Prolific audiobook narrator Lindsay Dorcus is among a group of six Illinois voice actors, podcasters, and journalists bringing class action lawsuits against tech companies that trained AI models on their “voice footprints,” Publishers Lunch reports. Nine separate lawsuits brought against Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, NVIDIA, ElevenLabs, Adobe, and Samsung allege that the vocal talents’ works were “scraped” from internet sources for training purposes without the narrators’ consent, a violation of the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA). “The Amazon suit is particularly pointed on the topic of audiobook narration, claiming that Amazon’s ignoring BIPA was ‘a deliberate institutional decision.’”
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Every day the editors of Poets & Writers Magazine scan the headlines—publishing reports, literary dispatches, academic announcements, and more—for all the news that creative writers need to know.
“Archaeologists working in Egypt have discovered a remarkable combination of Homeric epic and Egyptian ritual: a 2,000-year-old mummy with a papyrus fragment of the Iliad sealed in a clay packet outside its wrappings,” the New York Times reports. The papyrus fragment was unearthed at a burial site known as Oxyrhynchus, where it accompanied the mummy of a non-royal male, bundled close to the body. Scholars speculate that the passage served as more than good reading on the long path to eternity: “For a Roman-era Egyptian, the Iliad—specifically some lines from Book 2’s ‘Catalogue of Ships’—was perhaps as crucial for navigating the afterlife as a magical spell.”
Final approval of a $1.5 billion settlement between Anthropic and authors whose works were used to train its AI model Claude stalled yesterday as the judge in the case asked for more details about “issues including lawyers’ fees and payments to lead plaintiffs in what is the largest known U.S. copyright settlement,” Reuters reports. The settlement had received initial approval from Judge William Alsup, now retired, in September 2025, making it the first major U.S. case settled concerning authors’ rights in the training of AI. “Authors and other copyright holders filed claims covering over 92 percent of the more than 480,000 works included in the settlement, an attorney for the authors said during the hearing. The settlement has spurred objections from authors who have argued it is not large enough, overcompensates the plaintiffs’ attorneys, or wrongly excludes some copyright owners.”
American poet Sasha Debevec-McKenney has won the Swansea University Dylan Thomas Prize for her debut collection, Joy Is My Middle Name (Fitzcarraldo Editions, 2025). She received £20,000 (approximately $26,794). The other poet shortlisted for this year’s prize were Harriet Armstrong for To Rest Our Minds and Bodies (Les Fugitives), Colwill Brown for We Pretty Pieces of Flesh (Vintage), Suzannah V. Evans for Under the Blue (Bloomsbury), Seán Hewitt for Open, Heaven (Vintage), and Derek Owusu for Borderline Fiction (Canongate). The judges were Irenosen Okojie, Joe Dunthorne, Nidhi Zak/Aria Eipe, Prajwal Parajuly, and Eley Williams. The annual award celebrates “exceptional literary talent” under the age of forty.
The New York Public Library and Random House Publishing Group are partnering to offer the Kate Medina Fellowship for Literary Narrative Nonfiction to support writers whose projects “engage meaningfully” with the library’s onsite collections, including manuscripts, archives, books, photographs, prints, maps, newspapers, and journals. The selected fellow will receive a stipend of $30,000 to support four months of research between September 1, 2026, and March 15, 2027. Applications are due June 15.
The Independent Publishers Caucus has released the Independent Press Top 40 best-seller list for the week ending May 10, 2026. The list is compiled in partnership with the American Booksellers Association and identifies “the top titles from independent presses as represented at independent bookstores across the U.S.” The top five titles are: 1. The Calamity Club (Spiegel & Grau) by Kathryn Stockett, 2. John of John (Grove Press) by Douglas Stuart, 3. Heart the Lover (Grove Press) by Lily King, 4. I Who Have Never Known Men (Transit Books) by Jacqueline Harpman, and 5. On the Calculation of Volume (Book I) (New Directions) by Solvej Balle, translated by Barbara J. Haveland.
Lee Lai has won Australia’s Stella Prize, becoming the first nonbinary writer and first graphic novelist to take home the prestigious award, the Guardian reports. Lai receives the $60,000 honor for her book Cannon, published by Canadian press Drawn + Quarterly. The book follows a queer Chinese woman living in Montreal who cares for an aging relative by day and works at an upscale restaurant by night. The Stella Prize is offered by the nonprofit Stella, which describes itself as “the major voice for gender equity and cultural change in Australian literature;” the prize was opened to nonbinary writers in 2021.
Hachette Book Group leadership has launched a campaign to dissuade its employees from seeking to unionize, Publishers Lunch reports. With headings including “Why We Believe Hachette Is Stronger Without a Union” and “What You Could Lose With Union Negotiation,” a series of electronic messages and flyers posted around the Hachette offices present the company’s talking points. Hachette Workers Coalition responded online, arguing that the corporate messages “[frame] the union as a third party that will harm our existing benefits and workplace culture. ...But the union is all of us, and we won’t be intimidated.”
