Sir Salman Rushdie sits for a long and interesting interview with the Barnes & Noble Review (and is also featured in the teaser edition of Volume III of Picador's glorious Paris Review Interviews series, which we haven't set down since BEA) ... Another high-profile publishing departure as Jane Friedman decamps HarperCollins ... The Orange Prize has been awarded to Rose Tremain for The Road Home ... Who, the Guardian wonders, should replace Sebastian Faulks (an unsurprising smash) when it comes time to write the next James Bond adventure? McEwan is name-checked but "he disapproves of smoking so strongly that 007's nemesis would probably set fire to him or herself with a cigarette." (We are available for the gig.) ... A rare First Folio has sold for a real shitpot ... Check out Narrative Magazine's new "Works in Progress" feature, in which the likes of T.C. Boyle and Cynthia Ozick show you what they are working on ... Previously untranslated Bolano is always good to get us going (and exactly how the hell does one code a tilde in HTML?) ... On the joys of discovering Wilfrid Sheed ... We agree that The Invention of Love is, indeed, "masterly and underrated," so we're pleased to see the Guardian paying some attention to AE Housman ... Anna Porter's Kasztner's Train: The True Story of Rezso Kasztner, Unknown Hero of the Holocaust, (sitting right here in the TBR stack) will receive the history prize marking the 20th anniversary of the Helen and Stan Vine Canadian Jewish Book Awards ...The riches on offer with the newest issue of Open Letters defy summary, so we simply advise you to go ... Those who feel we tread too harshly on Martin Amis must be secretly relieved for the existence of V.S. Naipaul, who can always be counted on to provide the dumbest sound bite of the week ... Alan Cheuse's roundup of summer reading is up at NPR and includes Nam Le's lauded collection The Boat ... "Schlappschwanzliteratur (direct translation: “limp-dick” literature)" ... Ortiz v. Tolstoy ... Joanna Hershon discusses her novel The German Bride with Nextbook ... Nigel Beale chats with Frank Wilson ... John Hodgman has called Elizabeth Gilbert's story "The Famous Torn and Restored Lit Cigarette Trick" the best short story he's ever read, and the Paris Review has made it available online ... Isabel Allende interviewed by Reuters ... We would be remiss not to note the passing of George Garrett ... The novels of George Orwell are reconsidered at the Sun ... And, finally, the real reason we launched The Elegant Variation.

That Elizabeth Gilbert story is marvelous -- Behold, indeed!
Posted by: Jim | June 05, 2008 at 10:24 AM
Here's a page with all the codes for special characters in HTML. It has the "n" with tilde. I would post the code here but since the comments are HTML sensitive it would just show up as an "n" with a tilde. Boy, that's recursive, isn't it?
http://www.utexas.edu/learn/html/spchar.html
Thanks for the interesting reading.
Posted by: Kathryn | June 05, 2008 at 11:42 AM
I always copy and paste the "ñ" from another article...so much easier.
Posted by: callie | June 05, 2008 at 02:07 PM