The Fate of St. Mark's, Dead Authors Podcast, and More
Saint Mark's Bookshop in New York City seeks a rent cut to stay in business; Ed Park takes job as senior editor of Amazon New York; a letter from T. S. Eliot to Virginia Woolf; and other news.
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Saint Mark's Bookshop in New York City seeks a rent cut to stay in business; Ed Park takes job as senior editor of Amazon New York; a letter from T. S. Eliot to Virginia Woolf; and other news.
New York Times best-selling author Carolyn Parkhurst shares the bookstores, reading series, and other literary landmarks of Washington, D.C., that make it “a beautiful, vibrant, creative city.”
A California group attempts to repeal a law that allows students to learn about Walt Whitman; Ugandan police arrest writer Vincent Nzaramba; previously banned Slaughterhouse-Five is restored to Missouri school library; and other news.
A Pennsylvania school closes production of the musical Kismet; Nobel Prize winner Gabriel García Márquez's 1996 book, News of a Kidnapping, sells out in Tehran; Eudora Welty's Mississippi garden; and other news.
The last remaining Borders closes its doors forever, and former employees leave an epitaph; the Phantom Tollbooth at fifty; Harlan Ellison sues to halt the release of a new film starring Justin Timberlake; and other news.
Ayn Rand's last novel gets the iPad treatment; the survival skills of Los Angeles's home-grown lit mag; Banned Books Week hosts virtual readings; the most-asked author questions; and other news.
Rachel Sussman and Terra Chalberg befriended each other a decade ago as young editors at Scribner. Later, Chalberg joined the Susan Golomb Literary Agency as an agent and director of foreign rights. (Susan Golomb is the long-time agent of Jonathan Franzen.) Sussman moved on, too, becoming an agent for the Zachary Shuster Harmsworth Agency, where she worked for six years.
Yesterday, the two peers announced the launch of a new literary agency, Chalberg & Sussman, which will offer an "unwavering commitment to helping emerging and established authors reach a broad audience across multiple platforms." With Chalberg managing the agency’s foreign rights alongside an international group of co-agents, the agency already has an impressive list of clients, including Margaux Fragoso, author of the New York Times best-selling memoir, Tiger, Tiger (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011); Hal Herzog, professor of psychology and author of Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat: Why It's So Hard to Think Straight About Animals (Harper, 2010); and Andrew Porter, Flannery O’Connor Award-winner for The Theory of Light and Matter: Stories (University of Georgia Press, 2008), among numerous others.
Borders successfully auctions its intellectual property; e-book publishers attempt to harness the narrative potential of interactivity; Kenneth Goldsmith on "unoriginal genius" and the changing state of creativity; and other news.
French novelist and poet Michel Houellebecq has gone missing; the Library Copyright Alliance calls Author's Guild lawsuit "deplorable"; two young-adult writers claim agents discourage their having gay characters in their manuscript; and other news.
An Amazon e-book promotion yielded 14,158 sales in one day; a note penned by J. D. Salinger is currently up for auction for fifty thousand dollars; arson at the University of Missouri library; and other news.