Texas Book Festival has announced its launch of Burro Libro Press, a new imprint that will focus on “discovering and publishing debut literary fiction by emerging writers with strong ties to Texas.” Developed in collaboration with the Austin-based indie press Deep Vellum Publishing, Burro Libro will find authors through an annual first book contest in which winners will receive publication, $5,000, a professionally-produced audiobook, and promotion at the Texas Book Festival. Submission for the inaugural contest will be open from June 1 to June 30. “We are excited to partner with Texas Book Festival on a program that creates new opportunities for debut fiction writers connected to Texas,” said Jill Meyers, editorial director of Deep Vellum, in a press release. “Deep Vellum has always believed in championing ambitious literary voices, and this collaboration allows us to support emerging authors in a meaningful and lasting way while deepening our partnership with Texas Book Festival.”
Writer Beware provides examples of the latest scams targeting writers, including an e-mail invitation to be a featured guest at a book festival or conference event and an offer to be interviewed on a radio show or podcast. “Unfortunately, AI-driven impersonation scams have glommed onto these events in a big way,” writes Victoria Strauss. “I’m getting a growing number of reports from writers who’ve received credible-seeming invitations that have turned out to be completely fake. It’s yet another area where writers must be extremely careful not to take anything at face value.” Among the details to look out for: “a Gmail, or occasionally an AOL, e-mail address where you’d normally expect the contact to come from a company or event email domain.”
Less than three weeks away from Pride Month, Kelly Jensen of Book Riot has released her annual guide to Pride displays in libraries. Intended primarily “to help library workers consider where and how to showcase LGBTQ+ books, programs, and other materials throughout June,” this year’s overview provides information about what to do if you see instances of censorship and how to write to your local library board about offering LGBTQ+ books and LGBTQ+ programming. “For libraries, Pride has traditionally been a month for joyful displays of queer books, with periodic and predictable complaints,” Jensen writes. “But several years into surging book bans, escalating violence, and swift-rising fascism, it is important to prepare for the upcoming month of events to anticipate all that has, does, and might arise.”
The winners of the 2026 British Book Awards (the Nibbies, as they’re commonly known) were announced at a ceremony in London on Monday, the Bookseller reports. Among the winners are the late Virginia Roberts Giuffre, whose Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice (Doubleday) won Overall Book of the Year as well as Book of the Year in the narrative nonfiction category; Florence Knapp, whose book The Names (Phoenix) won the award in the debut fiction category; and Oyinkan Braithwaite, whose audiobook Cursed Daughters (WF Howes), narrated by Weruche Opia, Diana Yekinni and Nnei Opia Clark, won in the audiobook fiction category.
A recent report from Ashley Woo, an associate policy researcher at RAND, drawing on data from the Spring 2025 American Instructional Resources Survey, offers insight into “concerns about the diminishing role of full books in schools.” The survey results suggest the peripheral nature of full-book reading in most secondary ELA classrooms, while showing that about two-thirds of teachers assigned only one to four books during the 2024-2025 school year. Teachers working with historically disadvantaged groups of students assigned fewer full books.
The New York Times has profiled Keith McNally, author of the memoir I Regret Almost Everything (Gallery Books, 2025) and the 2026 winner of the $50,000 Gotham Book Prize. McNally, the restaurateur behind NYC establishments such as Balthazar, Cafe Luxembourg, and the Odeon, writes about the successes and failures he’s met throughout his life. Bradley Tusk, a cofounder of the prize, shared that the judging for this year’s award was unusual in that McNally’s memoir received eight of the twelve judges’ votes in the very first round. “I like the idea of rewarding someone for being as self-aware and as accountable as McNally sounds in I Regret Almost Everything.”
Pine State Publicity, a PR firm located in North Carolina and founded by Cassie Mannes Murray in 2022, is starting a boutique literary agency, reports Publishers Weekly. Per an announcement, Pine State Literary (PSL), which is being headed by Zoe-Aline Howard, will focus on “voice-driven adult literary fiction and narrative nonfiction.” Howard states that their books will “challenge what we consider ‘marketable,’ and…break away from oversaturated settings like NYC and LA.” Publishers that Howard feels share an affinity with PSL include the South Carolina-based Hub City Press as well as Milkweed Editions in Minneapolis.
A federal judge has ruled that Department of Government Effiicency (DOGE) acted unconstitutionally when it cancelled more than 1,400 previously-approved grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the New York Times reports. While the ruling orders the cancellations rescinded, judge Colleen McMahon noted the “irreparable” damage done nonetheless: “The injury is not limited to the loss of money. It includes the disruption of protected expression, the interruption of ongoing research and publication, the cancellation or suspension of humanities programming, and the chilling effect caused by the government’s use of viewpoint-based and unauthorized criteria to terminate federal grants.” The terminations had previously come under additional scrutiny when it was revealed that DOGE employees had used ChatGPT to identify grants for cancellation based on keyword searches for terms including “L.G.B.T.Q.,” “BIPOC,” “equality,” “immigration,” and “citizenship.”
