Number 3 chiller
Ben Schott is never at a loss for German words (because he’ll just make some new ones).
The Author Sends Her Regrets: J. K. Rowling and other writers with second thoughts.
7 questions for Raphaël Jerusalmy, author of Saving Mozart.
We’re all familiar with the idea of ‘binge-watching’ a TV show, but what about binge-reading?
The Writer’s Room: Douglas Coupland, Joyce Carol Oates and other writers photographed where they write.
Why writers are the worst procrastinators. Should that be best procrastinators?
We prefer to imagine our writers toiling away in solitude rather than suckling on the teat of an all-singing, all-dancing, round-the-clock personal administrator. Read more
The Economist recommends Ella Berthoud and Susan Elderkin’s A–Z of literary remedies, The Novel Cure: ‘A charming addition to any library…Time spent leafing through its pages is inspiring—even therapeutic, if not quite therapy.
10 quotes from writers who loved a stiff drink.
Can you distinguish between 80 different languages in the Great Language Game?
Book Hive is a kinetic sculpture featuring 400 animatronic books, built to celebrate 400 years of libraries in Bristol.
Here’s Read more
Rabih Alameddine, author of An Unnecessary Woman, lists his six favourite books. An Unnecessary Woman will be available in bookshops from 23 February.
Tweeting while literary: Joyce Carol Oates, Stephen King and the dangers of being an author on Twitter.
Literary Valentines for the romantic reader.
Great historical slang from the Oxford English Dictionary. I for one have been doing my darnedest to bring ‘snoot’ and all its derivatives back.
Why yes, I would like to watch Read more
So good they reviewed it twice: Rebecca Mead’s The Road to Middlemarch: My Life with George Eliot is reviewed in the LA Review of Books by both Pamela Erens and Hannah Rosefield.
A literary agent on trendspotting and making something popular.
Track forward eleven minutes in to hear Laurie Halse Anderson discuss The Impossible Knife of Memory on Triple R’s Aural Text.
‘There are few writers who so acutely and seductively frame the eternally wounded, stupidly brave teenager inside a grown woman’s heart.’ Bookforum reviews Elena Ferrante’s The Story of a New Name, the second book in the Neapolitan series, which started with Read more