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4 votes
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Olga Tokarczuk – Nobel Lecture
4 votes -
Author and Norway princess's ex-husband Ari Behn dies aged 47
5 votes -
Protests grow as Peter Handke receives Nobel medal in Sweden – Turkey joined Albania and Kosovo in boycotting Tuesday's Nobel prize ceremony
5 votes -
GQ has selected their favorite books of 2019, and asked each book's author to make their own recommendation
5 votes -
How to live like Jane Austen
4 votes -
Karl Ove Knausgård is to become the sixth contributor to the Future Library, which collects works by contemporary authors that will remain unread until 2114
9 votes -
Is Tolkien's prose really that bad?
Recently I was reading through a discussion on Reddit in which Tolkien's writing and prose were quite heavily criticised. Prior to this I'd never seen much criticism surrounding his writing and so...
Recently I was reading through a discussion on Reddit in which Tolkien's writing and prose were quite heavily criticised. Prior to this I'd never seen much criticism surrounding his writing and so I was wondering what the general consensus here is.
The first time I read through The Lord of the Rings, I found myself getting bored of all the songs and the poems and the large stretches between any action, I felt that the pacing was far too slow and I found that I had to force myself to struggle through the book to get to the exciting parts that I had seen so many times in the films. Upon reading through The Lord of the Rings again recently my experience has been completely different and I've fallen in love with his long and detailed descriptions of nature, and the slower pacing.
Has anyone else experienced something similar when reading his works? Are there more valid criticisms of his prose that extend beyond a craving for the same high-octane action of the films?
13 votes -
Margaret Atwood and Bernardine Evaristo share Booker prize 2019
5 votes -
The 2018 Nobel Prize for Literature goes to Olga Tokarczuk, and the 2019 Prize to Peter Handke
Short link. Probably more to follow. The Swedish Academy handed out two prizes this year, after they were forced to suspend the prize last year amid a metoo scandal which saw most of the Academy’s...
Short link. Probably more to follow.
The Swedish Academy handed out two prizes this year, after they were forced to suspend the prize last year amid a metoo scandal which saw most of the Academy’s members either resign voluntarily or be forced to resign. There’s been a lot of speculation about how they were going to restore their reputation this year, and they spent a long portion of the press conference explaining their new process, whereas in past years they haven’t felt compelled to do so.
It was expected that at least one of the two prizes would go to a woman, with Margaret Atwood being one of the odds favorites (the bookmakers’ picks never win, so I don’t know whether we should put much stock in them, but they do reflect pre-award buzz). I’m not too familiar with either author, but it’s interesting that they chose Peter Handke. He’s one of Europe’s most controversial authors for his decades-long support of Serbia and Slobodan Milosevic’s actions during the Yugoslav Wars. He once compared Serbians to the Jews during WW2, visited Milosevic in prison when he was on trial for war crimes, and spoke at the man’s funeral. He’s also hailed as one of the greatest living German-language authors. It’s like the Academy decided to throw feminists a bone by awarding a woman the prize, but then couldn’t resist jumping headlong into controversy again right away.
10 votes -
Stieg Larsson and the unsolved murder case of Olof Palme
11 votes -
How to be a professional author and not die screaming and starving in a lightless abyss
15 votes -
“This has to end. We cannot say it any clearer.” A guide to the decades-long familial dispute over John Steinbeck’s estate.
7 votes -
In "The Testaments", Margaret Atwood expands the world of "The Handmaid’s Tale"
8 votes -
IF, Rudyard Kipling's poem, recited by Sir Michael Caine
6 votes -
Orwell knew: We willingly buy the screens that are used against us
10 votes -
Beloved author Toni Morrison has died at 88
18 votes -
Despite being a best-selling author, Jane Austen was paid very little
6 votes -
Are today’s young readers turning on The Catcher in the Rye?
9 votes -
Eight crime writers who wrote other forms of literature, including literary novels, memoirs, and even works of history
7 votes -
Rebuilding Jane Austen’s library
6 votes -
How Japanese RPGs inspired a new generation of fantasy authors
6 votes -
Jo Nesbø, master of Norway noir, returns with his creepiest yet
5 votes -
One family’s ordeal with schizophrenia: In “The Edge of Every Day,” Marin Sardy struggles to make sense of a deeply mysterious disease and its effects on her mother and brother
7 votes -
Novelists have condemned the Staunch prize – for thrillers without violence against women – as a ‘gagging order’, after organisers said the genre could bias jurors
7 votes -
Sandra Boynton is tweaking some of her beloved children’s books. But why mess with perfection?
7 votes -
Romance novelists write about sex and pleasure. On the internet that makes them targets for abuse
9 votes -
Liu Cixin’s war of the worlds
12 votes -
How the hell has Danielle Steel managed to write 179 books?
13 votes -
1982 video interview with Asimov, Wolfe, and Ellison
9 votes -
Fan fiction writers are better than tech at organizing information online
12 votes -
A very happy 50th birthday to 'The Very Hungry Caterpillar'
9 votes -
Two 'Good Omens' interviews: With writer Neil Gaiman, and with actors Michael Sheen and David Tennant
Neil Gaiman had one rule for the Good Omens adaptation: making Terry Pratchett happy The devil is in the detail of Amazon's long-awaited Good Omens
10 votes -
Of vices and rears; or why I've stopped reading Jane Austen
9 votes -
How Dr. Seuss’s Oh, The Places You’ll Go! became a ubiquitous (and cliché) graduation gift
4 votes -
Op-eds from the future: It’s 2059, and the rich kids are still winning
9 votes -
How to write about Africa
6 votes -
Binyavanga Wainaina: 'How to write about Africa'
2 votes -
Nothing but the truth: The legacy of George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four
5 votes -
From Agatha Christie to Gillian Flynn: Fifty great thrillers by women
5 votes -
Murder and the missing briefcase: The real story behind Harper Lee’s lost true crime book
5 votes -
Four books by Asian American authors republished as Penguin Classics
9 votes -
Encyclopedia Brown and the case of the mysterious author
9 votes -
Simon Pegg and Nick Frost’s Stolen Picture to adapt Ben Aaronovitch’s epic fantasy drama ‘Rivers of London’
9 votes -
Eudora Welty on Charlotte's Web, Dorothy Parker on Winnie the Pooh, and more classic reviews of beloved children's books.
5 votes -
Gene Wolfe turned science fiction into high art
7 votes -
The most prescient science fiction author you aren’t reading: Feminist dystopian fiction owes just as much to this woman — who wrote as a man — as Margaret Atwood.
8 votes -
Kosoko Jackson’s book scandal suggests YA Twitter is getting uglier
12 votes -
James Patterson donates $1.25 million to classroom libraries
9 votes -
It’s not enough for JK Rowling to say her characters are queer. Show it to us
17 votes