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Friday, August 31, 2018

Sally Rooney novel Normal People unites critics in praise

Lauded as ‘Salinger for the Snapchat generation’ the writer has won wide acclaim

The eclectic mix on this year’s Man Booker longlist surprised more than a few when it was announced in July, but the newest book of the 13 vying for the top literary prize has already won the hearts of critics on a unprecedented wave of good reviews: Normal People, by Sally Rooney.

With only two books under her belt – her debut, Conversations With Friends, was published only a year ago – Rooney has already been hailed as “the Jane Austen of the precariat” or “Salinger for the Snapchat generation”.

Related: Man Booker prize 2018 longlist includes graphic novel for the first time

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'A screaming nightmare': William Shatner boldly goes into VR

Star Trek’s Captain Kirk voices concerns about virtual reality after simulating a walk on Mars

As Captain Kirk in Star Trek, William Shatner took us to places “where no man has gone before”, with stories that foreshadowed the invention of the mobile phone and tablet computers. Now, in real life, the actor is exploring virtual reality (VR) technology – but he wants the entertainment industry to be aware of its potential detrimental impact on vulnerable minds.

Shatner told the Guardian: “The use of technology to affect our minds is so powerful now, that we need to be on guard in the future.” He is involved with Ziva Dynamics, a VR company, through which he has, for example, experienced “nightmarish footage” involving strange creatures that creep up on the user.

Related: Reboot no more: the overused characters who should be retired

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Han Kang to bury next book for almost 100 years in Norwegian forest

Prize-winning South Korean author joins Margaret Atwood and David Mitchell as a contributor to Future Library project

The world’s most secretive library, currently housed only in the minds of its authors and containing books that will not be read for almost a century, has added a new writer to its glittering list of contributors: the award-winning South Korean novelist Han Kang.

Han, winner of the Man Booker international prize for her novel The Vegetarian, was named on Friday as the fifth writer to be selected for the Scottish artist Katie Paterson’s Future Library project. Starting in 2014, Paterson has asked a writer a year to contribute a book to her public artwork. Riffing on themes of imagination and time, each work has been seen only by its author and will be printed in 2114, when a patch of 1,000 Norwegian spruce trees planted in 2014 in the forest that surrounds Oslo will be cut down to provide the paper for the texts.

Related: Sjón: why Oslo’s Future Library is a fairytale come true

Related: Lost in (mis)translation? English take on Korean novel has critics up in arms

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Thursday, August 30, 2018

Neil Gaiman and Haruki Murakami up for alternative Nobel literature prize

The New Academy, founded after the 2018 prize was cancelled as a result of sexual assault scandal, announces shortlist of four

While the scandal-ridden Swedish Academy searches its soul after the cancellation of this year’s Nobel prize for literature, a replacement award set up by a host of Swedish cultural figures has unveiled a shortlist that includes British fantasy novelist Neil Gaiman and Japanese literary superstar Haruki Murakami.

The New Academy prize in literature was established after the scandal that rocked the Swedish Academy this year, when the husband of one of its members was accused of sexual assault and this year’s Nobel subsequently suspended due to “reduced public confidence”. The alternative Nobel follows the same schedule as the original award, but rather than a secretive and small panel selecting the winner, the New Academy – made up of more than 100 Swedish cultural figures – asked Sweden’s librarians for nominations.

Related: The ugly scandal that cancelled the Nobel prize – podcast

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Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Is the future female? Fixing sci-fi’s women problem

When sci-fi fan Molly Flatt was asked to write a story about women in the future, she re-examined her relationship with the male-dominated genre – and why she remained immune to ‘the Scully effect’

Recently, I was asked if I could write a short story for a science fiction collection about “women inventing the future”. Could I write it in four weeks? I considered it. I have three day jobs, a two-year-old and was then knee deep in promotion for my debut novel. Out of those four weeks, I figured I’d have three days to write the thing – if granny could step up. “No problem,” I said breezily, and hung up. Then I panicked.

What on earth did “women inventing the future” mean? Was I supposed to write some sort of feminist space opera, full of menstruating aliens? A utopian version of the singularity, with robots who liked to talk about their feelings? A vision of a social media platform so woke and teeming with empathy that Zuckerberg would jack in Facebook and invest?

In my experience, kids are far more gender– (and sometimes, species–) blind than we give them credit for

Related: In science fiction, the future is feminist | Laurie Penny

Related: Dystopian dreams: how feminist science fiction predicted the future

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Sunday, August 26, 2018

Miles Franklin 2018: Michelle de Kretser wins $60,000 award for second time

The Life To Come author says that even in tumultuous political times, literature has an important role to play

The first time Michelle de Kretser won the Miles Franklin literary award, she was woken up in the middle of the night in a hotel in East Anglia by a phone call relaying the news. She was scarcely less surprised when she was told this week that she’d won it again, this time for The Life to Come.