Ahead of Mother’s Day, novelist Lisa Owens reflects on the children’s literature that buoyed her family through its earliest days—and her affinity for the harried parents in those picture books’ margins. “The illustrations of the adults, though, were what captivated me: bleary-eyed, multitasking, pregnant, on the phone, clambered upon with glasses askew, cooking, affectionate, exhausted,” writes Owens for the New York Times. “Here was a vision of parenting in the round—the good, the bad and the will you please just go to bed. It brought me great comfort and relief.”
HarperCollins closed its most recent quarter with an 8 percent boost in sales, thanks in large part to the success of Rachel Reid’s hockey romance Heated Rivalry and other titles in the series, Publishers Weekly reports. “Digital sales accounted for 26 percent of revenue in the quarter, up 1 percent from a year ago. In addition to sales of Reid’s books, sales in the quarter benefitted from $6 million from recent acquisitions.”
USA Today looks at the new report by PEN America that shows the number of nonfiction books banned at schools has doubled. The report found that “3,743 unique titles were removed from school classrooms and libraries from July 1, 2024, to June 30, 2025. There were 6,780 total bans across 23 states during that period, according to the organization.” More than 1,000 of the titles, or 29 percent of the total, were nonfiction, more than double the number from the previous year. PEN America says the rise in censorship is due to a widespread “embrace of anti-intellectualism” and that the data “mirrors the broader political attack on facts and knowledge and a skepticism, disdain, and devaluing of experts and expertise—tactics long associated with the rise of authoritarian regimes to sow distrust in democratic institutions.”
Shelf Awareness, the publisher of two newsletters focused on books, bookselling, and book reviews, recently alerted subscribers to the phishing schemes that have become ubiquitous in the publishing and writing communities. “We have learned that Shelf Awareness and its staff are being used in phishing attempts directed at book authors,” the editors wrote in Wednesday’s newsletter. “Shelf Awareness does not charge for review coverage. If you receive an offer over e-mail to review your book in return for payment, it is a scam, and you should not interact with the sender.”
Daniel Umemezie of Cedar Falls, Iowa, was named the 2026–2027 National Youth Poet Laureate at a ceremony in Omaha, Nebraska, on April 25, according to Urban Word. Asked what his focus will be as the youth poet laureate, Umemezie said, “During my tenure as National Youth Poet Laureate, I want to champion work that refuses to make itself legible on anyone else’s terms: multilingual poetry, diasporic poetry, poetry as a form of political insistence, and poetry as self, because I believe that when a young writer chooses to inhabit the fiery tension between who they are and how they express that identity, they embody art itself.” An initiative of Urban Word, the National Youth Poet Laureate program identifies, celebrates, and honors teen poets who exhibit a commitment to not just artistic excellence but also civic engagement, youth leadership and social impact.
Poets & Writers today announced that Marianne Boruch is the winner of the 2026 Jackson Poetry Prize, a $100,000 award given to “an American poet of exceptional talent.” Established in 2006 with a gift from the Liana Foundation, the Jackson Poetry Prize is bestowed annually by Poets & Writers and named for the John and Susan Jackson family. The judges were Major Jackson, Cole Swensen, and Afaa Michael Weaver. “In poems rhetorically sinuous and compelling, Marianne Boruch renders luminous the expanse and reach of human thought,” the judges wrote in their citation. Boruch is an emeritus professor of creative writing at Purdue University, where she founded the MFA program and taught for more than thirty years. She has written eleven books of poetry, most recently Bestiary Dark (Copper Canyon Press, 2021).
Students at Southern Oregon University (SOU) in Ashland are opposing a plan released on Monday “that details some $20 million in suggested cuts from the university, including the Music, Gender Studies, Creative Writing, and International Studies programs,” Ashland.news reports. The school’s board of trustees is expected to vote on the plan on Friday, May 8. “The board must submit the final plan to the Higher Education Coordinating Commission by Monday, May 11, in order to be eligible to receive $15 million in one-time funding from the state of Oregon to keep the university solvent until summer 2027.” Some have accused Deloitte Consulting, a firm that has been actively involved in restructuring SOU, of using AI to formulate the plan; SOU officials have denied the claim.
