Days after Alex Pretti was killed by ICE agents in Minneapolis, a group of publishing professionals, including Mabel Hsu and Zoey Cole, are organizing a two-day online auction to raise money for Minnesotans and immigrants elsewhere, Publishers Weekly reports. The group, Publishing for Minnesota, is holding the auction (among the offerings are “signed books, author headshots, original art, critiques for novels and picture books, marketing feedback, portfolio reviews, and ‘art jam sessions’”) on January 29 and January 30. The proceeds “will support organizations providing legal aid, emergency assistance, food, and community resources to Minnesotans in urgent need due to ICE’s activities.”
Writing Prompts
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In “Object Loss,” which appears in her Pulitzer Prize–winning poetry collection, Stag’s Leap<...
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The Academy of American Poets has announced the election of poets Gabrielle Calvocoressi and Cornelius Eady as chancellors. Established in 1946, the board of chancellors is “a group of fifteen distinguished poets who advise the Academy of American Poets on artistic matters, judge its largest legacy prizes, and serve as ambassadors of poetry.”
The National Book Foundation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation recently announced the selected titles for the fifth annual Science + Literature program, which identifies three books annually that deepen readers’ understanding of science and technology across fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. Authors receive $10,000 and will be celebrated at a public ceremony in New York City in March. This year’s selected titles are Ancient Light (University of Arizona Press) by Kimberly Blaeser, Forest Euphoria: The Abounding Queerness of Nature (Spiegel & Grau) by Patricia Ononiwu Kaishian, and Bog Queen (Bloomsbury Publishing) by Anna North.
Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs has announced Laura Tohe as the new poet laureate for the state, according to Journalaz.com. Appointed on January 14, distinguished poet, librettist, and prose writer Tohe will serve as the second poet laureate of Arizona, following Alberto Álvaro Ríos. She was born in Fort Defiance, Arizona, and grew up speaking both English and Diné Bizaad (the Navajo language), having previously served as poet laureate of the Navajo Nation from 2015 to 2019. In response to this honor, Tohe wrote: “Poetry is alive; it celebrates our human experience with language, voice, and reflection. I especially look forward to sharing and supporting poetry in Arizona’s rural communities. This is an exciting opportunity.”
Vogue recently launched a book club, starting this month with the classic 1847 novel Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë. Participants can share their thoughts via virtual conversations which will culminate in a live event in the coming weeks. The fashion magazine plans to cover four books throughout the year and even offers a daily reading schedule for those wanting to wrap up before the February event.
Libro.fm, an “online platform that partners with independent bookstores to sell audiobooks,” has now launched an annual subscription plan to retain customers and compete with Amazon’s Audible, Publishers Weekly reports. Having built up the growth momentum and scale to add this annual Plus membership alongside their existing monthly subscription, the Seattle-based company can now pay their booksellers upfront. Libro.fm’s cofounder and CEO, Mark Pearson, “credits booksellers with helping create curated playlists to promote books, making customers aware of the service, and handselling subscriptions while customers are in store,” leading them to their current success.
“Hundreds of shops, restaurants, and cultural institutions” across Minneapolis have closed their doors today as part of a general strike to protest the federal deportation program targeting the city, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reports. Numerous local bookstores and publishers have announced their participation in the economic freeze, known as the Day of Truth and Freedom, including Birchbark Books, Graywolf Press, and Milkweed Editions, as reported by Literary Hub and shared on social media channels this past week. “Milkweed Editions could not exist without its beautiful and diverse community of authors and readers in Minnesota—our home, where so many are being threatened with cruelty and removal,” said Milkweed staff in a January 20 statement on Facebook about the strike.
Former Bantam Books editor Toni Burbank has died, Publishers Lunch reports. After beginning her career at Columbia University Press, Burbank joined the staff of Bantam where she would work for over forty years, rising to the position of vice president and executive editor. “Toni was a legend who championed books that inspired readers to better understand themselves and the world around them,” said the Bantam staff in a statement on the news of her passing.
Percival Everett was the best-selling Black author in 2025, Publishers Weekly reports. His Pulitzer Prize-winning novel James, a retelling of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, tops the new list compiled by the African American Literature Book Club based on sales figures from Circana BookScan. Also leading the list are works by Kamala Harris, Octavia Bulter, Kimberly D. Moore, and Rachel Renee Russell.