“It felt incredible the first time but it feels even more amazing the second time,” De Kretser said.

Related: Miles Franklin 2018 shortlist: your guide to this year's top Australian novels

Related: The Life to Come by Michelle de Kretser review – tales of human complexity

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Lee Child set to adapt Jack Reacher novels for TV (but with a taller star)

As he prepares to make his archive public, the thriller writer explains why fans didn’t like Tom Cruise’s role on the big screen

He is one of the world’s most successful crime writers, selling more than 100 million copies of his novels and short stories worldwide. Now Lee Child is planning major television adaptations of his Jack Reacher books after fans complained to him about Tom Cruise’s portrayal of the larger-than-life hero in two Hollywood movies.

Reacher, a private investigator and drifter, is described in Child’s novels as physically towering, measuring in at 6ft 5in . Cruise, however, is said to be only 5ft 7in.

Related: Why I love Lee Child's Jack Reacher novels

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Friday, August 24, 2018

The Guardian view on science fiction: The Broken Earth deserves its Hugo | Editorial

The American writer NK Jemisin has now won the most prestigious award in science fiction three times. The planet should take notice

The divide between high and low culture, or between what readers love and what the critics think they ought to love, is not at all clear in science fiction. The prestigious Hugo awards are conferred on the basis of what most readers have loved most. The franchise is not restrictive, although there is a fee. Such openness can be construed as an invitation to game the system, but the Hugos have a defence mechanism: if the shortlists have been swamped by an organised voting campaign, it is possible for ordinary voters to reject all the nominees in a particular category and vote for “no award”. This defence has had to be used a couple of times in recent years to fight off attempts by rightwing trolls to impose their views on the majority.

For the last three years the winning novelist has been the American NK Jemisin, for the successive volumes of her trilogy The Broken Earth. On the surface, it deals with life on a planet of ceaseless, life-threatening volcanic activity, where three different sentient life forms – one so profoundly alien that it can swim through the planet’s crust, and another consisting of multifaceted flying obelisks – must wrestle with human dilemmas. So there is plenty of excitement and explosions of the traditional sort. But it is not stocked with fantasy figures for the adolescent male. The central emotional relationships are those between a mother and her daughters, and the deep structure of the plot explores the experience of slavery and the cost and necessity of revolt. Nothing is permanent: families and cities alike are violently broken by external force. Sometimes new forms of living are built on the ruins of the old. Sometimes it is all abandoned and forgotten. The future is terrifying and the past incomprehensibly alien, yet hope, love and courage never quite die.

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Thursday, August 23, 2018

Mary Beard returns to TV with 'exploration of nakedness'

BBC Two show will follow her journey exploring the history of the naked body in art

Mary Beard is to return to TV screens with a“singular exploration of the role of nakedness” in society.

The University of Cambridge classics professor and broadcaster has been commissioned by BBC Two to present a two-part series entitled The Nude Uncovered, which will follow her journey exploring the history of naked human bodies in art and how they impacted perceptions of beauty and gender politics.

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Crazy Rich Asians author wanted for dodging Singapore military service

Kevin Kwan, whose book has been adapted into a hit film, allegedly failed to complete mandatory service in the 1990s, says the Singapore defence ministry

Kevin Kwan, the author of the novel Crazy Rich Asians, which inspired the film of the same title, is wanted in his home country of Singapore for allegedly defaulting on his military service, the defence ministry said on Wednesday.

Kwan, 44, who also worked as an executive producer of the film, did not attend the Singapore premiere this week.

Related: Crazy Rich Asians review – glossy romcom is a vital crowd-pleaser

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Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Back to the Futuro: why the space-race house may yet have its day

Dreamed up in Finland, shaped like a flying saucer and landing in Yorkshire, Matti Suuronen’s ‘house of the future’ turned out to be an impractical curio – but its atomic-age aesthetics are still alluring

Like jetpacks, flying cars and robot butlers, the Futuro was supposed to revolutionise the way we lived. Unlike those other staples of an imagined future, however, this architectural oddity actually existed. A colourful pod in the shape of an ellipse, the Futuro was a sci-fi vision of the future, offering us a living space light years away from what most of us were used to. Nicknamed the Flying Saucer and the UFO House, it was symbolic of the ambitious space-race era. But as the Futuro celebrates its 50th anniversary, the revolution it promised clearly never happened. Aficionados estimate that of the 100 or so made, only 68½ (more on the half later) remain.

One belongs to Craig Barnes, an artist based in London, who saw a Futuro in a “dishevelled and tired” state while on holiday in Port Alfred, South Africa. He decided to mount a rescue mission. “I have family out there,” he says, “and I’d been seeing this Futuro since I was about three. I viewed it as a spaceship. I drove past in 2013 and workers were knocking down a garage next to it. I panicked and managed to trace the owner.”