For the Guardian, Raina Lipsitz takes a closer look at the circumstances surrounding the April decision by the legislature of Green County, New York, to rescind Esther Cohen’s appointment as the county’s first poet laureate after Republican legislator Michael Lanuto performed a “background check” during which he found in Cohen’s social media what he said was “the antithesis of what I believe this board stands for,” citing social media posts “about Zohran Mamdani (for) and Donald Trump (against).” Lipsitz quotes Bjorn Thorstad, founding executive director of the Hudson Valley Writers Residency and a member of the committee that selected the poet laureate, who says people see people view Cohen’s story “as emblematic of the assault on the arts writ large. ... Even though it’s only about one poet, even though government has a right to be discerning about its appointees, it’s nevertheless cutting too close to the bone for people who hate to see leadership leverage power against artists and free speech.”
Best-selling novelist Scott Turow has joined publishers Hachette, Macmillan, McGraw Hill, Elsevier, and Cengage in filing a class-action copyright infringement lawsuit against Meta and its founder and chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, the New York Times reports. “The complaint, which was filed on Tuesday morning in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, accuses Meta and Zuckerberg of illegally using millions of copyrighted works to train their artificial intelligence program Llama, and of removing copyright notices and other copyright management information from those works.” The lawsuit also claimes that Zuckerberg personally authorized and encouraged the illegal activity. A Meta spokesperson says the company “will fight this lawsuit aggressively.”
USA Today visits Audible Story House, the world’s first bookless bookstore now open in New York City. The store, which is free and open to the public Wednesdays through Sundays during May, features more than three hundred audiobook titles that customers can sample. “Not quite a bookstore and also not quite a library, Story House is a community hub and listening lounge for readers to hang out and discover a new audio obsession,” Clare Mulroy writes.
Oprah Winfrey has selected John of John (Grove Atlantic, 2026), the third novel by Douglas Stuart, for her book club, the Associated Press reports. The best-selling author won the Booker Prize for his debut novel Shuggie Bain (Grove Atlantic 2020). To read more about John of John, read “Ten Questions for Douglas Stuart.”
Employees at the University of Chicago Press are the latest group of publishing workers to unionize, according to Publishers Lunch, having formed a union with the Chicago News Guild, TNG-CWA Local 34071. “The UPC Workers Guild is seeking recognition from management and ‘is advocating for nothing less than excellence in the treatment of the press’s workers.’ Its mission includes ‘pay equity, sustainability, and transparency.’” Last week workers at Hachette Book Group formed the largest union in publishing history, and in April workers at Catapult unionized.
The 2026 Pulitzer Prizes were announced today. The winner in poetry is Juliana Spahr for Ars Poetica (Wesleyan University Press); the finalists are Douglas Kearney for I Imagine I Been Science Fiction Always (Wave Books) and The Intentions of Thunder: New and Selected Poems by Patricia Smith. The winner in fiction is Daniel Kraus for Angel Down (Atria Books); the finalists are Katie Kitamura for Audition (Riverhead Books) and Torrey Peters for Stag Dance: A Quartet (Random House). The winner in memoir/autiobiography is Yiyun Li for Things in Nature Merely Grow (FSG); the finalists are Anelise Chen for Clam Down: A Metamorphosis (One World), Sarah Chihaya for Bibliophobia (Random House), and Hala Alyan for I’ll Tell You When I’m Home (Avid Reader Press).
On the heels of the recent film release of The Devil Wears Prada 2, Julia Rittenberg of Publishers Weekly uncovers the rise and fall of the chick lit genre. “Before it was a movie, Lauren Weisberger’s The Devil Wears Prada, published by Broadway Books in 2003, marked the absolute high point of that once ubiquitous genre.” Chick lit is said to have started thanks to the success of Helen Fielding’s Bridget Jones’ Diary in 1996. However, soon after The Devil Wears Prada phenomenon, the chick lit market became oversaturated and the trend eventually fell off with the once overarching genre now being fragmented into distinct categories of romance or women’s fiction. “The millennials and Gen Z readers all have authors who are speaking to them, who are telling their story,” says Deborah Schneider, Weisberger’s longtime agent. “They’re writing a different story now, and it’s a little bit darker.”
Pizza Hut’s summer reading program is coming back this year to incentivize young readers with pizza parties, reports People Magazine. The BOOK IT! program recently announced the return of “Summer of Stories,” where kids from pre-K through sixth grade can earn personal pizzas and more for meeting reading goals. This time around, the program is also available for parents and teachers to utilize during the school year.
TIME Magazine has listed Bookshop.org as one of “The 10 Most Influential Social Good Companies of 2026,” alongside Dr. Bronner’s, Land O’Lakes, and Bombas. Last year, the company that is known for saving independent bookshops provided a record $9.5 million to local bookstores. Bookshop.org’s founder, Andy Hunter, has continued to expand the company’s reach and offerings with an e-book platform and the current development of an e-reader, stating, “Within the next two years we want to be the best place to shop online if you love books.”
