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March 20, 2026

Jeff Shotts has been announced as the winner of the 2026 A.P. Anderson Award, bestowed by the Anderson Center at Tower View to honor an individual for “significant contributions to the cultural and artistic life of Minnesota.” An editor at Graywolf Press for nearly thirty years and the press’s current executive editor, Shotts has acquired and edited works that have received the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and awards from the National Book Critics Circle, among other accolades. “Editors... work in the shadows and rarely get the acclaim they deserve,” wrote Dobby Gibson, one of Shotts’s nominators, in a statement shared by the Anderson Center. “Jeff’s work at Graywolf has strengthened Minnesota’s stature as a center of literary arts. By nurturing world-class talent from Minnesota and beyond, he ensures the Twin Cities are not just a regional hub but a national and international presence in literature. And most important of all, Jeff has ensured Graywolf—and by extension Minnesota—fosters a culture of literary risk, innovation, and excellence.”

March 20, 2026

For the New York Times, Alexandra Alter considers the curious case of Shy Girl, the buzzy self-published horror novel picked up by Hachette—and then pulled from publication after evidence of AI use in its authorship. After online speculation about the book’s voice and the telltale tics of AI, Max Spero, the founder and chief executive of the AI-detection company Pangram, ran the book through its software, finding that an estimated 78 percent of the book was AI-generated. Hachette subsequently cancelled the book’s planned publication in the United States and ceased printing the title in the U.K. While AI has roiled the online book marketplace for time, Shy Girl may be the “first commercial novel from a major publishing house to be pulled over evidence of AI use. Its cancellation is a sign that AI writing is not only appearing in cheap self-published e-books that are flooding Amazon but is seeping into even traditionally published fiction.”

March 20, 2026

Amazon Literary Partnership has opened applications for its 2026 grants cycle, offering funding to “literary nonprofits with the aim of empowering writers, helping them create, publish, learn, teach, experiment, and thrive.” Grants are awarded in amounts ranging from $5,000 to $20,000; in 2025, ninety-nine Amazon Literary Partnership grants offered a total of $1 million in funding to organizations across the United States. Recent recipients of grants include the National Book Foundation, the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses (CLMP), Girls Write Now, and Cave Canem. Applications for this year’s grants are due May 1. Recepients will be announced in July.

March 19, 2026

Utah has added another book to its list of banned titles, reports The Salt Lake Tribune. Looking for Alaska (Dutton Books for Young Readers, 2005) by John Green is now the twenty-eighth title to be banned from Utah public schools. This young adult fiction book was also among the top fifty-two books banned from U.S. schools in 2025, according to PEN America. Utah law requires that a title be banned from public schools if at least three school districts determine there to be indecent content found within. On Green’s website, he states that a sex scene from the book is frequently the most cited reason for why it has been banned.

March 19, 2026

Smithsonian Magazine covers a new exhibition at Yale Library that explores the history of typos across five hundred years. Entitled “‘Beauties of My Style’: Errata and the Printed Mistake” and opening on March 30 at the university’s Sterling Memorial Library, this exhibition shows errors found in Ulysses, the Bible, and many more well-known titles. According to the library, “errors committed” lists—acknowledging typos and including apologies and additions—first appeared in the fifteenth century, with authors placing these slips in the back of their books. The exhibition looks at errata lists alongside their respective texts, exploring themes such as “censorship, misrepresentation, intervention, and instability,” per the library’s statement.

March 19, 2026

The executive director of the Modern Language Association (MLA), Paula M. Krebs, will be stepping down from her position in 2027. Having been with the MLA for close to a decade, Krebs has led the association “through a period of significant evolution, guiding the organization as it strategized to respond to the impact of new technologies, the COVID-19 pandemic, and legislative challenges to higher education.” Of her time spent with the MLA, Krebs notes, “As a first-generation college student, I’ve always had a bit of an outsider perspective, and this organization welcomed that, allowing me to take some risks and try some new things.” The executive council plans to start searching for Krebs’s replacement in the coming weeks.