The Bookseller has covered the death of a worker at the Hachette U.K. distribution warehouse in Oxfordshire this week. Though the circumstances of the death are still unknown, the staff member was much-loved by his colleagues, according to a representative for the publisher. A Thames Valley Police spokesperson added, “Sadly, a twenty-three-year-old man has died. His next of kin have been informed and offered support by officers. A twenty-one-year-old man from Wallingford was arrested on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter and has since been bailed.”
To counteract the book bans that have been taking place in libraries and schools across the nation, the grassroots organization We Need Diverse Books (WNDB) has announced their Unbanned Book Network, reports the Associated Press. This network “will donate books by authors who have been banned and select Author Ambassadors for school districts facing bans.” WNDB is aiming to start with twenty schools in states where book banning is more widespread, including Texas and Florida. WNDB’s CEO, Dhonielle Clayton, remarks, “We’re not only facing an ongoing literacy crisis in the U.S., we’re also battling increased rates of censorship, which is infringing on our students’ right to read,” adding that the Unbanned Book Network will demonstrate “the power of diverse literature to transform young lives and our communities.”
California College of the Arts (CCA) will be closing their doors after the 2026-27 school year, reports KQED. In place of “northern California’s last nonprofit art school, which has served the region for 119 years” will be a new Vanderbilt University campus. The reason for CCA’s closing is related to financial hardship; in 2024 the school announced having a $20 million deficit and followed up with layoffs at that time, however running the school without a large endowment, and relying heavily on tuition, wasn’t sustainable in the long term. This signifies a major hit to the arts community in the Bay Area.
Celebrated science fiction and fantasy publisher Tor will venture into commercial fiction with a new imprint, Publishers Weekly reports. Set to launch in January 2027, Wildthorn Books will publish fifteen to twenty titles each year in genres including commercial and upmarket women’s fiction, suspense, paranormal mystery, magical realism, speculative nonfiction, and historical fantasy. Devi Pillai and Monique Patterson will lead the imprint. “‘Readers have changed—and so has the market,’ said Pillai in a statement, noting that as commercial fiction continues to blend with genre, it became apparent that Tor ‘was the perfect house to create Wildthorn.’”
The PEN/Faulkner Foundation has announced the longlist for the 2026 PEN/Faulkner Award for Debut Novel. From this longlist, three finalists will be announced in February, and the winning book will be announced in March. This year’s longlisted titles are Trip by Amie Barrodale (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), We Pretty Pieces of Flesh by Colwill Brown (Henry Holt), The Correspondent by Virginia Evans (Crown), The Devil Three Times by Rickey Fayne (Little, Brown), Awake in the Floating City by Susanna Kwan (Pantheon), North Sun by Ethan Rutherford (Deep Vellum), Blob by Maggie Su (Harper), and Maggie; Or, a Man and a Woman Walk Into a Bar by Katie Yee (Summit Books). These titles were selected from from a pool of 146 novels published by debut novelists in 2025. Rachel Beanland, Dionne Irving, and Taymour Soomro judged.
Renowned agent Georges Borchardt, who had “an astute eye for literary talent” and introduced American readers to the daring and the avante-garde, died on Sunday at the age of ninety-seven, the New York Times reports. “At various times, he or the Manhattan agency that he and his wife, Anne Borchardt, founded in 1967, Georges Borchardt Inc., represented five Nobel laureates, eight Pulitzer Prize-winners and one statesman, the French president Charles de Gaulle.” Borchardt is also remembered for having “arranged for the publication in English of Elie Wiesel’s searing Holocaust memoir Night after it was rejected by fourteen American publishers” and for spotting the brilliance in “an enigmatic but tender and often darkly funny French play written by a lanky Irishman”—Waiting for Godot. In an interview with the Paris Review, Borchardt reflected on his legacy: “I really feel in many cases that I’ve made it possible for a book to succeed and also made it possible for a writer to go on writing.”
