The Thumbnail will be here in all its glory a bit later today but in the interim we have loads - and we do mean loads - of links that have been piling up. So we lance the boil herewith and present you the best the litscape has to offer ... To wit:
* Jonathan Lethem (check out his newly redesigned site) contributes an essay about Rod Serling to Professor Barnhardt's Journal.
* There's not a ton of coverage out there on Booker nominated Tash Aw, so check out this Q&A with the New Straits Times.
* Not too long ago we mentioned booksxyz.com, which donates its profits to education. The Book Standard gives them a nice write-up in the latest issue.
* The UK litblog ReadySteadyBlog has long been one of our favorites, and it's even better now with a spiffy resdesign and RSS feeds.
* Irvine Welsh is finally getting some serious critical attention - God help him.
* Raymond Benson, one of the interchangeable authors who picked up Ian Fleming's pen and continued the Bond saga, is getting his own museum in Japan. There's no punchline.
* Shame on us for missing this LA Times piece on what locals with too many books do with their collections. (Thanks to LA Brain Terrain for the heads up.)
* The Literary Saloon has done a much better job keeping with Imre Kertesz coverage than we have (hell, they've done a much better job with pretty much everything than we have, except maybe for Eugen Weber penis jokes), so we thank them for this link to this Times UK review of a new translation of Fatelessness - reviewed by noted Hungarian poet George Szirtes. Very much worth reading. (They've also got Peter Ackroyd on Malory, and we are suckers for all things Arthurian.)
* The right-wing nutjobs at the Washington Times are making times for some litcrit, with this review of the new Welty biography and this brief nod to MOTEV fave Thomas Mann.
* We find Diane Johnson's novels more or less unreadable but she does write about Paris and that's hard for us to resist. Perhaps she'll do a bit better with her non-fiction treatment.
* The Columbia Anthology of Modern Japanese Literature is briefly reviewed in the Japan Times.
* Amazon the small publisher's best friend? The jury is out.
* Lee Siegel takes a long look at Sean Wilsey's memoir for The Nation.
* Justin Chatwin (War of the Worlds) has been signed to play the lead role in the film adaptation of The Pornographer's Poem - our personal favorite of the first round of Litblog Co-op titles.
* And finally, the Navy is taking Louis L'Amour to sea ...
OK, we feel better now. More to follow, and don't forget to check back for the Thumbnail!
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