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Author Declares Culture Dead, Publishers Still Printing Books

W. David Marx diagnoses 25 years of creative stagnation in a new cultural history. Presumably the irony of launching a fresh cultural critique about the death of cultural innovation isn't lost on anyone involved. — Artnet

The Heart Of Small-Market Weekly Newspapers? The Obituaries

“It has long been recognized that newspaper obituaries hold value for communities, documenting lives and preserving local history. Their significance is rarely debated. Their value to the business of news and in sustaining local newsrooms is far less understood.” - Reynolds Journalism Institute

Amazon’s AI Authors Lack What Writers Need Most: Attitude

Machine-generated novels and coloring books are flooding the marketplace, but they're missing literature's secret ingredient—artistic ego. Turns out readers might actually miss all that human neurosis and creative self-importance after all. — LitHub

Science Peer Review Journals Are Being Swamped By AI Slop

For more than a century, scientific journals have been the pipes through which knowledge of the natural world flows into our culture. Now they’re being clogged with AI slop. - The Atlantic

Unique, “Priceless” Medieval Manuscript Discovered In English School Library

The book is the only surviving complete original manuscript of Richard Rolle’s Emendatio vitae, written circa 1340. - BBC (MSN)

Women-Centered Fantasy Is Fueling The Publishing Industry

Women are rewriting the rules of sword-and-sorcery, trading testosterone-fueled quests for romance-driven adventures. Publishers are discovering that dragons plus dating equals dollars—who knew female readers wanted both magic and meaningful relationships? — The Conversation

Writers vs. Machines: The John Henry Complex Returns

ChatGPT has writers channeling their inner folk hero, hammer in hand. But as Stephen Marche notes, we've been dancing with technological muses long before algorithms—typewriters, anyone? — LitHub

Maybe Listening To An Audiobook Really Is As Good As Reading A Print Book

“Is listening to a book while doing the dishes, walking the dog or drifting off to sleep really as valuable as sitting down to read it? For authors, the publishing trade and those encouraging reading and literacy, the answer is increasingly yes.” - The Guardian

Alabama Library Board Cuts Funding To Library That Wouldn’t Remove “Handmaid’s Tale”

The Republican-run Alabama Public Library Service Board voted to withhold roughly $22,000 in state funding from the Fairhope Public Library, citing the library’s failure to comply with the board’s rules requiring books deemed “sexually explicit” be relocated to the adult section. - The Daily Beast

A Brief History Of The Word “Hello”

The greeting’s first known appearance in print happened 200 years ago this week in a Connecticut newspaper, but its roots go back at least two centuries further, probably more. - BBC

Our Connection Between Athletics And Writing

The intensity of the workout was necessary to take her out of her head, so that she could write from a different place—“an embodied place, because writing is not just intellectual; it’s emotional connection, sensual connection,” she explained. “We exist in the world.” - The Atlantic

Author Julian Barnes Says He Has Written His Last Book

“I won’t stop writing, because I’ve been a journalist all my life, before I became a novelist. So I shall do journalism, reviews and things like that. But in terms of books, this” — Departure(s) — “is my last.” - The Telegraph (UK) (Yahoo!)

The Private Museums Grappling With America’s Real History

The Legacy Museum, which opened almost eight years ago, is perhaps the closest thing America has to a national slavery museum. Crucially, however, it is completely privately funded, receiving no state or federal financial support. - The Atlantic

The Poverty Of Being A Novelist

I’m a novelist, and I was paid £1,000 and £500 respectively for my last two books. The latter was shortlisted for an international literary award. That’s £1,500 earned in 10 years. - The Guardian

In Praise Of The Boarding School Novel

“Because they distill and contain all the pain and pleasure of being young into one crucible, ... they are such rich source material for novelists. Fiction thrives on change, and what bigger, more painful transformation is there than becoming a teenager?” - LitHub

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