Transworld, a division of Penguin Random House UK, is launching the publisher’s first horror imprint, 3AM Books, the Bookseller reports. Led by publishing director Rachel Winterbottom and editorial director Simon Taylor, the imprint takes its name from the witching hour, “the moment when the world feels most heightened, uncanny and like anything might happen.” The list aims to “reflect the full range and ambition of horror today, bringing together established voices, bold new talent and a growing community of readers.” 3AM’s first title, Fawn by debut author and journalist CN Vair, is forthcoming in August.
Publishers Weekly reports on a new survey of more than five hundred publishers, librarians, and other industry professionals, sponsored by BISG and BookNet Canada, on how AI “can be effectively and ethically used.” Of those surveyed, 48 percent said their organizations use AI; 29 percent use it for administrative and operational tasks, another 29 percent use it for marketing activities, and 21 percent use it for data analysis or reporting. “The primary concern for survey respondents around AI in the industry is inadequate controls around the use of copyrighted material, with 86 percent noting the issue.”
May is Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month, and the Los Angeles Public Library is celebrating with the third annual AAPI Joy Festival on Saturday, May 16. The free event, themed “AAPI Voices, Then & Now,” will honor the diversity, culture, and contributions of Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities through author talks, theater, culinary demonstrations, workshops, and crafts. “Highlights include lion dancers, Japanese dance performances, Korean fabric art, lei making, and the Carlos Bulosan Book Club Awards, presented by the Friends of Echo Park Library, honoring literary figures who have made significant contributions to Filipino American literature and community advocacy.” Featured authors include Livia Blackburne, Jasmin ‘Iolani Hakes, Angie Kang, Stacey Lee, Aimee Phan, Kim-Hoa Ung, and Oliver Wang.
USA Today reports on the scourge of AI-powered scams impersonating famous authors that are flooding the writing community. In one scam, a bot that purports to be best-selling author Colleen Hoover is offering to get a writer’s book featured in USA Today for the low, low price of $200. “Scammers impersonate well-known authors. Others pose as book clubs and offer to get your book in front of hundreds of readers for a fee. Some tease a shortcut to a Hollywood adaptation deal. These days, the emails often open with flowery, highly specific praise about the book. Artificial intelligence has scraped the book’s copy and polished its own words to seem like a real, emotional appeal.” For more on scams targeting writers, read Poets & Writers Magazine’s collection of coverage on the topic.
PEN America recently announced that the Rutherford County Library Alliance, a local coalition of library advocates in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, will receive the PEN/Benenson Courage Award at the 2026 PEN America Literary Gala on May 14. “The all‑volunteer alliance galvanized its community against book bans and led opposition to a library board order to remove children’s books deemed ‘inappropriate,’” the organization said in a press release. “The county library director was fired for refusing to carry out the order.” The PEN/Benenson award honors individuals for exceptional courage in defending free expression often in the face of personal danger or intense public scrutiny.
The Academy of American Poets recently announced plans for a new prize honoring the work of Louise Bogan and her lasting impact on poetry and poetry criticism. Recipients of the $5,000 Louise Bogan Award for Poetry and Criticism will be selected annually by the Academy of American Poets’ board of chancellors. The first winner will be announced during National Poetry Month in April 2027. There is no submission process. Bogan, the fourth U.S. poet laureate, was an acclaimed poet who received Yale University’s Bollingen Prize for Poetry in 1955 and the Academy of American Poets’ Fellowship in 1959, among other honors. She was also a critic and a longtime poetry reviewer for the New Yorker.
“New York City seems to be undergoing something of a literary revival in recent years,” argues Alicia Kort in TimeOut New York. “While headlines continue to sound alarms about a loneliness epidemic, New Yorkers are increasingly gathering in bars, cafés and bookstores to listen to authors and writers read aloud to crowds.” Kort cites the immense popularity of this year’s BookCon in the city, which sold out four months in advance and drew a crowd of 25,000, and droves of local BookTok fans, “newly voracious readers actually want to get together to discuss the books that have been enthralling them.” Penina Roth, founder of the Franklin Park Reading Series, concurs: “In general, Gen Z seems to be reading more and turning away from online activity, I think likely because of the vitriol on social media and a desire for more real world interaction. Reading is also becoming a less solitary activity.”
A former HarperCollins executive has created a free public dashboard that makes sale numbers for indie press titles available to anyone. In a discussion of the dashboard for Publishers Weekly, creator Jim Hana describes the way the new tool, Small Press Insights, offers a more accessible vantage on figures that are often kept from the public. “I left Harper about six months ago. I came back from AWP [the Association of Writers & Writing Programs annual conference] this year and, maybe because I didn’t have access to all the data I used to have, I just couldn’t get oriented in this world,” Hana told Publishers Weekly. “At a big house there’s BookScan—very expensive, very proprietary—plus internal data, whatever you can glean from a big data science department, which I oversaw. I was interested in: what can you put together that’s freely available?” The resulting dashboard tracks sales of “roughly nine hundred indie and university presses against Amazon rankings, the Independent Publishers Caucus’s weekly Top 40, and forthcoming-title feeds from Edelweiss and NetGalley.” This week, at the top of Hana’s ranking chart is Viktor E. Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning (Beacon Press, 2006), followed by more recent titles from Beth Brower and Lily King.