Hundreds turned out to see the Futuro paraded through the streets. It looked as if locals had captured a spaceship

It's a wonderful space to bounce around ideas. Everything about it is a celebration of the imagination

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Tuesday, August 21, 2018

UK festival directors demand end to ‘overly complex’ visa process

Leading figures from arts, music and culture write letter calling for government reforms

Directors of some of Britain’s biggest festivals have signed a letter calling for the government to make its “overly complex” visa application process more transparent, after a surge in refusals and complications for authors, artists and musicians invited to perform in the UK.

Related: Visa refusals starve UK’s arts festivals of world talent | Letters

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Fiction, not lies, is a way of telling the truth – Ali Smith in Edinburgh

First minister Nicola Sturgeon interviews the experimental novelist at a book festival event

Maybe it is because of the Scottish Reformation. Maybe it is because of the Scottish Enlightenment. Maybe it is because of all those universities founded in a tiny country in the Middle Ages. Whatever the reason, audiences at the Edinburgh international book festival were treated to a sight unthinkable in England: a senior politician interviewing an experimental novelist live on stage in front of an enthusiastic audience.

As Ali Smith, the writer in question, said: “I can’t imagine sitting next to any other politician who actually reads books. Can you imagine Theresa May sitting here?” (No one, perhaps unfairly, mentioned Jeremy Corbyn, also due to appear at the book festival; he once revealed that he has read Ulysses four times.)

Related: Authors' visa struggles undermine book festival, says Sturgeon

Related: UK reading habits an embarrassment, says Edinburgh book festival director

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Monday, August 20, 2018

Chelsea Clinton says she has not ruled out running for office

Daughter of Bill and Hillary says a move into politics in future is a ‘definite maybe’

Chelsea Clinton has said she has not ruled out running for office one day, describing a move into politics as a “definite no now” but a “definite maybe” in the future.

She told the Edinburgh International Book Festival that while she “abhorred” Donald Trump’s presidency, she has no current plans to follow in her parents’ footsteps.

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Hugo awards: women clean up as NK Jemisin wins best novel again

Jemisin’s third win in as many years signals an end to the influence of the rightwing ‘Puppies’ groups, with female authors winning all major categories at sci-fi awards

Author NK Jemisin has scooped her third Hugo award for best science-fiction novel and, in doing so, has become the standard-bearer for a sea change in the genre’s diversity, as women – especially women of colour – swept the boards at last night’s ceremony.

Taking the stage to accept her third win in three years for her novel The Stone Sky, Jemisin told the audience at the 76th World Science Fiction Convention in San Jose, California, on Sunday that “this has been a hard year … a hard few years, a hard century,” adding: “For some of us, things have always been hard, and I wrote the Broken Earth trilogy to speak to that struggle, and what it takes to live, let alone thrive, in a world that seems determined to break you.”

Related: NK Jemisin: the fantasy writer upending the 'racist and sexist status quo'

Related: The Hugo Awards: George RR Martin, Vox Day and Alastair Reynolds on the prize's future

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Hugo awards: women clean up as NK Jemisin wins best novel again

Jemisin’s third win in as many years signals an end to the influence of the rightwing ‘Puppies’ groups, with female authors winning all major categories at sci-fi awards

Author NK Jemisin has scooped her third Hugo award for best science-fiction novel and, in doing so, has become the standard-bearer for a sea change in the genre’s diversity, as women – especially women of colour – swept the boards at last night’s ceremony.

Taking the stage to accept her third win in three years for her novel The Stone Sky, Jemisin told the audience at the 76th World Science Fiction Convention in San Jose, California, on Sunday that “this has been a hard year … a hard few years, a hard century,” adding: “For some of us, things have always been hard, and I wrote the Broken Earth trilogy to speak to that struggle, and what it takes to live, let alone thrive, in a world that seems determined to break you.”

Related: NK Jemisin: the fantasy writer upending the 'racist and sexist status quo'

Related: The Hugo Awards: George RR Martin, Vox Day and Alastair Reynolds on the prize's future

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'Disgrace and shame': Alan Moore points to Boris Johnson in Grenfell fire comic

Moore has briefly come out of retirement to contribute to a new anthology raising money for PTSD support for survivors

Comics legend Alan Moore, who announced he was “pretty much done” with the medium two years ago, is making a brief foray out of retirement to point an excoriating finger at Boris Johnson over the Grenfell Tower fire.

Moore, the author of the seminal graphic novels Watchmen and V for Vendetta, is one of 24 contributors to a forthcoming comic anthology, 24 Panels, which is designed to raise money for those affected by the fire that broke out in London’s 24-storey Grenfell Tower last year, killing 72 people. An illustrated poem, his comic, “If Einstein’s Right …”, touches on fragmentary moments from different lives and features a mug-shot image of Boris Johnson.

