ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

WORDS

Not The Norman Rockwell Of Verse — Robert Frost At 150

"Frost remains one of the greatest literary enumerators of a particularly modern darkness, regardless of his reputation (among those who refuse to read him carefully). ... Now, on the 150th anniversary of his birth, it’s worth considering that Frost is our great American poet of darkness." - The Hedgehog Review

How Harper Collins Is Tweaking Book Design To Save Trees

In an effort to reduce the carbon footprint of each book, they’re tweaking fonts, layout, and even the ink used. And so far, these subtle, imperceptible tweaks have saved 245.6 million pages, equivalent to 5,618 trees. - Fast Company

A Crisis In Classics Studies

Classics is no longer sleepy. The legacies of ancient Greece and Rome have reemerged as key cultural battlefields fought over by everyone from left-wing scholars to gun rights advocates. - LA Review of Books

Want To Read More Books? Super-Readers Share Tips

We talked to a few super-readers, who routinely finish hundreds of books a year, about their habits and goals — and asked them about what tips they have for the rest of us. - Washington Post

How Independent Publishers Change The Game

Over the last twenty years, the number of independent book publishers has grown by over 21 percent, with independent publishing now making up over 35 percent of the market. For publishers like Borucki, the Pandemic years felt rife with opportunity. - LitHub

Stop Trying To ‘Keep Up’ With Books

On social media, erstwhile readers post out of "a combination of obligation, social performance, genuine curiosity, love of books, and a desire to be involved, plus a dollop of early-adopterism and cheerleading." - Reactor Magazine

Booksellers At Portland’s Fabled Powell’s Books Get Requests For Monster Romance

Or, as it’s more commonly called, ‘monster smut.’ One bookseller says, “We had one that actually sold out really fast where it was called Hot Tyrannosaurus Rex. It’s just like, dinosaur smut.” - Oregon Public Broadcasting

A Perfectly Written Rejection Letter For Gertrude Stein

Sure, this is a work that would later become The Making of Americans, but in 1912, it was an experimental poetry manuscript rejected out of hand, and with snark, by London publisher Alfred C. Fifield. - Open Culture

If You Really Want To Reach Those ‘Book Goals,’ Here Are Some Strategies

Make it a community affair - or read in a new spot in your town or city. Adjust your genre plans. Or, you know, just dump the goals and have a good time. - NPR

A 30-Year Quest To Find The Author Of A Book Picked Up For One Egyptian Pound

The author of the book died by suicide in 1963. "All she left was a note by her bed for her son, Abbas, that read: 'I do love you, it’s just that life is unbearable. Forgive me.' After her death, her writing fell into oblivion.” - The New York Times

The OED Goes Japanese In Its Latest Update

Most of the new Japanese words relate to food, but there’s also art, including “kintsugi, the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery by joining pieces back together and filling cracks with lacquer dusted with powdered gold, silver, or platinum, highlighting the flaws in the mended object." - The Guardian (UK)

Lewis Carroll Apparently Had Terrible Insomnia

Of course, the author of Alice in Wonderland embraced the joys of sleeplessness. “For Carroll, waking and dreaming were not quite the opposites they seem to be. And since he believed dreaming to be a source of creativity, it follows that to him, sleeplessness might also be useful." - Slate

The Woman Who Wants To Push Her Christian Fiction On Us All

As the popular author’s books get turned into a TV series and a movie, she says, "It does feel like an answer to a prayer. … I just feel like I can almost see God smiling.” - The New York Times

People Are Always, Always Better Than Algorithms At Book Recommendations

"What is unquantifiable is horrifying to the corporate overlords, of course, but it’s the magic that connects readers with particular books." - LitHub

Without Warning, A Linchpin Of The Entire U.S. Indie-Publisher Ecosystem Has Closed

Small Press Distribution, founded in 1969, was the country's only not-for-profit literary distributor. It served roughly 400 small. independent presses and was known for getting unknown or experimental books to stores and to readers. Titles it distributed won over 100 literary awards in the last five years alone. - KQED (San Francisco)

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