March 18, 2026

Publishers Weekly reports on the surprise Chapter 11 filing of Baker & Taylor, which reveals debts to thousands of creditors that are estimated to total between $100 million and $500 million; the company’s estimated remaining assets are valued at $1 million to $10 million. Those owed money include Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, and HarperCollins, which are due $23.4 million, $16.4 million, and $15.6 million respectively; Ingram, Wiley, Norton, and multiple public libraries are also on the list of those to whom Baker & Taylor is in debt. “Given the huge gap between Baker & Taylor’s assets and what they owe their creditors, one observer told Publishers Weekly that companies will be lucky to receive pennies on the dollar.”

March 18, 2026

Six novels have been announced as the shortlist for the second annual Climate Fiction PrizeDusk by Robbie Arnott (Chatto & Windus), The Tiger’s Share by Keshava Guha (John Murray Press), Awake in the Floating City by Susanna Kwan (Simon & Schuster) Hum by Helen Phillips (Atlantic Books), Endling by Maria Reva (Virago), and The Book of Records by Madeleine Thien (Granta Books). Sponsored by the British nonprofit Climate Spring, the prize “celebrates the most inspiring novels tackling the climate crisis” as part of the organization’s broader mission to leverage the power of storytelling to address climate change. The winner of this year’s prize will be announced May 27 and will receive £10,000 (approximately $13,300).

March 18, 2026

Publishers Lunch reports that book distributor Baker & Taylor is set to close in January 2027. The news comes on the heels of the failed acquisition of the company’s assets by distributor ReaderLink last month. Local news reports that 253 of the 318 of the employees at the company’s warehouse in Momence, Illinois, learned yesterday that they had lost their positions; the remaining employees will assist in winding down operations through the end of the year. One of the oldest companies in the book industry, Baker & Taylor “was the largest supplier of materials to libraries, and B&T Publisher Services distributes books from more than 250 small presses. Small publishers are particularly in need of distribution services after the closure of Small Press Distribution.”

March 17, 2026

The Los Angeles Times uncovers a trend in book jacket design marked by childlike sketches, doodles, and crayon marks. “The more childish and unrefined, the better,” Maddie Connors writes. The “naive design” trend reportedly appeals to millennials and Gen Z readers. “The book cover trend, imbued with nostalgia for childhood, promises fiction that grapples with the pangs of adulthood in an age of precarity.” Examples of the design can be found on the covers of books by Madeline Cash and Cazzie David.

March 17, 2026

Virginia Evans is the winner of the 2026 PEN/Hemingway Award for Debut Novel for The Correspondent (Crown), the PEN/Faulkner Foundation announced. Judges Rachel Beanland, Dionne Irving, and Taymour Soomro considered 146 eligible novels by American authors published in the United States during the 2025 calendar year. Submissions came from 59 publishing houses, including small and academic presses. Evans will receive $10,000. The other finalists were Susanna Kwan for Awake in the Floating City (Pantheon) and Maggie Su for Blob: A Love Story (Harper).

March 17, 2026

Jaime Leifer has been named publishing director of Bloomsbury US’s adult trade division, according to Publishers Weekly. “Leifer will oversee the adult literary fiction list alongside the division’s nonfiction list, which the publisher hopes to expand.” 

March 17, 2026

An author in Utah has been convicted of “aggravated murder after poisoning her husband with fentanyl and then self-publishing a children’s book about coping with grief,” the Guardian reports. Prosecutors say Kouri Richins gave her husband five times the lethal dose of the synthetic opioid by mixing it in a cocktail that he drank in March 2022. The couple were $4.5 million in debt; Richins reportedly believed she would inherit her husband’s estate, valued at more than $4 million, after his death.

March 16, 2026

Comic book retailers are adopting BookTok-style videos to help increase store sales, reports Publishers Weekly. Creating content for a younger, online demographic, these booksellers are employing a variety of social-media-savvy techniques, including posting reels and creating videos in which they speak with comics creators, utilize puppets to share reviews of recent releases, drink wine while discussing new books, and more. One such comic store owner, Jen King of Space Cadets in Shenandoah, Texas, says, “When they see what people are like in the community, and how we talk to each other, they realize, Oh wait, they’re just like my friends. I’m not any different in person. The person they see on the screen is really me.”

