* The John McGahern appreciations continue to roll in - The Observer covers his funeral, as does the BBC. The Wasington Post ran their official obituary. As promised, we spent several bittersweet hours with the lovely All Will Be Well.
* If you've got five million pounds to spare (and these days who doesn't?) a First Folio can be yours.
* We swear to God, we were thinking just the other day "Wonder when Peter Carey will have something new for us" (we're big fans) and - wham - the Literary Saloon has the goods. It's uncanny.
* Alasdair Gray (Lanark) has a blog.
* David Mitchell is interviewed in the Santa Cruz Sentinel in advance of his forthcoming visit on April 23.
* The Sunday Times profiles Flann O'Brien, who has become the Hot Thing thanks to a cameo appearance of one of his books on the TV series Lost.
* Steven Barrie-Anthony got to hang out with Gore Vidal and writes about it for the Los Angeles Times.
* Do stop by Fred Ramey's blog at Unbridled Books, where he's thinking out loud about some of the vagaries of publishing literary fiction, and asks some probing questions, including "Why does it seem that the publishing industry can gainfully expect fiction readers to muscle their way through a slough of artlessness to get to the heart of a story but rarely believes that readers will be willing to slip into the currents of an artful telling to get there?"
* Imre Kertesz has a new novel, not yet available in English.
* In the Chronicle of Higher Education, Lawrence Biemiller looks back at Tom Wolfe's career and comes away feeling generally positive about things - unsurprising, as he explicitly skips over the novels, pleading "short attention span."
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