The Brooklyn Festival, a "rigorously local event," is coming to town ... Michael Wood reviews Julian Barnes's latest for the Sun ... Another writer faces prosecution under Turkey's odious Article 301 ... A two-part Irish radio interview with John Banville (thanks to Andrew Deacon) ... Inside the sausage: Past Booker judges talk about previous award deliberations ... Speaking of the Booker, the usual attention is being lavished upon the shortlisted debuts ... Lloyd Jones - who taught another of the master class at the Melbourne Writers Festival - is among the New Zealand writers honored with the 2008 Minister's Awards for Literary Achievement ... Western novels, once tremendously popular in Germany, are no longer selling well there ... Stewart O'Nan is among the writers planning a benefit reading to save Mark Twain's Connecticut house ... The passing of Robert Giroux was widely noted in our absence, so we direct you to this reminiscence at the Kenyon Review ... The UK Film Council is funding a remake of The Picture of Dorian Gray. (One of our many abandoned screenplay idea was an updated version of the story, set in NYC amid the modeling world. Yeah, that's why we abandoned it.) ... The independent review Rain Taxi is profiled in Publishers Weekly ... Jose Saramago has announced the completion of his latest novel, at the age of 86 ... Thirteen grand will buy you a train trip with Paul Theroux ... and, finally, we suggest you mourn the elimination of Netherland from the Booker by checking out Andrew Anthony's lengthy profile of Joseph O'Neill in the Guardian: 'I certainly did have a Trimalchio moment,' O'Neill confesses. 'For years the book was called The Brooklyn Dream Game, till my friend, the poet Paul Muldoon, raised a friendly eyebrow... and I thought I had a terrific title. Netherland was suggested by Sally.' (Thanks to Dave Lull.) Chistchurch report and Roth update still in draft but coming ...
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