* Joseph Boyden discusses his Giller Prize win.
* Scott McLemee reviews Orwell's essays at the Barnes & Noble Review.
The Orwellian universe is a nightmare in which the historical record is constantly rewritten at the whim of those in authority, and reality itself defeated by the brute force of slogans framed with perfect cynicism. Such is the world emerging from Animal Farm and 1984, his last two novels, published in the 1940s, at the height of Stalinism. They have survived as something more than historical documents, for the urge to turn language into a weapon has outlasted the Cold War, too. But no reader who is familiar only with those books really knows George Orwell. For that, you must read his essays, which provide an education in the urgent need to avoid lying to oneself.
* Always a reason to celebrate - a new issue of Bookforum is available online.
* Rushdie on Midnight's Children: “I wish I knew the secret of its popularity,” he adds with a smile. “I’d do it again.”
* The Book Bench interviews John Hodgman (former literary agent).
HODGMAN: A literary agent is nothing but a cheap salesman (or woman); while a writer is a cheap salesman (or woman) who also has to actually write the books. Frankly, the lit agent has the better end of the deal. It’s a wonderful job, allowing you a very close and life-long relationship with a number of different writers whom you get to tell what to do. Were it not for the siren call of fake trivia, I would still happily be doing it today.
* David Ebershoff heads to the big screen in a big way.
* And, finally, check out LA's literary rabbi, David Wolpe, going mano-a-mano with Christopher Hitchens and, in our opinion, getting the better of him (and we tend to the atheist camp).
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