A lost copy of the earliest surviving poem in the English language has surfaced at a national library in Rome, reports the Guardian. The newly-uncovered manuscript contains the text of Caedmon’s Hymn, a nine-line verse that the illiterate Northumbrian cattle herder Caedmon originally composed sometime in the seventh century. This iteration of the poem is thought to have been transcribed by an Italian monk sometime between 800 CE and 830 CE, making it the third-oldest known copy in existence. Scholar Mark Faulkner, who discovered the text together with his Trinity College Dublin colleague Elisabetta Magnanti, notes that the text employs full stops after every word, evidencing the recent advent of word spacing:“It is part of the early development of ways of dividing words and shows text starting to come towards the presentation of English that we know today.”
Jim Milliot of Publishers Weekly writes about the potential for major changes to printing in light of a new report from the Book Manufacturers’ Institute. “One potential shift in the publisher-printer relationship could stem from publishers’ growing acceptance of digital printing, as they become more willing to deviate from offset printing in order to lower costs.” Milliot notes that the unit cost of each individual book would likely be higher with digital printing but that the report emphasizes the shift would allow for greater flexibility for ordering, reducing inventory costs.
TikTok has released its first monthly BookTok bestseller list in the UK, Books + Publishing reports. “The list features the books that are ‘the most successful titles within the #BookTok community each month,’ and was first launched in Germany in 2023 before expanding to Austria and Switzerland in 2024.” Topping the bestseller list for March, perhaps not surprising, is Rachel Reid’s Heated Rivalry.
The New York Public Library recently announced five finalists for the Young Lions Fiction Award, a $10,000 prize honoring the work of “exceptional early-career authors.” They are Ariel Courage for Bad Nature (Henry Holt, 2025), Kyle Edwards for Small Ceremonies (Pantheon, 2025), Harris Lahti for Foreclosure Gothic (Astra House, 2025), Carrie R. Moore for Make Your Way Home (Tin House, 2025), and Stephanie Wambugu for Lonely Crowds (Little, Brown, 2025). The judges are Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, Raven Leilani, and Alexander Sammartino. The winner will be announced on June 15.
As of May 1, DeFiore and Company and the Stuart Krichevsky Literary Agency (SKLA) will combine forces to create one larger agency under DeFiore’s name, Publishers Lunch reports. In a statement Brian DeFiore, the founder of DeFiore and Company, said, “The goal is to create an even more supportive, nimble, and powerful framework for all of us to serve our clients masterfully.” Stuart Krichevksy added, “I have always promised myself that I would secure SKLA’s future well before I make any plans to step down, and can think of no better home for the superb team we have built than at DeFiore and Company.” This new firm will be based out of DeFiore’s Union Square offices in New York City.
Lost Kite Editions, the Minneapolis-based nonprofit press dedicated to publishing literature from underrepresented writers, is set to debut its inaugural list this May, Publishers Weekly reports. The first two titles are “21 Birthdays by Kennedy Amenya Gisege, a long-form essay about being separated from his daughter by prison bars, and Disfigured Hours, a collection of poems by B Batchelor about life in prison.” An editorial board member of Lost Kite, and founder of the Minnesota Prison Writing Workshop, Jennifer Bowen, added that the press is acquiring books from “a very integrative community of writers on the inside and writers on the outside” of the prison system. Editors of the press will represent a mix of those who are currently, or were previously, incarcerated, as well as those who have never been in prison; together they will help shape the literary landscape with their editorial decisions.
Oprah Winfrey has entered into a multiyear licensing deal with Amazon, reports Nicole Sperling of the New York Times. “The former doyenne of daytime talk will produce twice-a-week video podcasts beginning this summer, create specials focused on her Favorite Things and Book Club labels, and repurpose the 25-season library from ‘The Oprah Winfrey Show.’” The tech giant will be promoting Winfrey’s popular book club via Audible, Kindle, and Goodreads to further its reach. Of this partnership, Winfrey stated, “Expanding our reach globally is an opportunity I embrace, as we continue to connect through stories that invite new ways of seeing, and hopefully deepen, understanding.”
While the Anthropic settlement continues to dominate headlines, another copyright lawsuit from authors against a tech company for its AI training is moving through Northern California federal court, Publisher Lunch reports. “Plaintiffs Stewart O’Nan, Abdi Nazemian, Brian Keene, Rebecca Makkai, and Jason Reynolds claim that MosaicML, which provides training data for AI companies and is owned by Databricks, used the Books3 dataset to train their own large language model, called MPT, and Databricks’s LLM, called DBRX.” The defendant had filed a motion to dismiss the case—and, indeed, the tech company was successful in getting an earlier version of the complaint dismissed last year—but the judge recently ruled that the allegations in the current version of the lawsuit are sufficient for the case to proceed.