Related: Kathy Burke on Grenfell Tower: ‘These people will need help for the rest of our lives’

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Sunday, August 19, 2018

A new generation follows the pack as tarot makes a comeback

Onstage readings, elaborate books and artworks thrive in an ‘age of uncertainty’

It was once seen as the preserve of fairground fortune-tellers spouting platitudes from a booth, and ageing hippies with a fondness for Aleister Crowley and the occult. Now, the art of reading the tarot is back in style, with books, artwork and onstage readings captivating a new generation of fans.

Instagram is full of beautifully shot tarot spreads, with cards showing the High Priestess or the Wheel of Fortune very much to the fore, while tarot-card readers are the heroines of crime novels such as Ruth Ware’s The Death of Mrs Westaway and EV Harte’s Dolly Greene series, and enthusiasts can get decks featuring everything from Alice in Wonderland to Game of Thrones.

I’ve had people sobbing when I’ve read their cards, people telling incredible stories

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Could this be the best job in the world?

Luxury resort in Maldives seeks bookseller. Pay derisory. Fringe benefits unparalleled

Wanted: barefoot bibliophile willing to punt Daniel Defoe to rich, modern-day Robinson Crusoes at a luxury desert island resort.

Philip Blackwell, scion of the bookseller family, needs a Man Friday for possibly the world’s most remote bookshop, based in the luxury eco resort of Soneva Fushi in the Maldives.

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Saturday, August 18, 2018

Likely identity of Oscar Wilde’s American sweetheart ‘Hattie’ uncovered

Biographer pinpoints the woman who stole writer’s heart on his 1882 US book tour

It was on his famous 1882 lecture tour of the United States and Canada that Oscar Wilde briefly lost his heart to a woman called “Hattie”.

He wrote to her: “When I think of America I only remember someone whose lips are like the crimson petals of a summer rose, whose eyes are two brown agates, who has the fascination of a panther, the pluck of a tigress, and the grace of a bird. Darling Hattie, I now realise that I am absolutely in love with you, and for ever and ever…”

The circumstantial evidence linking the Crockers with Wilde’s tour and his stay in San Francisco is so strong

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Marvel Comics mogul Stan Lee wins renewed protection against elder abuse

Keya Morgan, a memorabilia collector, must stay at least 90 metres away from Lee for the next three years

Marvel Comics mogul Stan Lee won renewal of a protective order on Friday against a onetime business manager accused of subjecting the 95-year-old Spider-Man co-creator to elder abuse after taking charge of his affairs earlier this year.

Keya Morgan, a New York-based memorabilia collector who became involved with Lee following the death of Lee’s wife last year, must stay least 91.4 metres (100 yards) away from the Marvel magnate for the next three years, the restraining order states.

Related: Stan Lee: police probe reports of elder abuse against Marvel mogul

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Friday, August 17, 2018

Woman's Weekly's 'exploitative' contracts anger authors

As well as slashing fees for short stories, the magazine has demanded fiction writers waive all rights to their work

The new issue of the Woman’s Weekly fiction special is out now, promising its readers short stories from writers who “never fail to come up with new twists and turns and unexpected plots”. But, in a twist that may have surprised the editors, authors are up in arms over a new contract that demands all rights for any story it publishes.

Woman’s Weekly has been a British newsstand favourite for a century, with its blend of cakes and crochet, fiction and fashion. It is now part of media giant TI Media, which produces magazines including Homes & Gardens and Marie Claire.

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Thursday, August 16, 2018

Emma Thompson: role as family court judge was 'great privilege'

Actor tells of spending time ‘backstage’ in high court for her role in The Children Act

Emma Thompson has said that spending time at the high court for her latest role in which she plays a family court judge was an extraordinary experience and “one of the greatest privileges”.

The actor plays a judge in The Children Act, an adaptation of Ian McEwan’s 2014 novel, in which her character has to decide whether Adam, a 17-year-old with leukaemia, should be forced to have potentially life-saving blood transfusions despite the procedure going against his religious beliefs as a Jehovah’s Witness.

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National Portrait Gallery buys painting of young Dylan Thomas

Cherubic painting by the Welsh poet’s friend Augustus John has been acquired for £214,750

A portrait of a young Dylan Thomas, with red curly locks and a fresh, butter-wouldn’t-melt expression, has been acquired for the National Portrait Gallery.

The cherubic painting, by Thomas’s friend Augustus John, has been on long-term loan and permanent display at the gallery for 20 years.

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Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Family claims win in high court challenge to Northants library cuts

Proposed measures by struggling local authority had not considered statutory duties closely enough, judge rules

A young girl and her family who took on Northamptonshire county council over its plans to close 21 libraries have claimed a win in the high court, after a judge ruled that the cash-strapped council would have to revisit its plans while “paying attention to its legal obligations”.