March 16, 2026

Jack Kerouac’s original typescript scroll of the first draft of On The Road has sold for upwards of $12 million, making it the most expensive literary manuscript to sell at an auction, reports Fine Books & Collections. Typed with no paragraphs or chapter breaks, and measuring 119 feet long by 9 inches wide, the famous scroll “features occasional cross-outs by repeated ‘x’s, and numerous penciled deletions and word changes, in some cases substituting fictional names for the real names of himself and his companions, plus marginal notes in pencil by Kerouac.” Singer-songwriter Zach Bryan bought the literary work of art, having previously purchased a church in the author’s hometown that he plans to turn into a Kerouac museum. 

March 16, 2026

Four years following his survival of an assassination attempt, Salman Rushdie says he’s tired of being everyone’s “free speech Barbie,” reports the Guardian. During this year’s New Orleans Book Festival, Rushdie spoke with the Atlantic’s George Packer, saying, “it’s a little frustrating to be not known for a book—but for something that happened to a book,” referring to the attacker that stabbed him onstage at the Chautauqua Institution in New York in 2022 due to his having written The Satanic Verses (Viking, 1989). Wanting to focus more on his writing than the incident, Rushdie mentioned his return to fiction, and his most recent short story collection, The Eleventh Hour, published by Random House last November. 

March 13, 2026

For the New York Times, Alexandra Alter spoke to acclaimed writers about a key element of their practice: the company of dogs. Authors including Alice Hoffman, editor of the new anthology The Best Dog in the World: Essays on Love, and anthology contributors Roxane Gay, Amy Tan, and Paul Yoon reflected on the singular gift of a dog’s company at the writing desk. Some literary familiars even know when it’s time to call it a day, as with novelist Ann Leary’s dog, Eddie. “When he thinks she’s done enough work, he closes her laptop with his paw,” writes Alter.

March 13, 2026

Ten-time Grammy winner Billie Eilish is in final talks to make her screen debut in a film adaptation of The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath’s iconic 1963 best-seller, Deadline reports. The film will be directed by Oscar winner Sarah Polley, whose ouevre includes the acclaimed literary adapation Women Talking, based on the Miriam Toews book of the same name. Eilish will play the part of Esther Greenwood, the protagonist of Plath’s novel drawn from experiences of her own adolescence. Previously, Julia Stiles and Kirsten Dunst have been attached to plans to adapt the novel but no such films have come to fruition.

March 13, 2026

The buzziest books on #BookTok are about to find their way to the top of an official #BookTok chart in the U.K., the Guardian reports. The new chart will launch later this month, offering a ranked list of twenty titles that are “resonating most strongly with readers online.” The ranking will “combine verified retail sales data with social media engagement,” using data about engagement provided by TikTok and sales figures drawn from NielsenIQ BookData. Both popularity metrics will be integrated using an algorithm developed by NielsenIQ BookData partner Media Control to arrive at the final ranking. Nielsen IQ and Media Control described the significance of the new chart, which creates “for the first time, a reliable data-based link between social media resonance and real sales performance” as #BookTok continues to drive book sales worldwide. 

March 12, 2026

The tech company behind Grammarly is facing a class action lawsuit over an AI tool that the writing software implements to offer editing suggestions to users from the perspective of well-known writers and academics, “none of whom consented to have their names appear within the product,” reports Miles Klee for Wired. Award-winning journalist Julia Angwin is the only plaintiff named in the suit, as her name, alongside Stephen King and Neil deGrasse Tyson, was offered via Grammarly’s “Expert Review” tool. The suit states that Angwin “challenges Grammarly’s misappropriation of the names and identities of hundreds of journalists, authors, writers, and editors to earn profits for Grammarly and its owner, Superhuman.”

Literary Events Calendar

Readings & Workshops

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Veteran Voices Reflection produced by Poetic Theater Productions. March, 2023.
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KB Brookins reading at the Queer South Reading Series - Queer South II. May, 2023.
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Najee Omar leading a public workshop at Fort Green Park Conservancy’s Poetry in the Park series. April 2023, Brooklyn, NY.

Poets & Writers Theater

In this Penguin Random House video, Andy Weir talks about how his novels often emerge from daydreaming, and the origins of his 2021 novel, Project Hail Mary, which has been adapted into a film directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller... more

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