The Guardian reports on a welcome attempt by Congress to close the UK libel tourist loophole, which Holocaust-denier David Irving tried unsuccessfully to exploit in his libel suit again Deborah Lipstadt ... James Wood on Saramago's latest in the New Yorker: "Some of the more significant writing of the past thirty years has taken delight in the long, lawless sentence—think of Thomas Bernhard, Bohumil Hrabal, W. G. Sebald, Roberto Bolaño—but no one sounds quite like Saramago." ... Many outlets are noting the sad passing of literary agent Pat Kavanagh ... NaNoWriMo, in which entrants try to write a 50,000 word novel in 30 days, is upon us once more ... David Bezmozgis might be the first short story writer to utter those immortal words: "What I really want to do is direct." ... J.M. Coetzee is among the nominees for the inaugural Australia-Asia Literary Award ... Frankfurt wraps up, dimmed by the credit crunch ... Joshua Ellison, editor of the fine journal Habitus, is interviewed ... Philip Hensher advises it's nearly impossible to get any writing done if you're on the Booker shortlist ... Tibor Fischer has a new book out ... A French court has ordered €50,000 paid to the heirs of Antoine de Saint-Exupery ... Fintan O'Toole suggests something any writer long ago realized - that we're the last place to look for moral clarity ... Check out the latest issue of Farafina, guest edited by Laila Lalami ... For all of us left scratching our heads over the Le Clezio Nobel, the New Yorker is coming to our rescue ... And, finally, there's the inevitable final stage of Booker madness - the "I was a judge and lived" essay.
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