Mrs Justice Yip, announcing her judicial review judgment on Tuesday, found that the council’s decision-making process had been unlawful, and that it had not properly considered whether it would be operating a comprehensive and efficient library service – as required by law – once the much-criticised closures had gone ahead.

Related: Northamptonshire council backs 'bare minimum' service plan

Related: In Corby, life without local services is set to become a grim reality

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Sunday, August 12, 2018

Home Office stopped author from speaking at UK festival, says publisher

Visa refusals mean Palestinian Nayrouz Qarmout unlikely to get to Edinburgh book festival

The publisher of a Palestinian author denied a visa to appear at the Edinburgh book festival this year says the Home Office has effectively stopped her from speaking, despite reversing its decision.

Nayrouz Qarmout, who is also a TV journalist, was one of a dozen Middle Eastern and African writers and illustrators who had their applications for visitor visas refused, sometimes multiple times, ahead of this year’s festival, which began on Saturday.

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Saturday, August 11, 2018

VS Naipaul, Nobel prize-winning British author, dies aged 85

Trinidad-born author won both acclaim and disdain for his caustic portrayals, in novels and non-fiction, of the legacy of colonialism

The writer VS Naipaul, who explored questions of place and identity for more than half a century, has died aged 85.

Lady Naipaul confirmed that her husband had died peacefully in London. “He was a giant in all that he achieved and he died surrounded by those he loved having lived a life which was full of wonderful creativity and endeavour,” she said.

Related: Teju Cole on A House for Mr Biswas by VS Naipaul – a novel of full-bore Trinidadian savvy

Related: The 100 best novels: No 90 – A Bend in the River by VS Naipaul (1979)

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VS Naipaul, British author, dies aged 85

Nobel and Booker prize-winning writer died surrounded by loved ones in his London home, family confirms

The British author VS Naipaul has died at his home in London aged 85, his family said in a statement.

Related: The 100 best novels: No 90 – A Bend in the River by VS Naipaul (1979)

Related: Teju Cole on A House for Mr Biswas by VS Naipaul – a novel of full-bore Trinidadian savvy

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How amateur sleuths finally tracked down the burial place of William Blake

On 191st anniversary today of his death, fans and artists will unveil new headstone and pay homage to poet’s work

When the stone marking William Blake’s grave is unveiled this afternoon, on the 191st anniversary of the poet and painter’s death, it will also mark the conclusion of 14 years of detective work and campaigning for two of his admirers.

Carol and Luis Garrido had always had a fascination for the man who wrote poems such as The Tyger and And did those feet in ancient time, better known as Jerusalem, England’s unofficial national anthem, as well as art and engravings that have inspired artistic movements.

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Socialist bookshop welcomes ‘uplifting’ response after attack by far right

Crowds gather at Bookmarks in London’s Bloomsbury to hear writers and poets, including former children’s laureate Michael Rosen

A week after far-right protesters stormed Britain’s largest socialist bookshop and destroyed books and magazines, crowds gathered on Saturday outside its doors in a show of solidarity.

A series of leftwing writers and poets addressed the audience, many saying that the attack on Bookmarks in London’s Bloomsbury by 12 people, including Ukip supporters, demonstrated how invigorated elements of the far right had become.

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Friday, August 10, 2018

Omarosa Manigault Newman's book: the key revelations about Trump

The ex-White House adviser’s forthcoming memoir says Trump insisted upon being sworn in to the presidency with his own book

Omarosa Manigault Newman, whose association with Donald Trump goes back all the way to his days on reality TV, has displayed her flair for spectacle by publishing a scathing insider’s account of his White House.

Related: Omarosa says Trump is a racist who uses N-word – and claims there's tape to prove it

Related: Trump's tactic to attack black people and women: insult their intelligence

Related: Eighteen months into the Trump presidency, insider accounts pile up

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Helen Lederer launches prize for funny female writers

The Comedy women in print award is a response to how few female authors have won the Wodehouse prize

The Women’s prize for fiction was famously set up in response to the Booker prize failing to shortlist any female authors in 1991. Two decades on, a new award celebrating the funniest novels by women has been announced, in the wake of a sexism row over the Wodehouse prize for comic fiction.

Awarded each year at the Hay literary festival, the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse prize has gone to three female authors in 18 years: Helen Fielding, Marina Lewycka and Hannah Rothschild. Earlier this summer, the bestselling novelist Marian Keyes laid into the Wodehouse – previously the UK’s only prize for funny fiction – for its “sexist imbalance”.

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Langston Hughes 'born a year before accepted date', researcher finds

Poet researching archives of local African American newspaper finds story reporting on ‘little Langston’ before his recorded birth date

A poet’s late-night internet search of local newspaper archives has revealed that one of the US’s greatest cultural icons, the African American poet Langston Hughes, was born a year earlier than his biographers have believed for decades.

