ArtsJournal: Arts, Culture, Ideas

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The 1990s Magazine That Showed, And Gripped, Lesbian Mecca San Francisco

Curve began its life as Deneuve, a lesbian magazine founded by a 23-year-old who gambled all her money on horse races, won, and used the proceeds to start the mag. There's a new movie documenting its evolution, and how different things might be in 2021. Franco Stevens: "Once I came back from the Book Fair in Chicago, walked into...

John Steinbeck Really Did Write A Werewolf Novel. No Way His Estate Is Letting You See It.

"The manuscript, Murder at Full Moon, was completed in 1930 but was never published. A single copy has been sitting, mostly forgotten, in an archive in Texas since 1969. It includes drawings by Steinbeck himself. A scholar of American literature at Stanford University is pushing for the book to be published, but the agents for Steinbeck's estate vehemently refused...

It’s The First New Ancient Greek-English Dictionary In 178 Years, And Victorian Euphemisms Are Gone

Having decided that the old reference works, still in use in English schools and universities, were too "antiquated" to work from, the editors of the new Cambridge Greek Lexicon spent 23 years going over virtually every surviving piece of ancient Hellenic writing back to Homer and up to circa 120 AD. "The new dictionary's editors 'spare no blushes', ...

Forgotten Archive Of Brontë Family Manuscripts Headed To Auction

"The collection was put together by Arthur Bell Nicholls, the widower of Charlotte, who of the six Brontë children lived the longest, dying in 1855 at the age of 38. Nicholls sold the majority of the surviving Brontë manuscripts in 1895 to the notorious bibliophile and literary forger Thomas James Wise. The collectors and brothers Alfred and William Law...

In Rushdie’s Defense…

In his new book, “Languages of Truth: Essays 2003-2020,” Rushdie attempts to perform a defensive castling move. He suggests his work has been misunderstood and mistreated because the literary culture has turned from brio-filled imaginative writing toward the humbler delights of “autofiction,” as exemplified by the work of Elena Ferrante and Karl Ove Knausgaard. - The New York Times

What Accounts For The Enduing Popularity Of Orwell?

There is no doubting the clarity and vigor of his prose, but when it comes to assessing his capacity to face up to grim truths, there is good reason to doubt Orwell’s claims to his having looked reality unflinchingly in the eye and told it like it was. Orwell’s friend Malcolm Muggeridge believed that while Orwell displayed “an almost...

The Benedictine Monk Who Roams The World Helping To Save Ancient Manuscripts

" the world's most renowned, prolific and peripatetic manuscript conservationist. Over the past 20 years his work has taken him from the Balkans to the Himalayas, from the Sahel region of Africa to the Middle East, injecting him into the heart of conflict zones and resulting in several narrow escapes from rebel movements and religious extremists." - Smithsonian Magazine

What Happens To Literary Culture When Book Reviews Go Away

"The ubiquity of social media is often offered up as a solution to the paucity of mainstream book criticism. While it is no longer possible to earn a living as a working critic, the internet has provided us with arguably more amateur criticism than at any other point in history, from BookTube to Bookstagram to Twitter Books. But the...

How Jane Rogers Took On Britain’s Very Male Literary Establishment In The 80s

Rogers: "When I started work on Mr Wroe’s Virgins I was 35. I was wildly ambitious, and had a chip on my shoulder. Faber had published my first three novels and all had found critical favour. But I was broke and my sales were poor, and I was spiky about the literary world." - The Guardian (UK)

An Israeli Airstrike Has Destroyed Gaza’s Largest Bookstore

"The beloved Samir Mansour Bookshop was destroyed on Tuesday by an Israeli airstrike. The shop, which was established in 2008, had thousands of books, including the largest collection of English literature in Gaza, and was also part of a publishing house that focused on Palestinian writers." Israel claimed the strike's purpose was to destroy Hamas tunnels. - LitHub

How A Book Gets Adapted For A Movie

It's not always obvious or a direct line. Start with a good story. Characters that lift off the page. And then it gets complicated. - LitHub

Do Away With Classics Because They’re Imperialist?

"As the field’s most famous practitioner, and a dedicated anti-racist and feminist, Mary Beard takes a middle position: she believes neither that classics deserves a pedestal nor that it must be destroyed. Recently, in conversation, Beard defended her stance—and spoke about feminist translations, Internet manners, and the fluid properties of the canon." - The New Yorker

‘The French Author Is No Longer Just The White Man Over 50’; The Gallic Literary World Is Finally Diversifying

"Major publishers have created special collections to promote first-time authors and ethnic minorities while new publishing houses are opening the field to a larger spectrum of writers, styles, and subject matter. … In parallel, writing workshops and graduate degrees in creative writing – once seen as a North American concept – are popping up around the country and acting...

A Poetry Slam, Moved From The Apollo Theatre To A Clothing Boutique

"By noon, a dozen poets had arrived. Several paced the sneaker section, frantically whispering their metaphors, anaphoras, and onomatopoeias to themselves; others scrolled TikTok. A few snapped approval as fellow-finalists recited pulsing trochees and accentual slant rhymes. Alex Guzman, a nervous sixteen-year-old who wore glasses held together with Scotch tape, wandered into an empty room at the back and...

Amazon Makes Deal To Lend Books Through The Digital Public Library of America

The deal represents a major step forward for the digital library market. Not only is Amazon Publishing finally making its digital content available to libraries, the deal gives libraries a range of models through which it can license the content, offering libraries the kind of flexibility librarians have long asked for from the major publishers. - Publishers Weekly

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