Well, it didn't take much more than one look for the judge to send on our way - and so justice ducks a bullet for another year. In the meantime, we're actually quite pleased with the discussions yesterday's post seems to have sparked, and we hope that will continue - a focus group extraordinaire, a gratis brainstorming session on just what really would make a superb online book review. In the meantime, more literary news from around the globe:
Henrietta Rose-Innes, winner of the Caine Prize, had a feeling she might win ... Salman Rushdie remains the overwhelming favorite to win the Best of the Booker, which will be announced today ... Apropos Curtis Sittenfeld's new novel, American Wife, Buzz Sugar wants to know if you think the First Lady should be off limits as a literary subject ... Slugging it out over remnants of Kafka's estate found in a Tel Aviv apartment (The Guardian's coverage of same is here) ... Nam Le gets his very own LAist interview ... We can think of few things more dreadful than Victoria Glendinning's suggestion to hand over the Booker to the vox populi (C'mon, we're just back from jury duty ... we've seen what's out there and it's not pretty) ... though when you consider the bold move of handing Jhumpa Lahiri the Frank O'Connor award, perhaps she has a point ... Last thing on awards: Will someone please tell the geniuses at the Saroyan Prize that there's no way thirty titles constitute a short list ... "I think Putin stops at Dostoyevsky," she said, musing on whether Vladimir Putin had read Nabokov. "I think Nabokov would be very threatening to his whole worldview. He doesn't really provide for any exceptionalism and sovereign democracy." ... More on Obama's reading list ... Scott McLemee draws a line connecting WALL-E and Kenneth Burke ... PW editor-in-chief Sara Nelson talks about what the boomers are reading - apparently, they buy one in seven of all books ... Amitav Ghosh has a new novel out and Reuters goes to New Delhi to talk to him about it ... Sally Vickers, the most recent contributor to the Canongate Myths series, is profiled in the Irish Times ... We might credit this piece on the future of book technology a bit more if the Globe and Mail editors and reporters knew the difference between "Steven King" and "Stephen King" ... Of course, if Nick Hornby hates e-books, well that's good enough for us - we wash our hands of the future ... Take the Guardian's literary adaptation quiz and find out "if you're well-read or culturally illiterate" ... Martha's Vineyard has been rocked by the fire that damaged The Bunch of Grapes Bookstore ... And, finally, what happens when Philip Roth meets American pop culture:
Do not miss tomorrow's seriously awesome (did we really say that?) TEV giveaway ... Until then!
Yeah, but Norman Mailer was on the Gilmore Girls FOR REAL! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZzqktoIkhqY
Posted by: Jack Pendarvis | July 10, 2008 at 08:29 AM
Ironically, reading Philip Roth would have given her a good primer and a lot to talk to Phil Roth about. Especially if she'd read Sabbath's Theater.
Posted by: Cory Garfin | July 10, 2008 at 09:13 AM
My comment has nothing to do with this post but I wanted to say that I finished Harry, Revised about 20 minutes ago and I wanted to tell you that I enjoyed it greatly. One of the best books I've read this year.
Posted by: Justin Steiner | July 10, 2008 at 10:00 AM
And somehow I feel this should go here as well: http://artforum.com/video/id=20473&mode=large
Posted by: Jack Pendarvis | July 14, 2008 at 05:34 PM