Kansas poet Eric McHenry told the New York Times that he was trawling through digitised local newspaper archives when he spotted a note on the society page of the African American weekly newspaper, the Topeka Plaindealer from 20 December 1901, mentioning that “Little Langston Hughes has been quite ill for the past two weeks. He is improving.” The paper recorded the minutiae of daily life for locals, promising: “Do you want to know where your friends are, who they visit, what they are doing? What the race is doing in general? Read the Plaindealer.”

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The best recent science fiction – reviews roundup

Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett; Tommy Catkins by Stephen Palmer; Sam Hawke’s City of Lies; One Way by SJ Morden; and Candas Jane Dorsey’s Ice and Other Stories

After recent forays into science fiction and magic realism, Robert Jackson Bennett tackles epic fantasy in Foundryside (Jo Fletcher, £14.99). The ancient city-state of Tevanne is ruled by four merchant houses who have mastery of a powerful form of magic known as scriving: the ability to effect change through the control and manipulation of objects. Sancia Grado, a young girl scraping a precarious living in the teeming city, has a special ability that is both an asset and a curse: when she touches an object, she instantly comprehends its fundamental nature and recalls its history. She has to keep her body covered at all times to protect herself from sensory overload, but her ability helps in her profession as a thief; when she is hired to carry out a heist from a fortified warehouse, her success and its ramifications threaten to transform society. What starts as a run-around chase caper soon deepens into a compelling treatise on power and its misuse.

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Omarosa: Trump is a racist who uses N-word – and there's tape to prove it

Former Apprentice contestant and ex-White House adviser writes in new memoir that she witnessed ‘truly appalling things’

Donald Trump is a “racist” who has used the “N-word” repeatedly, Omarosa Manigault Newman, once the most prominent African American in the White House, claims in a searing memoir.

The future US president was caught on mic uttering the taboo racial slur “multiple times” during the making of his reality TV show The Apprentice and there is a tape to prove it, according to Manigault Newman, citing three unnamed sources.

Related: Attack ads, lawsuits, insults and fights: Trump's charged history with race

Related: Former Apprentice star on leaving Trump's White House: 'I've seen things that made me uncomfortable'

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Booker prize longlisting leaves Sabrina's publishers struggling to meet demand

Nick Drnaso’s graphic novel, the first to make the finalists for the UK’s leading fiction award, has seen sales rocket after the announcement

Readers have been scrambling to get hold of copies of Nick Drnaso’s Sabrina since it became the first graphic novel ever to make the Booker prize longlist last month, with bookshops desperately seeking new stock of the surprise bestseller.

Waterstones head of fiction Chris White said that the book, which follows the story of a missing woman and has been described as a masterpiece by Zadie Smith, was its second bestselling title from the selection of 13 chosen by judges, behind Michael Ondaatje’s historical novel Warlight.

Related: Yes, graphic novels are thriving. (Well done, Booker) | Rachel Cooke

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Thursday, August 9, 2018

Authors' visa struggles undermine book festival, says Sturgeon

Scottish first minister urges UK government to resolve snags affecting Edinburgh event

Nicola Sturgeon has accused the UK government of undermining the Edinburgh international book festival by failing to resolve ’authors’ difficulties in obtaining visas.

The festival’s director, Nick Barley, has said some of the invited writers have been “humiliated” by the process they had to endure to get into the UK.

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Love of my life: Brian May launches book on Victorian photographer

Guitarist reveals passion for Queen Victoria’s snapper, George Washington Wilson, in biography

Armed with a book instead of a guitar, Brian May, best known as the lead guitarist of the rock group Queen, is heading into unknown territory at the Edinburgh book festival to launch a lavishly illustrated biography of the Victorian Scottish photographer George Washington Wilson.

Wilson, now almost forgotten, was a star of his day and after recording the construction of a new castle for Victoria and Albert at Balmoral - his startling images show the glaringly bright brand-new building - became the Queen’s official photographer in Scotland.

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Ukip members sent 'mind-broadening' reading after bookshop attack

Index on Censorship gives books promoting tolerance to trio suspended from party after attack on Bookmarks in London

Free speech campaigners have sent books including The Handmaid’s Tale, The Color Purple and the Qur’an to the three Ukip members who attacked a socialist bookshop in London to “introduce them to different ideas”.

Bookmarks in Bloomsbury was attacked by 12 people – one of whom was wearing a Donald Trump mask – just before it closed on Saturday. The group chanted far-right slogans, knocked over displays, ripped up magazines, and intimidated the two members of staff who were there. Ukip later said that three of its members, Elizabeth Jones, Luke Nash-Jones and Martin Costello had been suspended, pending an investigation into the incident.

Related: Ukip suspends three members over socialist bookshop attack

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Mill workers’ poems about 1860s cotton famine rediscovered

Research has uncovered 300 works by writers in Lancashire struggling during the economic crisis caused by the US civil war

The forgotten voices of Lancashire’s poverty-stricken cotton workers during the US civil war have been heard for the first time in 150 years, after researchers at the University of Exeter unearthed a treasure trove of poetry.

