A WEEKLY ROUND-UP OF NEWS OF THE LITERARY WORLD, AVAILABLE EVERY Monday
Literally This Week is recorded each Sunday night and includes news from across the literary spectrum, from authors to publishers, bookstores to libraries. It there is news in the world of books, host Keith F. Shovlin will cover it. The show closes with the top 2 on the New York Times bestseller lists in Fiction, Non-Fiction, and eBooks.
From around the world into your podcast queue, let’s get literal!
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This week: Bram Stoker’s lost reference materials are rediscovered, J.K. Rowling takes her former assistant to court, Comics legend Stan Lee passed away, Russian publishers are censoring LGBT books, the National Book Awards were handed out, Toxic is the OED word of the year, and Tanzania holds two journalists for questioning. All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This week: Dark Horse Comics is going to the movies, the CBC awarded diversity, a famous author gave a boost to library advocacy, bookseller WH Smith has bought its way into airports, AI is being used by Police to study writings for lies, an Iowa library is flooded with support after an act of hatred, and the UK prepares to pick a new poet laureate . All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This week: the Hurston/Wright prize started a week of award news, the World’s Biggest Book sale goes to Dubai, an Iowa man burns library books to protest Pride, PBS named the Great American Read, transgender literature is on the rise, the Kirkus Prize winners were announced, and Ireland votes to legalize blasphemy. All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This week: Stephen Hawking warns of superhumans in his final book, a Brazilian Presidential candidate benefits from fake news, how #MeToo influences the literary industry, the Man Booker Prize was announced, children’s mental health gets help from picture books, the creator of the Little Free Library has died, and Iceland’s book giving tradition is under threat. All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This week: Contemplating the potential unionziation of comics creators after #metoo and #timesup, the Swedish Academy elected two new members in planning for next year’s Nobel, Brazil’s National Museum prepares to rebuild, the PEN/Pinter prize awarding came with a plea for authors to call out lies, HarperCollins took a big step toward Spanish-language literature, the Alternative Nobel is announced, and Marvel fires an author over online harassment. All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This week: it’s banned book week and the Guardian takes notice, Penguin Random House is nothing the week in partnershing with We Need Diverse Books, ever want to know the reasons comics are banned?, the Kirkus Prize nominees are announced, the judge’s copy of a banned book is going on the auction block, the Nobel Prize for Literature might not be back next year, and the founder of the World Wide Web has charted a new path forward. All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This week: teachers are using YA novels to teach #MeToo, Tronc newspapers have a second bidder, a nominee withdraws from the alt Nobel, CRS reports go online, the New York Review of Books fires their editor, Barnes & Noble opens a new, smaller store, and the Oxford English Dictionary wants to learn new slang. All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This week: the EU Copyright law is back in the news, Google wants to kill URLs, several publishers are staffing up this year, a Florence bookstore is looking for a new owner, Time’s new owner is shifting staff, the EU preliminarily passed its copyright reform, and French bookstores are up in arms over a prize winner. All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.
This week: Some questions remain unanswered about the final days of Stan Lee, South Korean booksellers are struggling to survive, an author will be headlining the White House Correspondents dinner next year, a former Librarian of Congress died, Glamour magazine ends its print run, Michelle Obama’s book is B&N’s bestseller of the year, and a novelist has been banned from China All this, plus the New York Times and Publisher’s Weekly bestseller lists and the latest news from aois21, Literally This Week.