Gotham Ghostwriters, an agency specializing in connecting editorial specialists with clients such as CEOs, nonprofit directors, thought leaders, and celebrities, has published a set of guidelines for AI use in an attempt to establish “baseline industry standards for collaborative writers and their clients,” according to Publishers Weekly. “At the center of the guidelines is a page-long list of ‘Recommended Disclosures,’ which enumerates specific ways in which ghostwriting professionals might use generative AI tools for administrative tasks; ‘research, analysis, and collaborations’; and generative uses, including ‘generating initial drafts of text content that will be revised later’ and ‘generating initial drafts of graphics.’” Gotham Ghostwriters CEO Dan Gerstein is quoted in a statement as saying, “We have clearly seen that artificial intelligence has both benefits and pitfalls for writers.... So it’s our central challenge as a profession to find meaningful ways to maximize the opportunities of AI while minimizing the threats.”
Aspen Words last night announced the winner of the ninth annual Aspen Words Literary Prize , a $35,000 award for a work of fiction that illuminates a vital contemporary issue and demonstrates the transformative power of literature on thought and culture. Maria Reva won the award for Endling (Doubleday, 2025). Reva was selected as the recipient of the prize by an independent five-member jury comprised of Kate Bowler, Michael Cader, Jamil Jan Kochai, Imbolo Mbue, and Héctor Tobar. Head juror Tobar was quoted in a press release saying, “As jurors, we were impressed by the ambition of Endling, by the way it wove together ecological themes with an epic story about the war in Ukraine. At the same time, it was a bold work that played with the very idea of what the literary form of a novel can be.”
Keep in mind that this Saturday, April 25, is Independent Bookstore Day. Indiebound.org has a nifty map of participating bookstores and an extensive list of how those bookstores are celebrating. For more about the history of Indie Bookstore Day and how last year’s special day brought something unexpected to the online retail environment, read “The Clash of Amazon and the Indies” (March/April 2026) by Priscilla Wu.
Harper One president and publisher Judith Curr is set to retire on May 29, according to Publishers Lunch. Prior to joining HarperCollins, where she launched the Harper Via imprint, Curr founded Atria Books as a division of Simon & Schuster, where she worked with authors such as Colleen Hoover, Jodi Picoult, and Jennifer Weiner.
Susan Choi and Lily King join four debut authors with titles shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for fiction, the Guardian reports. Choi’s Flashlight and King’s Heart the Lover are shortisted for the prize worth £30,000 (approximately $40,497), along with Dominion by Addie E. Citchens, The Correspondent by Virginia Evans, The Mercy Step by Marcia Hutchinson, and Kingfisher by Rozie Kelly. The winner will be announced on June 11.
The Oregon nonprofit Literary Arts recently announced the winners of the 2026 Oregon Book Awards, celebrating the thriving literary culture of the state. Winners included Jennifer Perrine, who received the Stafford/Hall Award for Poetry for Beautiful Outlaw (Kelsey Street Press); Ling Ling Huang, who received the Ken Kesey Award for Fiction for Immaculate Conception (Dutton); and Judith Barrington, who received the Sarah Winnemucca Award for Creative Nonfiction for Virginia’s Apple: Collected Memoirs (Oregon State University Press). The Stewart H. Holbrook Literary Legacy Award was given to Willamette Writers, the largest writers organization in the Pacific Northwest, in recognition of “outstanding, long-term support of Oregon’s literary community.”
The “new adult” fiction category seems here to stay, observes Daniel Yadin in Publishers Weekly. Fueled by BookTok and a generation of readers raised in the age of “YA juggernaut series,” the “new adult” category has been embraced by Big Five publishers in the last two years. St. Martin’s launched its new adult imprint Saturday Books in 2024; imprints Berkley XO, Requited, and Scarlett Press followed as projects of Penguin Young Readers; Little, Brown; and Simon & Schuster. “Late teens to twenties is a unique period in someone’s life, and that hasn’t been fully recognized as its own category,” Lisa Yoskowitz, editorial lead of Requited, told PW. “This does feel like the moment to be meeting it.”
On the occasion of Earth Day, the Academy of American Poets has announced the winners of the 2026 Treehouse Climate Action Poem Prize, an annual award recognizing “exceptional poems that help readers recognize the vulnerable state of our environment.” This year’s first-place poem is “In the not-not-woods” by Malia Maxwell; poets W. J. Herbert, Ronald Carson, and Deahna Fumerol were also honored. All four poets will have their poems appear in the Academy’s Poem-a-Day series, which reaches 330,000 readers and podcast listeners daily. (Learn more about the Treehouse Climate Action Poem Prize in “Celebrating the Earth That Lifts Us Up: Contests Honoring Environmental Writing” by Emma Hine, featured in the May/June 2026 issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.)