Up to 400,000 of the county’s cotton workers were left unemployed when the war stopped cotton from reaching England’s north-west in the 1860s and the mills were closed. Without work, they struggled to put food on the table, and experts from the University of Exeter have discovered that many of them turned to poetry to describe the impact of the cotton famine.

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Wednesday, August 8, 2018

UK refuses visas for a dozen Edinburgh book festival authors

Director slams humiliating application process endured by invited writers and warns of damage to country’s cultural life

A dozen authors who were planning to attend this year’s Edinburgh international book festival (EIBF) have had their visas refused, according to director Nick Barley, who warned the “humiliating” application process will deter artists from visiting the UK.

The festival, which starts on Saturday and will feature appearances from 900 authors and illustrators from 55 countries, routinely provides assistance for visa applications. It has reported a jump in refusals over the last few years.

Related: 'A Brexited flatland’: Peter Gabriel hits out after Womad stars refused entry to UK

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Backlash after the Nation apologises for publishing controversial poem

Anders Carlson-Wee’s How-To has been accused of racism and ableism, but some writers say the magazine should not be scared to offend

A fierce debate has broken out in US literary circles after the progressive magazine the Nation apologised for publishing a poem in which a white poet assumes a black vernacular.

The young American poet Anders Carlson-Wee’s poem How-To was published in the Nation in July. Assuming the voice of a homeless person, it opens: “If you got hiv, say aids. If you a girl, / say you’re pregnant – nobody gonna lower / themselves to listen for the kick. People / passing fast.”

pic.twitter.com/GyRhf0LJ02

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'Elitist': angry book pirates hit back after author campaign sinks website

OceanofPDF was shut down last week after publishers issued hundreds of takedown notices – but authors have been left dealing with angry users

Authors have been called elitist by book pirates, after they successfully campaigned to shut down a website that offered free PDFs of thousands of in-copyright books.

OceanofPDF was closed last week after publishers including Penguin Random House and HarperCollins issued hundreds of takedown notices, with several high-profile authors including Philip Pullman and Malorie Blackman raising the issue online. Featuring free downloads of thousands of books, OceanofPDF had stated on its site that it sought to make information “free and accessible to everyone around the globe”, and that it wanted to make books available to people in “many developing countries where … they are literally out of reach to many people”.

This is the kind of email you get for speaking out against book piracy. ‘Elitist’? No, I just want to be paid for my work, the same as everyone else. I value my readers, I just wish all readers valued the people who create the books for them. pic.twitter.com/qoBIywVpJ5

Related: 'We're told to be grateful we even have readers': pirated ebooks threaten the future of book series

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Tuesday, August 7, 2018

Good fryday: former Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams writing cookbook

Adams says book will contain recipes that kept negotiators going during 1990s peace talks

As transformational journeys go, this one, it might be said, takes the biscuit. Gerry Adams, the former president of Sinn Féin and a veteran Irish republican, has revealed he is writing a cookery book.

The book, which is being teed up for the Christmas market, will contain recipes with “some of the best-kept secrets” of the 1998 peace process, he said.

Not 2 Long 2 Christmas. A Wee Taste Of A Great Stocking Filler From Ted & Pádraic agus Mise. pic.twitter.com/XmtEYAk76c

Related: The Guardian view on the Gerry Adams cookbook: recipe for reconciliation? | Editorial

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Monday, August 6, 2018

China bans Winnie the Pooh film after comparisons to President Xi

Memes likening Xi to the portly Pooh have become a vehicle in China to mock the country’s leader

Who’s afraid of Winnie the Pooh? The Chinese government, apparently.

Chinese censors have banned the release of Christopher Robin, a new film adaptation of AA Milne’s beloved story about Winnie the Pooh, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

Related: China's Twitter erases John Oliver after scathing Xi Jinping skit

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Socialist bookshop inundated with support after rightwingers' attack

Donations and messages of support have flooded in after far-right protesters targeted Bookmarks in central London

Socialist bookshop Bookmarks has said that it has been inundated with messages of support after far-right protesters targeted it in an attack on Saturday evening.

Twelve men, one of whom was wearing a Donald Trump mask, entered the central London shop as staff were closing for the day, knocking over displays and ripping up magazines while chanting far-right slogans. The shop, which is planning a free public “solidarity” event with appearances from authors on 11 August, said it had received messages of support from MPs and writers as well as thousands of activists from around the world.

Related: Far-right protesters 'ransack socialist bookshop in London'

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Sunday, August 5, 2018

Judith Brett wins National Biography award for 'profound' look at life of Alfred Deakin

Author takes home $25,000 prize for The Enigmatic Mr Deakin, which includes ‘surprising detail’ about Australia’s second prime minister

Judith Brett has won the $31,000 National Biography award for what the judges have called one of “the very best political biographies written in Australia”.

