WORDS

Jack Kerouac’s 120-Foot-Long Typescript For “On The Road” Sells For $12.1 Million

“It’s one of the most mythic icons in American letters — and now the most valuable. The 120-foot-long scroll on which Jack Kerouac hammered out the 1957 Beat Generation classic On the Road has realized an astounding $12.1 million at auction, setting a record for a literary manuscript.” - Artnet

The Benefits Of Audiobooks

Audiobooks offer significant benefits, primarily increasing reading accessibility, enabling multitasking during daily chores or commutes, and boosting comprehension for auditory learners. - Good E-Reader

Dictionary/Encyclopedias Sue AI Companies Over Copyright

Britannica, which owns Merriam-Webster, retains the copyright to nearly 100,000 online articles, which have been scraped and used to train OpenAI’s LLMs without permission, the publisher alleges in the lawsuit. - TechCrunch

Grammarly Apologized For Turning Live And Dead Writers And Teachers Into So-Called Experts

But what the CEO “failed to mention was that the company wasn’t just dealing with hundreds of furious writers — it was facing litigation as well.” - Futurism

The Prestige Novel Is Dead

Although the literary novel remains the touchstone for what “elite” cultural status might mean, its former midcentury monopoly on prestige, Brier claims, has been shattered. - LA Review of Books

How Math And Literature Are Closely Related

Literature and mathematics have these strong connections because mathematics is all about structure and pattern. It's the language we use to describe those things. - CBC

Study: Autocomplete Changes How People Write

Overall, the study participants who saw the biased AI text shifted their positions toward those espoused by the AI. - Scientific American

How Barnes & Noble Became Popular Again

Barnes & Noble is experiencing a revival. It opened 60 new stores last year and plans to do the same this year. It is reportedly soliciting banks to handle an IPO. - The Atlantic

Recommendations For Deeply Depressing Irish Books To Read On St. Paddy’s Day

“These days the air has a keen edge. A desperate edge. What forms can the imagination take when power seems nonsensical and cruelty deliberate? These questions haunt—and should haunt—our fiction.” - Electric Lit

In A Really Tough Market, Some Indie Publishers Are Finding Ways To Survive

Jane Austen card decks (themed by book), collaborations with London publishers, old imprints reabsorbed or renamed, and audio - some indie publishers are finding ways to stay alive and even, ina few cases, grow. - Publishers Weekly

What Happens When A Tiny Library In A Tiny Coastal Town Gets A Windfall

A donor “gave $150,000 to the library in honor of her late husband, ... who had been a math professor,” with one catch: the library had to take his library of 1,000 mathematics books. - Oregon ArtsWatch

The Book World Seems To Have Fallen Back In Affection With Barnes And Noble

“Like all big chains, when you shop there, more of your money leaves the community than when you shop at something locally owned. … anything that takes market share from Amazon is positive.” - The Atlantic

Why Competitive High School Scrabble Has Become A Mess

It’s not just because of the intensity of the competitors, though that counts for a lot. Stefan Fatsis recounts a contested play at last year’s North American championship and the confusion arising from — let’s call it a breakdown of lexical authority. - Unabridged

There Are Fewer Than 10 Full Time Book Critics Left

By some measures, there are as many as 1 million books published annually in the US, and it’s a number that doesn’t show any signs of slowing down. The result is that there is intense competition for the small slice of the review landscape that remains. - Book Work

Missing Page From Major Archimedes Manuscript Rediscovered In France

“A lost page from the Archimedes Palimpsest, among the oldest sources for the Greek mathematician in existence, has been discovered … at the Musée des Beaux-Arts in Blois. The page in question contains geometric diagrams and a passage from Archimedes’s treatise on the sphere and the cylinder, hidden beneath a layer of later religious writings.” - Artnet

Our Free Newsletter

Join our 30,000 subscribers

Latest

Don't Miss