In between running around to various L.A. literary events and writing long book reviews, the links have been piling up here. So we're going to offer them up one-fell-swoop-like and return tomorrow with more considered postings.
* LINK OF THE DAY: Ed inaugurates the Tanenhaus Brownie Watch, and we're totally hooked. (We'd be remiss, however, if we didn't direct you to Sarah's poignant memories of her grandmother.)
* We first learned of the passing of Czeslaw Milosz when our feedreader advised us of this post at Golden Rule Jones.
* It's been mentioned but not enough - Kenyan writer Ngugi wa Thiong'o and his wife were attacked in their home last week. And in Germany, a Bangladeshi author has been killed.
* Lots o' great stuff in TLS, including this mediation of Shakespeare's problematic Pericles. There's also this look at Friday the 13th lore, which I was too busy to notice on Friday.
* The Australian takes another look at the recently discovered Larkin trove.
* Doreen Baingana offers up her account of the recent Caine Prize for African Writing ceremony at Oxford.
* Looks like we have finally heard the end of the Norma Khouri saga.
* Our friends Down Under do not appear to have experienced the Lynne Truss backlash yet. (Not to worry though - Australian fiction has nothing on us when it comes to worrying about the current state of literary affairs.)
* A Henry James novel not by Colm Toibin ... how unhappy do you suppose David Lodge must be?
* The Globe and Mail looks at novelists-turned-lyricists.
* The Philly Inquirer looks at Muriel Spark's poems. (Use bugmenot to avoid registering.)
* The Edinburgh International Book Festival is shaping up to be quite the success, with more than 10,000 people coming to check out Toni Morrison, Alex Garland, Dame Muriel Spark and Louis de Bernieres. J.K. Rowling is set to give a reading as well. (Related: The Herald ponders Edinburgh's claim to literary supremacy.)
* Yada yadd yada Guardian yada yada yada Dale Peck yada yada yada the end of criticism as we know it.
* We can run James Bond/Ian Fleming stories pretty much until you're blue in the face. (And this one, from the Scotsman, is actually the best we've read to date.)
* Nadine Gordimer's friends defend her right to be thin-skinned.
* David Kipen offers up this dispatch from the recent Dickens Universe conference at UC Santa Cruz, which sounds like a blast (in an oddly bookish way).
* Both the anthology My California and Lisa Glatt's A Girl Becomes a Comma Like That have hit the Los Angeles Times bestseller list. TEV congratulations to Lisa and to My California editor Donna Wares.
* CSM profiles new Paris Review editor Brigid Hughes.
And finally, we're still looking for a nice apartment in Pacific Palisades, so do let us know if you hear about anything ...
Comments