of black authors.

Evaristo’s Booker-winning novel Girl, Woman, Other topped the paperback fiction chart this week, making her the first woman of colour to take that spot. And Eddo-Lodge topped the paperback nonfiction chart with her 2017 book Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race, making her the first black British author to hold the spot. Barack and Michelle Obama have both topped the hardback nonfiction charts, as has British chef Lorraine Pascale.

Related: Do the work: an anti-racist reading list | Layla F Saad

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Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Police violence, heritage and love: Forward poetry prizes reveal shortlists 'made to last'

Native American poet Natalie Diaz among contenders for best collection award with Postcolonial Love Poem, alongside Pascale Petit and Caroline Bird

A poetic exploration of the wounds the US has inflicted on its indigenous people, written by one of the few remaining speakers of the Mojave language, has made the shortlist for the prestigious Forward prize for best collection.

As Black Lives Matter protests sweep the world in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd, Natalie Diaz – a MacArthur “Genius” grant recipient and former professional basketball player – writes in her collection, Postcolonial Love Poem, of police violence against Native Americans. In her poem American Arithmetic, she notes that “Native Americans make up less than / 1 percent of the population of America”, but “Police kill Native Americans more / than any other race”.

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Neil Gaiman and Chris Riddell announce new 'piratical adventure'

Pirate Stew will reunite the novelist and the illustrator in a rhyming tale for children due out this autumn

Neil Gaiman has dug out a story he first wrote on a scrap of paper more than a decade ago and turned it into a new book for “anyone of any age who likes pirates, cooking, swashbuckling and/or doughnuts”.

The American Gods and Good Omens author’s rhyming Pirate Stew, out in October, will be illustrated by the former UK children’s laureate Chris Riddell. Gaiman has previously collaborated with Riddell on titles including The Graveyard Book, Coraline and Fortunately, the Milk, with characters from the latter set to appear in the forthcoming book.

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'Trans women are women': Daniel Radcliffe speaks out after JK Rowling tweets

Harry Potter star responds to controversy after the author is accused of transphobia

The Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe has spoken out over JK Rowling’s recent comments about the transgender community and said he hopes they will not “taint” the series for fans.

The statement comes in response to a series of controversial tweets from Rowling over the weekend.

Related: JK Rowling in row over court ruling on transgender issues

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Monday, June 8, 2020

#Publishingpaidme: authors share advances to expose racial disparities

Fantasy author LL McKinney sets off trend for authors to reveal the amounts paid for their work, pointing to stark differences between ethnicities

Authors from Roxane Gay to Matt Haig have been sharing what they were paid to write their books in order to highlight the disparity between what black and white writers earn from their publishers.

Started by black fantasy author LL McKinney, the #publishingpaidme hashtag called on white authors to share what they had been paid by publishers, with many major names weighing in with their advances.

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Comedy Women in Print prize unveils mythbusting shortlist

Marian Keyes, chairing this year’s judges, says finalists ‘showcase different ways that women are funny’ and challenge belief that women can’t write comic fiction

Marian Keyes has hailed the “glorious” range of the 2020 shortlist for the Comedy Women in Print prize, but admitted “it’s going to take a long time before that whole ridiculous myth that women aren’t funny is done away with”.

The prize was set up by the writer and comedian Helen Lederer in 2018, after Keyes accused the Wodehouse award for comic fiction of a “sexist imbalance”. Only four women have won the Wodehouse prize in its 20-year history.

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Sunday, June 7, 2020

Revealed: how Dickens’ Nancy became a battle between ratings and realism

Unseen edits show that the earthiness of the ‘harlot with a heart’ in Oliver Twist was toned down for the Victorian reader

Nancy, Oliver Twist’s only true ally in the backstreets of Charles Dickens’ London, is the big-hearted “fallen woman” at the emotional core of one of the best-loved stories in the English language. Yet Dickens was unsure just how “coarse” to make her portrayal, it is revealed this month with the publication of the original manuscript of the 1837 novel to mark the 150th anniversary of the great writer’s death.

Unseen edits in Dickens’ manuscript, printed for the first time with all its surviving pages by SP Books, in a collaboration between the Charles Dickens Museum and the V&A, show how Dickens pulled back from painting Nancy too garishly. His campaigning instinct to depict the lives of poverty-stricken Londoners realistically seems to have battled with a desire to keep the more moralistic readers of his hit episodic novel on her side.