The National Book Critics Circle has announced the finalists for its annual awards in six categories—Autobiography, Biography, Criticism, Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry—as well as the Barrios Book in Translation Prize and the John Leonard Prize. The winners will be named on March 26 at a public ceremony in New York City. The finalists in poetry are Yuki Tanaka for Chronicle of Drifting (Copper Canyon), Rickey Laurentiis for Death of the First Idea (Knopf), Kevin Young for Night Watch (Knopf), Henri Cole for The Other Love (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), and Tolu Oloruntoba for Unravel (McClelland & Stewart). The finalists in fiction are Karen Russell for The Antidote (Knopf); Katie Kitamura for Audition (Riverhead); Solvej Balle for On the Calculation of Volume (Book III) (New Directions), translated from the Danish by Sophia Hersi Smith and Jennifer Russell; Han King for We Do Not Part (Hogarth), translated from the Korean by e. yaewon and Paige Aniyah Morris; and Angela Flournoy for The Wilderness (Mariner). The finalists for the John Leonard Prize are Nicholas Boggs for Baldwin: A Love Story (Farrar, Straus and Giroux); Evanthia Bromily for Crown (Grove); Saou Ichikawa for Hunchback (Hogarth), translated from the Japanese by Polly Barton; Liz Pelly for Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist (Atria/One Signal); Hedgie Choi for Salvage (University of Wisconsin Press); and Lucas Schaefer for The Slip (Simon & Schuster). The finalists for the Barrios Book in Translation Prize are Yoko Tawada for Exophony: Voyages Outside the Mother Tongue (New Directions), translated from the Japanese by Lisa Hofmann-Kuroda; Banu Mushtaq for Heart Lamp (And Other Stories), translated from the Kannada by Deepa Bhasthi; Hanna Stoltenberg for Near Distance (Biblioasis), translated from the Norwegian by Wendy H. Gabrielsen; Neige Sinno for Sad Tiger (Seven Stories), translated from the French by Natasha Lehrer; Markus Werner for The Frog in the Throat (NYRB Classics), translated from the German by Michael Hofmann; and Olga Ravn for The Wax Child (New Directions), translated from the Danish by Martin Aitken.
According to Michael Cader of Publishers Lunch, a recent case management update filed with the court by the attorneys in the $1.5 billion Anthropic settlement reveals that there are currently eight-six opt-outs ahead of the extended deadline of January 29. “As for claims received for the pool of nearly 500,000 registered, infringed works, ‘the Settlement Administrator has received a total of 56,798 claims for 161,691 works.” At this rate, taking into account attorneys’ fees, each claimed work would be awarded over $8,000.
Min Jin Lee’s forthcoming novel, American Hagwon, her first since Pachinko, which has sold over a million copies and was named among the best novels of the 21st century by the New York Times, will explore the Korean obsession with education, the Associated Press reports. “‘We’re obsessed with education, and it became my obsession over why Koreans care so much,’ says Lee, whose American Hagwon, scheduled for Sept. 29, will likely be one of the year’s most anticipated books.” The book’s publisher, Cardinal, is calling it a look into “what happens when the rules shift, the world order becomes suddenly unrecognizable and benchmarks of success are no longer a guarantee.”
Canadian poet Karen Solie is the winner of the 2025 T. S. Eliot Prize for her collection Wellwater, the Guardian reports. Solie was announced as the winner at a ceremony in London on Monday; she will receive £25,000 (approximately $33,638.50) from the T. S. Eliot Foundation. The annual prize is awarded to the writer of the best new poetry collection published in the UK and Ireland. “Wellwater emerged from a shortlist that included Tom Paulin’s Namanlagh, Isabelle Baafi’s Chaotic Good, Nick Makoha’s The New Carthaginians and Sarah Howe’s Foretokens.” The judges were Michael Hofmann, Patience Agbabi and Niall Campbell.
A new organization known as McCormack Writing Center will house the programs formerly known as Tin House Workshop, the organization announced on its website today. Founded in 2003 as a summer writers workshop and operated alongside the literary magazine Tin House and Tin House Books, the workshop expanded its programming to craft intensives, online classes, and residencies in subsequent years. The transition to the McCormack Writing Center follows the acquisition of the organization’s book publishing arm by Zando in 2025. Tin House Workshop lead staff Lance Cleland and A.L. Major will stay on through the transition, serving as executive director and director of programs respectively.
Literary Events Calendar
- January 27, 2026
Killer Cocktail Release Party for Frieda McFadden's Dear Debbie!
The Haunted Book Shop6:00 PM - 7:30 PM - January 27, 2026
Writers Workshop: An Ecology of Quilts
Online7:30 PM - 9:00 PM EST - January 27, 2026
Open Mic at The Winchester
The Winchester Music Tavern9:00 PM - 11:00 PM
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Poets & Writers Theater
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