The Enigmatic Mr Deakin examines both the private and public life of politician and Australia’s second prime minister, Alfred Deakin, from his impact on national policy to his penchant for writing in the newspaper about himself under a pseudonym.

Related: Tim Winton, Helen Garner, Paul Keating, Deng Adut: the stories behind the year's best biographies

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Far-right protesters 'ransack socialist bookshop in London'

Owners of Bookmarks say masked attackers wrecked displays and tore up books

The owners of Britain’s largest socialist bookshop, Bookmarks, have said the store was attacked by far-right protesters wearing masks who wrecked displays and ripped up books and magazines.

Posting on Facebook and Twitter, Bookmarks said staff were closing the shop on Bloomsbury Street in central London on Saturday evening when around a dozen people descended on it.

Free speech and independent bookshops - under threat in an age where intolerance and Amazon flourish - should be cherished. Utterly despicable... https://t.co/93Qoh8G1cH

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Friday, August 3, 2018

How The Handmaid's Tale dressed protests across the world

The red-and-white costume from Margaret Atwood’s novel has been donned by women from Ireland to Argentina

When US vice-president Mike Pence visited Philadelphia on 23 July, he was greeted by a now familiar sight: a wall of women dressed in scarlet cloaks, with oversize white bonnets obscuring their faces.

The outfit worn by Margaret Atwood’s handmaids in her 1985 dystopian novel The Handmaid’s Tale and its recent TV adaptation has been in evidence from Argentina to the US, the UK and Ireland, and has emerged as one of the most powerful current feminist symbols of protest, in a subversive inversion of its association with the oppression of women.

What the costume is really asking viewers is: do we want to live in a slave state?

Related: When real-life protest imitates art – from Three Billboards to Father Ted

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Thursday, August 2, 2018

I spy ... another fiendishly difficult GCHQ puzzle book

Surveillance agency tweets teaser for collection that will tie in with its centenary

One of the most secretive organisation in the UK, the surveillance agency GCHQ, sent out a tantalising tweet on Thursday. It took the form of a colourful puzzle made up of emojis.

It was a tease for an announcement on Friday of a new GCHQ puzzle book. The first one in 2016 proved a surprise hit, selling more than 300,000 copies.

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If Beale Street Could Talk: first trailer for Barry Jenkins' Moonlight follow-up

Oscar-winner’s James Baldwin adaptation tipped for further awards glory once it premieres at the Toronto film festival

Barry Jenkins, the Oscar-winning writer-director of Moonlight, has revealed the trailer for his much-anticipated new film If Beale Street Could Talk.

Related: James Baldwin's much anticipated new novel – archive, 18 June 1974

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100 days, 100 lives: pen portraits to mark Armistice centenary

Writers invent new literary form to give voice to those who lived through first world war

Their stories may be passing out of living memory, but the voices of those who lived and died during the first world war are being kept alive in a major literary project to commemorate the centenary of the Armistice.

Each day over the 100 days from 5 August until 12 November, one 100-word piece of prose based on the life of a real individual will be published as part of the 100 Days project, covering the centenary of the hundred days offensive.

Related: Lest We Forget? review – deeply moving memorials to the Great War dead

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Ernest Hemingway story from 1956 to be published for the first time

A Room on the Garden Side, written in 1956, is set in the author’s beloved Ritz hotel in Paris, at the end of Nazi occupation

It may sound like many other Ernest Hemingway stories – with themes of Paris, wartime, battle talk over a bottle of wine – but A Room on the Garden Side, a story written by the American novelist in 1956, is set to be published for the first time.

Not seen by many beyond scholars and academics over the last six decades, the story takes place in the Ritz hotel and is narrated by a character called Robert, who shares the author’s own nickname, Papa. Robert and his entourage of soldiers, who are all due to leave the city the next day, drink, quote Baudelaire and debate “the dirty trade of war”.

Related: Lost glories of the Paris Ritz’s belle époque go under the hammer

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Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Hillary Clinton and Steven Spielberg to make TV series on women's suffrage

Ex-secretary of state and Oscar winner to adapt Elaine Weiss’s book The Woman’s Hour, tracking the fight for women’s voting rights

Hillary Clinton and Steven Spielberg are teaming up to adapt Elaine Weiss’s critically acclaimed book The Woman’s Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote for television.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, the former secretary of state and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee will executive-produce the series with Spielberg’s Amblin Television. Weiss’s book, which was released in March to rave reviews, tells the inside story of the fight to ratify the 19th amendment, internecine disagreements about how past to secure the vote, and the racism that affected the women’s suffrage movement.

Related: The Obamas have got a Netflix deal. Now every politician will want one | Matt Forde

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