Although she is pimped and abused she has real joie de vivre. She is not just a victim

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Saturday, June 6, 2020

Max Brooks: 'Pandemics come in predictable cycles. If I'm the smartest guy in the room, we're in big trouble'

The World War Z author talks about how science fiction turned him into a disaster expert, Donald Trump, and growing up with parents Mel Brooks and Anne Bancroft

Max Brooks is getting a little tired of being proved right. An author with cult appeal and massive sales, he is regularly referred to as “a soothsayer” and “a genius”. His 2006 novel, World War Z, was about a deadly virus originating in China that causes global devastation, and his compulsive new one, Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Sasquatch Massacre, is about people forced into self-isolation, huddling in terror from an unimaginable threat outside. But Brooks, 47, is dismissive of the hyperbole: “Everything I write about has already happened. The history of pandemics tends to come in extremely predictable cycles. So if I’m the smartest guy in the room, we’re in big trouble,” he tells me over Skype from his home in Los Angeles (our interview was in May, before the national protests after the killing of George Floyd, but well after lockdown started.). He has the jittery energy of the chronically anxious, and the easy confidence of one who has been thoroughly validated.

He certainly saw the coronavirus coming long before most politicians, and was making preparations in January. On 16 March, when most people in the western world were barely getting to grips with the lockdown, he made a video about the importance of social distancing to protect the elderly. He enlisted the help of the oldest person in his life, his father, comedy god, Mel Brooks. “If I get the coronavirus, I’ll probably be OK. But if I give it to him, he could give it to Carl Reiner, who can give it to Dick Van Dyke, and before I know it, I’ve wiped out a whole generation of comedic legends,” says Brooks, pointing to his father behind a glass door and listing his closest friends. The video has been watched more than 16m times. “I wasn’t given some secret information. I got my information from the news. Really deep state: turning on CNN and watching Wuhan getting locked down,” he says dryly.

I thought World War Z was a really cool movie that happened to have the same title of a book I once wrote

A message from me and my dad, @Melbrooks. #coronavirus #DontBeASpreader pic.twitter.com/Hqhc4fFXbe

Everyone wanted Anne Bancroft to be sexy Mrs Robinson. Nobody cared that her favourite book was about microbes

America has the most incompetent, disastrous, captain ever, but the ship has had mechanical problems for some time

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Friday, June 5, 2020

Jacqueline Wilson asks children to join Silly Squad this summer

Tracy Beaker author says theme for this year’s Summer Reading Challenge is reading for fun and asks young readers to pick books that make them happy

British children may be facing a summer in lockdown, but according to the writer Jacqueline Wilson it isn’t the moment to attempt the classics, but for comfort reading.

Wilson, the former children’s laureate, is calling on children to sign up online for the Summer Reading Challenge, which launches on Friday. Encouraging children aged four to 11 to read during the long break, this year the focus is on funny books, and getting children to read whatever makes them happy.

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Stuffed mermaids, baroque masterpieces and David Hockney at dawn – the week in art

Books gather treasures from Europe’s strangest collections and show what we’re missing at the National Gallery, and artists respond to George Floyd’s death – all in your weekly dispatch

Cabinets of Curiosities
With museums closed, a richly illustrated book of artistic wonders is the next best thing. This new extra-large volume is full of photographs of some of Europe’s most surreal collections. The cabinet of curiosities was a Renaissance ancestor of the modern museum that mingled natural and human rarities. Dive into a world of carved amber, magic coral and stuffed mermaids.
• Taschen, out now

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Thursday, June 4, 2020

Donations to inclusive publishers' appeal leap after George Floyd killing

Pandemic fundraiser for Knights Of and Jacaranda has seen donations of more than £100,000 in the past week

More than £100,000 has poured in from the public over the last week to help diverse independent publishers in the UK survive the coronavirus pandemic.

Last month, inclusive publishers Jacaranda Books and Knights Of warned their income had reduced to almost zero after the outbreak closed bookshops and distributors, putting their futures at risk. They launched a crowdfunding appeal administered by the independent writing charity Spread the Word, looking to raise £100,000 to ensure their survival. Eighty per cent of donations go to the two presses, with the remaining 20% to other independent publishers in the UK.

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Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Anti-racist book sales surge in US and Britain after George Floyd killing

Books by authors including Reni Eddo-Lodge, Ibram X Kendi and Robin DiAngelo are selling out on both sides of the Atlantic

Books tackling racism and white supremacy by authors including Reni Eddo-Lodge, Ijeoma Oluo and Layla F Saad are selling out in Britain in the wake of eight days of protests in the US over the police killing of George Floyd.

