We're heading off for an impromptu trip back east for a few days, about which more anon. In the interim, Stephen Elliott will be taking over here tomorrow with a special announcement, and there will be some pre-posted events items coming on Friday, so do check back. And if responses to emails take longer than usual, please bear with us.
* Raul Guerra Garrido has won the National Prize for Spanish Letters.
* Hitchens-like, the Cape Town Book Fair is set to double in size. (Sorry, cheap shot. We're incorrigible.)
* Orham Pamuk had a bumpy appearance in St. Louis.
But at an appearance at Washington University on Monday, Pamuk, 54, declined to comment on a visit to Turkey this week by Pope Benedict XVI and was perturbed that a reporter was present.
* Another year, another edition of DaCapo's Best Music Writing.
* Irvine Welsh is poised to follow in Tom Wolfe's footsteps as the next winner of the Bad Sex Award.
* It's that list time of year - the Christian Science Monitor weighs in with their best fiction of 2006 list. Have read many and have most. We haven't really thought properly about it yet but Theft is up there.
* FOTEV and regular guest reviewer Daniel Olivas has been named one of the Top 10 Latino Authors to Watch by LatinoStories.com.
* We're on the record as being big Mark Thwaite fans. Go check out as he guest blogs at the Poetry Foundation website.
* Your Pynchon week coda: Check out PopMatters comprehensive roundup on Matters Pynchon.
* The Kenyon Review blog runs an interview with Claire Messud, whose novel The Emperor's Children is showing up on its share of year-end best-of lists.
* And, finally, this is our idea of a holiday catalog. (Thanks, Keith!)
Oh, I just purchased a book from the Shaman Drum Bookshop! Lovely service - I recommend buying from this store.
I bought Battered Guitars (on page 19 of the catalogue), a book of poetry by Kostas Karyotakis, the dark and melancholy Greek who committed suicide (back in 1928) in Preveza, Greece (not far from where I live now!). The poet's work has been translated excellently by Keith Taylor and William Reader. Can't wait for it to arrive.
Posted by: kathryn | November 29, 2006 at 05:21 AM