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13 votes
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‘Fandom has toxified the world’: Watchmen author Alan Moore on superheroes, Comicsgate and Donald Trump
46 votes -
Groundbreaking exhibition on Tove Jansson's public art opens in Helsinki – focuses on the artist and writer's lesser-known mural work
12 votes -
Newly published collection - Letters by Oliver Sacks – provides valuable insight into a curious mind
16 votes -
Twenty years after the publication of her fantasy debut, “Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell,” Susanna Clarke is returning to her richly imagined world of magical England (gifted link)
19 votes -
Long-lost Bram Stoker story discovered in Dublin
23 votes -
The story behind the Oblivion mod Terry Pratchett worked on
54 votes -
Karl Ove Knausgård on the magic of Ursula K LeGuin, returning to Virginia Woolf, and the insight of Jorge Luis Borges
13 votes -
Stephen King’s ‘Fairy Tale’ getting ten episode series adaptation from A24
8 votes -
The Place of Tides by James Rebanks review – a warming tale of gathering eiderdown in Norway
2 votes -
Satu Rämö has caused a publishing sensation across Europe – all thanks to her novels about Hildur, a mindful cop who solves murders with her needle-clacking sidekick
5 votes -
‘I’ve dealt with anti-hillbilly bigotry all my life’: Barbara Kingsolver on JD Vance, the real Appalachia and why Demon Copperhead was such a hit
19 votes -
The Cosmere Begins - A Parody Song
13 votes -
You can learn Lord of the Rings’ Elvish — just not Tolkien's version
26 votes -
The return of Ta-Nehisi Coates
12 votes -
Jessica Valenti (Abortion, Every Day) has a book coming out next week
5 votes -
Based on a Jane Fallon novel and directed by Guy Unsworth, a new show powered by Swedish pop duo Roxette opens in Malmö – Per Gessle reflects on their arrival at the opera
4 votes -
Why TV is wrong for Tolkien
15 votes -
When victimhood takes a bad-faith turn. Wronged explores how the practice of claiming harm has become the rhetorical province of the powerful.
28 votes -
Beyond Bilbo: JRR Tolkien’s long-lost poetry to be published
12 votes -
Arundhati Roy and Toomaj Salehi announced as joint winners of the Vaclav Havel Center’s 2024 ‘Disturbing the Peace’ Award to a Courageous Writer at Risk
5 votes -
Native American author Tommy Orange selected as the next Future Library writer – will pen a manuscript that won't be published until 2114
13 votes -
Two more women accuse Neil Gaiman of sexual assault and abuse
63 votes -
Academic authors 'shocked' after Taylor & Francis sells access to their research to Microsoft AI
42 votes -
Weeks after Alice Munro’s death, daughter tells of dark family secret
16 votes -
A forgotten poem by Chronicles of Narnia author CS Lewis reveals details of friendships between fantasy writers and medievalists at the University of Leeds
15 votes -
Coffee, booze, undressing, deprivation: How writers get in the mood to write
18 votes -
Dear Mr. Borges, which translation should I read?
13 votes -
Travis Knight to direct Laika adaptation of Susanna Clarke’s ‘Piranesi’
12 votes -
Piranesi: Travis Knight to direct movie based on Susanna Clarke book
8 votes -
Ursula K. Le Guin's home will become a writers residency
19 votes -
Science fiction writer Ursula K. Le Guin made Schrödinger’s cat famous
12 votes -
The repressive, authoritarian soul of “Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends”
40 votes -
This American Civil War submarine vanished for 136 years
3 votes -
Which books or authors have had the greatest impact on your worldview despite never having read them?
Some (hopefully obvious) caveats before we begin. By definition, everyone sharing examples here has not deeply engaged with the source material, so they're likely to have misconceptions from...
Some (hopefully obvious) caveats before we begin.
- By definition, everyone sharing examples here has not deeply engaged with the source material, so they're likely to have misconceptions from cultural osmosis.
- If you have read the source, feel free to share whether the common knowledge is accurate, a common misconception, or the first time you've seen it interpreted that way.
- If it was a video game, classical music, or other non-book that influenced you, those are also welcome.
Some answers from asking a similar question elsewhere
- Marx
- The Bible
- F.A. Hayek
- Aristotle
- Milton Friedman
- Socrates
- Plato
I'll post my answer as a comment to give it equal weight to the others.
8 votes -
Tobias Santelmann, Joel Kinnaman to star in Netflix’s Harry Hole nordic noir series
4 votes -
Alice Munro, Nobel laureate and master of the short story, dies at 92
9 votes -
Jack Conroy, proletarian author and editor, supported important 20th century US poets
4 votes -
Paul Auster, the patron saint of literary Brooklyn, dies at 77
15 votes -
The world's oldest hat shop that fitted James Bond
4 votes -
Authors of Tildes: How well do you know your own book when you publish?
I've spoken with some authors who are working on non-fiction books. I've noticed that some of them know their books intimately and can correct me if I mis-relay a section back to them that I've...
I've spoken with some authors who are working on non-fiction books. I've noticed that some of them know their books intimately and can correct me if I mis-relay a section back to them that I've read. They can do this without checking the actual book and I've then verified that I was incorrect.
Others have told me that by the time they were finished a seemingly infinite number of edits, they can't bear to read their own book again and just sent it to an editor at that point and released it.
I was surprised by the latter but it does remind me of my own experience writing very long papers in college. Is this common in your own experience?
26 votes -
Self published authors, how do you market your books? Nothing I've tried has had any success.
So, over the pandemic, I decided to follow a dream and write a novel. I followed all of the best practices I could find, had it beta read by folks so that the finished product would be as polished...
So, over the pandemic, I decided to follow a dream and write a novel. I followed all of the best practices I could find, had it beta read by folks so that the finished product would be as polished as possible, posted it on Amazon's kdp site in ebook and paperback/hardcover, and then set out to get the word out, but nothing seems to be attracting any attention to it.
To be fair, I know I'm not going to be the next Stephen king, but at the same time I feel like I should be able to find an audience somewhere. I've tried Facebook ads, i run a blog I post to semi regularly, as well as mirror posts on FB and insta, I've tried a couple of short videos on tiktok, but since its launch a couple years back, I've managed to amass just under 20 bucks Canadian in royalties.
Now, money wasn't a motivator when I began this new trek, but it would be nice to feel like the world I created has reached a few people and given them at least a small amount of entertainment.
If you're an author that's had success with some form of marketing, please share, and if you're someone who reads new stuff on the regular, where do you go to find new stories?
35 votes -
'James' and 'Demon Copperhead': the triumph of literary reimagining of classic books
8 votes -
Eleanor Johnson on how medieval christian writers accepted ecological collapse in contrast to evangelicals today
11 votes -
Ryan Gosling movie 'Project Hail Mary' set for Spring 2026
22 votes -
How one author pushed the limits of AI copyright | US Copyright Office grants copyright for work made with AI, with caveat
5 votes -
Sci-fi author Vernor Vinge dead at 79
32 votes -
Percival Everett can’t be pinned down
5 votes -
When Virginia Woolf wrote about early women writers, she was unaware of or underestimated a few published Elizabethan women
8 votes -
How Jim Heimann got crazy for California architecture
3 votes