Rightsholders for more than 91 percent of the works named in the Anthropic lawsuit have filed claims in the class action settlement for the company’s pirating of books to train their LLM, according to Publishers Lunch. “Attorneys received 119,876 claims by the March 30 deadline, according to the court filing. Those account for 440,490 of the 482,460 works on the works list.”
Former librarian of Congress Carla Hayden, who was fired by President Donald Trump last year, was among three honorees recognized by the Authors Guild at the organization’s annual fundraising gala on Monday night, the Associated Press reports. “In many places today, librarians are under attack for believing in the power of the written word and in the principle that free people should be able to read freedom. Yet librarians remain steady and hopeful,” said Hayden, who received the Champion of Writers Award. The other honorees were authors Percival Everett, who received the Baldacci Award for Literary Activism, and Amy Tan, recipient of the Preston Award for Distinguished Service to the Literary Community.
Eight handwritten letters from John Keats to Fanny Brawne were returned to the family of John Hay “Jock” Whitney, the former U.S. ambassador to the UK, after being stolen from Whitney’s home in the 1980s, the Guardian reports. “Brawne was Keats’s neighbor in Hampstead, with whom he became infatuated and elevated to muse and goddess.” The thirty-seven letters, valued at approximately $2 million, are dated between 1819 and 1820.
The American Library Association (ALA) released its annual list of the most commonly challenged books at libraries across the United States, NPR reports. “The ALA says that it documented 4,235 unique titles being challenged in 2025—the second-highest year on record for library challenges. (The highest ever was in 2023, with 4,240 challenges documented—only five more than in this most recent year.)” The eleven most frequently targeted books are Sold by Patricia McCormick, The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky, Gender Queer: A Memoir by Maia Kobabe, Empire of Storms by Sarah J. Maas, Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo, Tricks by Ellen Hopkins, A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas, A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess, Identical by Ellen Hopkins, Looking for Alaska by John Green, and Storm and Fury by Jennifer L. Armentrout.
Bookshop.org’s sales grew by 55 percent last year, reports Publishers Weekly. Six years since its inception, the online bookseller, which offers a revenue stream to independent bookstores and gives readers an alternative to Amazon in the process, continues to grow due to increased sales for romance books, new e-book sales, and a Spotify partnership, started in February of this year, that allows users to buy print books in the app through Bookshop. “If I told you in 2019 that there was going to be a massive resurgence of indie bookstores after twenty years of decline, nobody would have believed me,” says Andy Hunter, Bookshop’s CEO.
Books clubs throughout Los Angeles have evolved into unconventional and diverse community-focused events, reports Malia Mendez of the Los Angeles Times. “Driven by Gen Z and millennial organizers eager to shed the isolation of the pandemic era, events ranging from book crawls to silent reading parties are successfully turning time spent with literature into happening social occasions.” The duo behind the Preoccupied literary platform even started a walking book club, which includes a forty-minute stroll with a featured author followed by shopping at a local bookstore.
The winners of the 38th annual Publishing Triangle Awards were recently announced. The following ten titles were selected “as the very best in LGBTQ+ literature published in 2025.” Drought by Scott Alexander Hess (Rebel Satori Press) won the Ferro-Grumley Award for LGBTQ+ Fiction; Lonely Crowds by Stephanie Wambugu (Little, Brown) won the Edmund White Award for Debut Fiction; Beyond the Lesbian Vampire: Reclaiming the Violent Lesbian in Contemporary Queer Horror by Sam Tabet (University of Wales Press) won the Judy Grahn Award for Lesbian Nonfiction; Baldwin: A Love Story by Nicholas Boggs (Farrar, Straus and Giroux) won the Randy Shilts Award for Gay Nonfiction; The Boy Kingdom / El reino de los varones by Achy Obejas (Beacon Press) won the Audre Lorde Award for Lesbian Poetry; I Do Know Some Things by Richard Siken (Copper Canyon Press) won the Thom Gunn Award for Gay Poetry; Local Woman by Jzl Jmz (Nightboat Books) won the Leslie Feinberg Award for Trans and Gender-Variant Literature; Mirage City by Lev AC Rosen (Minotaur Books) won the Joseph Hansen Award for LGBTQ+ Crime Writing; We Can Never Leave by H. E. Edgmon (Wednesday Books) won the Jacqueline Woodson Award for LGBTQ+ Young Adult and Children’s Literature; and What Is Queer Food?: How We Served a Revolution by John Birdsall (Norton) won the Amber Hollibaugh Award for LGBTQ+ Social Justice Writing. Each winner will receive $1,000.



