(Apologies! We were so tired last night that we only saved this post as a draft ... hence the delay.)
It's late, we're tired and drunk yet again. The weekend is just near enough to beckon but not near enough to actually surrender to, so rather than take the day off entirely, we've got this smattering of lit links to pass your way. But then we're off to rest up and recover for some heavy lifting that awaits in the days ahead as we try to button things up here in advance of our trip to New York next week. So without further ado:
* We've got an obvious soft spot for NPR's Day to Day, but that's certainly not the only reason we link to yesterday's report on graphic novels.
* Hugh "I Know a Book When I See One" Grant, Whitbread judge. We are waiting for the punchline on this one. What next? Paris Hilton, Pulitzer Committee? Anna Nicole Smith, Man Booker Chairman? Per Waestberg, Nobel Literary Chair? Oh wait, that one's legit.
* Decoding men in six simple words - Australia discovers He's Just Not That Into You. (We thought the six words were sex, beer, beer, cars, beer, sex.)
* The Second International Forum for Literature is to be held next year in Seoul. Attendees will include "Shigehiko Hasumi, former president of Tokyo University; American poet laureate Robert Hass; Gary Snyder, an American poet who is also a Zen Buddhist and environmental activist; Robert Coover, the godfather of ``hyper-fiction,’’ or novels using computer hypertext; Margaret Drabble, an English novelist; Ngugi Wa Thiong'o, a Kenyan novelist; French author Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio; and one of France's leading cultural critics, philosopher Jean Baudrillard."
* The Seattle Times reports on the rehabilitation of Snohomish County's Carnegie Library. If you'd like to find some closer to home, this interesting website tells you a little bit about California's Carnegie Libraries.
* Reason Online gives an oddly careful consideration to the year's "most insane literary experiment" - Olivia Joules and the Overactive Imagination ...
aargh leave Hugh alone, he did okay at Oxford and is underutilised dreadfully in Hollywood ( except when playing cads of course). They could do worse for celeb Whitbread judges.
Posted by: genevieve | December 18, 2004 at 12:28 AM