Eddo-Lodge’s Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People about Race is the bestselling book on Amazon in the UK, where it is listed as temporarily out of stock. The award-winning title, which was first published in 2017, has also made this week’s paperback nonfiction charts from Nielsen BookScan. Saad’s Me and White Supremacy – subtitled How to Recognise Your Privilege, Combat Racism and Change the World – is at No 5 in Amazon’s UK charts, and also out of stock, as is Akala’s Natives: Race and Class in the Ruins of Empire, at No 7.

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Unknown Hemingway short story Pursuit As Happiness published

Autobiographical tale tells of hunt for ‘the biggest goddam marlin that ever swam in the ocean’ and has strong echoes of The Old Man and the Sea

An unknown short story by Ernest Hemingway, recounting a hunt for a huge marlin, which echoes the narrative of The Old Man and the Sea, has been published for the first time.

Pursuit As Happiness, published in this week’s issue of the New Yorker, follows the narrator on a fishing trip in search of “the biggest goddam marlin that ever swam in the ocean”. One day, “the water so clear and in so close that you could see the shoals in the mouth of the harbor ten fathoms deep”, he and his friends hook one – although the trip isn’t, eventually, as successful as they might like.

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Museum hopes photo set brings out colourful side of Charles Dickens

Colourised images of a tanned and waistcoated author on show when museum reopens

Looking healthily tanned, with a warm expression, and wearing a natty yellow, green and blue Clan Gordon tartan waistcoat, he is unmistakably Charles Dickens – but as we’ve never seen him before.

The Charles Dickens Museum in London has created and released the first of a new set of colourised photographs of the writer in the run-up to the 150th anniversary of the author’s death. It is a taster of a major exhibition on images of Dickens that the museum will stage as soon as it is able to reopen after lockdown restrictions are relaxed further.

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Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Isaac Newton proposed curing plague with toad vomit, unseen papers show

Notes made in the shadow of a devastating outbreak show the great scientist sketching out some distinctly queasy remedies

It is not as bad as suggesting injections of disinfectant. Isaac Newton’s 17th-century prescription for plague – which blended powdered toad with toad vomit to form “lozenges” to drive away the contagion – has been revealed.

Two unpublished pages of Newton’s notes on Jan Baptist van Helmont’s 1667 book on plague, De Peste, are to be auctioned online by Bonham’s this week. Newton had been a student at Trinity College, Cambridge, when the university closed as a precaution against the bubonic plague, which killed 100,000 people in London in 1665 and 1666.

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Monday, June 1, 2020

Watership Down author's estate wins back all rights to classic novel

In a case at London’s high court, Richard Adams’ estate won a longstanding claim against Martin Rosen, director of the 1978 animation

The estate of Watership Down author Richard Adams has won back all of the rights to the late author’s classic novel about anthropomorphised rabbits, in a high court ruling against the director of the famed animated adaptation.

The high court in London ruled on 27 May that Martin Rosen, the US director of the 1978 adaptation of Adams’s novel, had wrongly claimed that he owned all rights to the book, in which a group of rabbits fight to survive the destruction of their warren.

Related: Watership Down author Richard Adams: I just can’t do humans

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No pubs, no kissing, no flying: how Covid-19 is forcing authors to change their novels

Never mind newly minted corona lockdown stories, authors are frantically rewriting existing projects to reflect a world turned upside down by the pandemic – or shelving them indefinitely

Tom Watson, the former deputy leader of the Labour party, has been having a busy lockdown. Signed up to write a political thriller called The House, he and his co-author Imogen Robertson have been rapidly rejigging their novel to reflect a post-Covid world.

Their near-future setting now includes a national inquiry “about what’s going on in the background”, where characters – if they meet socially – “choose not to drink out of glasses and they wipe the bottle before they drink”, and undergo temperature checks when entering public buildings, “which everyone is used to by then”, says Watson, who is finding life away from politics as a newly minted thriller author “a relief”.

I’m trying to work out where we might be. Will getting on a plane feel wildly anachronistic? Will working from an office seem weird?

Conducting a crime investigation under lockdown rules would be a mammoth task … I'd fail unless I sought advice from officers working through it

People need relatable fiction about a confusing time. I hope it might make some feel less alone and give a sense of hope

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