It's amazing how much interesting stuff piles up around here in the course of a few days. And although we'd love to give each of these items their fair share of space and play, things are still a mite busy around here. We're riding our first big stage race this weekend and then we've got our Very Important Meeting on Monday (which we do promise to talk about soon, unless it goes horribly badly, in which case we'll just let it drop). In the meantime, there's much good stuff to feast on:
* Malachy McCourt (brother of Frank) is running for governor of New York.
* Hungarian writer Agnes Heller has received Denmark's Sonning Prize.
* South African author, women's rights and anti-apartheid champion Ellen Kuzwayo has died.
* The Poem That Changed America: "Howl" Fifty Years Later continues to garner attention, most recently from Slate. (We thumbed through a copy the other day in our favorite neighborhood book store in Pacific Palisades and liked what we saw, especially the reproduction of the typescript.)
* As Bettie Page resurfaces in the national consciousness courtesy of Gretchen Mol, Scott McLemee interviews Maria Elena Buszek, author of the forthcoming Pin-Up Grrrls: Feminism, Sexuality, Popular Culture.
* The theatre world is licking its wounds in the wake of the playwright-less Pulitzers.
* Rakhim Esenov was honored in New York by PEN America, marking the first time the author has been allowed to leave Turkmenistan since March 2004.
* L.A Times reporter Steven Barrie-Anthony talks with Walter Kirn about The Unbinding, his online novel for Slate.
* The author of the novel The Graduate is facing eviction. Dustin Hoffman should bail his ass out.
* Talk of the Town, a musical based on the Algonquin Round Table, is showing regularly at - the Algonquin!
* Bloomberg adds to the chorus of glowing coverage for Suite Francaise, which just showed up on our doorstep and is tempting us away from the work we're trying to finish.
* TEV guest reviewer Daniel Olivas has graduated to the El Paso Times, where he reviews Reyna Grande's Across A Hundred Mountains.
* We're pleased to report that Pinky's Paperhaus (who has stepped into the void with a little LATBR review of her own) is returning to internet radio. You can catch this fine program of writers, books and music at Theory Radio.
* We'd have pegged Kurt Cobain for a Hemingway kinda guy but Tim Appelo, writing for PoetryFoundation.org muses on his interest in the work of Alicia Ostriker.
* And finally, shame on us for not having pointed in a more timely fashion to the latest installment of the Bat Segundo show, featuring Erica Jong.
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