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How Does Winning A Booker Prize Affect An Author’s Career Long-Term?

Yes, of course a Booker leads to soaring sales of the book that wins, but what about an author’s subsequent works? - The Bookseller (UK)

Why Publishing Can’t Get Over Its Addiction To “Buzzy” Stories

Publishing, argues Isen, was once an industry that offered room for experimentation and long bets; now it’s haunted by the tyranny of short-term judgment. - The Walrus

This Countertenor Happily Goes Back And Forth Between Vivaldi And Sarah Vaughan

“For John Holiday, being true to himself means weaving together the loose strands of opera, gospel, R&B, jazz and pop that make up his musical life and inheritance.” - The New York Times

Why The Record Sale Price For The Frida Kahlo Painting Is Nothing To Celebrate

In the rush to map cultural issues like gender disparity onto high-level financial trading, we’re forgetting that this has nothing to do with gender at all, and even less to do with art. - Artnet

Those Eureka Moments And Why They’re So Remarkable

You never feel as if you’re getting warmer; rather, you go from cold to hot, seemingly in an instant. Or, as the neuropsychologist Donald Hebb, known for his work building neurobiological models of learning, wrote in the 1940s, sometimes “learning occurs as a single jump, an all-or-none affair.” - Quanta

If Machines Do Most Of Our Writing, What Will Happen To Human Writing?

If you’re more likely to read something written by AI than by a human on the internet, is it only a matter of time before human writing becomes obsolete? Or is this simply another technological development that humans will adapt to? - The Conversation

One Of Canada’s Leading Authors Of Indigenous Stories Just Found Out He Has No Indigenous Ancestry

“Thomas King, … the writer of books including 2003's The Truth About Stories: A Native Narrative and 2012's The Inconvenient Indian: A Curious Account of Native People in North America, says he is reeling from recent news that he has no Cherokee ancestry.” - CBC

As Our Machines Get More Intelligent, We Keep Redefining What Intelligence Is

Machine intelligence meets or surpasses humanlike abilities in many areas—but being an embodied human is complex, and our grasp of intelligence has grown significantly. - Scientific American

Broadway’s “Queen Of Versailles” To Close After Only A Few Weeks

The musical, based on a 2012 documentary about a Florida couple seeking to build a palatial home but stymied by an economic downturn, is yet another high-profile financial failure for Broadway: The show cost up to $22.5 million to capitalize. - The New York Times

The Taj Mahal Has Become A Flashpoint Of Controversy

The symbol of love is now a flash point in India’s historical antagonism between Hindus and minority Muslims, a battle between historians — a battle over truth, identity and power. - Washington Post

Inside The Collapse Of Dr. Phil’s Media Network

“The unraveling of McGraw’s (Merit Street Media) was a gut punch for the celebrity therapist who has assiduously built a reputation" — and riches — "as one of the most trusted voices on television. But his fortunes faded amid a dying market for syndicated TV and clashes with a distributor and partner.” - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

Drawing A Line: As 21st-Century Pop Culture Got Stale, The Counterculture Became Right Wing

In place of the bohemian idealism of previous countercultural movements, this counter-counterculture embraced cynicism, scoffing at inclusivity and progress. - The New York Times

LA Phil Reduces Its Youth Orchestra Program (YOLA)

“This decision comes as we assess how to best serve the Los Angeles community with recent economic challenges and shifts in funding for the organization,” the LA Phil said in a statement to Boyle Heights Beat on Thursday. - Boyle Heights Beat

One Big Beautiful Bill: Architecture Is No Longer A Professional Degree

Under the terms of the One Big Beautiful Bill, the provision of student loans in the USA will be overhauled starting 1 July, 2026, with borrowing amounts set to be determined by whether a degree is considered professional or not. - Dezeen

This Public Radio Station In Rural Alaska Genuinely Saves Lives

KYUK, which broadcasts in English and indigenous language Yugtun to the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta on Alaska’s west coast, transmitted crucial evacuation and rescue information when the remnants of a typhoon hit the area last month. The station lost 70% of its budget when Congress defunded public radio this past summer. - Reveal

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