Year / 2004
Litquake 2004
This weekend, if you’re in the San Francisco area, the third Litquake is going down. About a hundred authors reading their goods at the Koret Auditorium. Joe Bob says check it out.
And the Nobel Goes to…
Elfriede Jelinek “for her musical flow of voices and counter-voices in novels and plays that with extraordinary linguistic zeal reveal the absurdity of society’s clichés and their subjugating power.”
Update
Allemande
- Ron takes on Paul Maher again and talks with Stephanie Lehmann.
- Jennifer Weiner fends off medically imbalanced Big Media.
- The Book Babes squeal in Tanenhaus’s presence. I’ve responded.
- Amy Fisher is back and she has a self-published book where, it appears, she dispenses parenting advice.
- The Nobel buzz is purring, but could it go to a woman? Only nine women have been awarded the Nobel Literature Prize since 1901.
- Bend It Like Beckham director Gurinder Chadha has given Pride and Prejudice the Bollywood treatment.
- David Mitchell gets the royal treatment over at the Independent (first seen at the Literary Saloon)
- The Washington Post takes a look at Altman’s Tanner ’88 followup.
- S.E. Hinton talks at length with the Ottawa Citizen about returning to writing after a long hiatus, movies, motherhood, and her new novel.
- Nebraskan Ted Kooser will be the next poet laureate of the United States.
- Maya Angelou has written a cookbook.
- The short story defended yet again (via Bookninja)
- Stuart Macintyre argues that historians are no longer detached observers.
- Joan Didion examines Kerry.
- The Dagger Awards have been announced. (via Sarah)
- Books on anger examined at the TLS.
- An early review of the new Atwood essay collection.
