Daily News

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.

1.10.25

According to newly released documents in a California class-action lawsuit against Meta, CEO Mark Zuckerberg knew that the books used to train the company’s AI tool were pirated, reports Katy Hershberger of Publishers Lunch.

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1.10.25

Simon & Schuster has launched a new audio imprint, Simon Maverick, featuring content from self-published authors, according to Publishers Weekly. Led by Jason Pinter, former publisher of Polis Books, the imprint aims to publish more than fifty titles in 2025, and will be “dedicated to shining a light on works from talented, diverse, and emerging independent authors.”

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1.10.25

To support booksellers affected by the wildfires in Southern California, Bookshop.org is matching up to $10,000 in donations to the Book Industry Charitable Foundation, reports Shelf Awareness.

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1.9.25

Publishers Weekly reports on bookstores and publishers that have been closed or evacuated due to the ongoing fires, power outages, and severe weather in the Los Angeles metro area. Among the bookstores affected are Vroman’s and Octavia’s Bookshelf in Pasadena, Book Soup in West Hollywood, and Zibby’s Bookshop in Santa Monica.

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1.9.25

Crown Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, has launched a new imprint devoted to elevating Black voices. Storehouse Voices “will issue books across a broad range of nonfiction categories and fiction genres, promoting the richness of Black storytelling through intentional acquisitions and hiring efforts, strategic partnerships, and authentic, equity-minded community outreach,” according to Crown’s press release. “Founded with a mission of bridging the representation gap of authors of color in the publishing industry, Storehouse Voices is informed by a deep understanding of the unique cultural and historical contexts of the Black experience in America and committed to ensuring that literary works by underrepresented authors are presented authentically, respectfully, and powerfully across the publishing and media landscape.”

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1.8.25

Two literary agencies, Park & Fine Literary and Media and Brower Literary & Management, have merged to form Park, Fine & Brower Literary Management, Publishers Weekly reports. “The new agency represents more than 300 authors of all genres and in all stages of their careers, with Park & Fine cofounder Celeste Fine and Brower founder Kimberly Brower serving as co-CEOs.”

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1.8.25

Adriana Gallardo of NPR’s Morning Edition tells the story of how the unfinished manuscript of Zora Neale Hurston’s final novel, The Life of Herod the Great, out now from Amistad, was nearly consumed by fire after the author’s death in 1960. “Lucky for readers of Hurston, a neighbor and friend of the writer intervened with a hose, saving hundreds of pages that ended up in the hands of Deborah G. Plant, a scholar specializing in the life and works of Hurston.” For more about Hurston’s final novel, read “A New Hurston’s ‘Incomplete’ Truths” by Destiny O. Birdsong.

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1.8.25

Jenna Bush Hager, who in 2019 joined the ranks of celebrity book club hosts like Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, and Emma Roberts when she launched Read With Jenna on the Today show, is starting her own publishing venture with Penguin Random House, the New York Times reports. Thousand Voices x RHPG will publish four to six books a year across genres, including literary fiction, memoir, historical fiction, and romance, at various imprints within Random House.

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1.7.25

Tracy Wolff, author of the Crave series of romantasy (romance plus fantasy) books, is being sued for copyright infringement by Lynne Freeman, who alleges that Wolff’s novel Crave shares significant plot points with her own unpublished novel, “Blue Moon Rising,” which Freeman had submitted to Entangled, the press that later published Crave, after Freeman withdrew her submission. Katy Waldman of the New Yorker explains how romantasy’s “reliance on standardized tropes makes proving plot theft tricky.”

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1.7.25

Both the director and chair of London’s Royal Society of Literature (RSL), “a learned society founded in 1820 by King George IV to ‘reward literary merit and excite literary talent,’” are stepping down from their posts ahead of the results of the society’s first ever governance review, conducted by the National Council for Voluntary Organisations, according to the Guardian. Last year the RSL was “widely criticised for alleged censorship, changes to the way it elects fellows, and not taking a strong enough stance in response to the stabbing of Salman Rushdie.”

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1.7.25

For writers who may find the blank pages of that brand new notebook intimidating, some seasoned journal-keepers, including novelist Maggie Shipstead, share advice with T: The New York Times Style Magazine for how to start and keep a journal.

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1.6.25

The Dallas-based literary arts nonprofit and publishing house Deep Vellum has acquired the British small press Fum d’Estampa Press, which has published thirty titles of literature in translation, including poetry, fiction, nonfiction, since it was founded in 2020, Publishers Weekly reports. Deep Vellum publisher Will Evans calls it a “perfect alignment of missions to champion global voices.”

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1.6.25

Barnes & Noble plans to add sixty new locations in 2025, according to Michael Cader of Publishers Lunch, which would put the total number of B&N locations at around 700 by the end of the year.

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1.6.25

Fable, a popular app for talking about and tracking books, is changing the way it creates personalized summaries for its users after complaints that an AI model used offensive language, Christine Hauser reports for the New York Times

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1.6.25

Carter Sherman of the Guardian writes about the political dimensions of the increasingly popular romance genre, citing those in the romance community, sometimes referred to as “romancelandia,” who have rallied voters and resisted book bans through podcasts and phone banks.

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Week of December 30th, 2024
1.3.25

An exhibition of rare items connected to Charles Dickens will open in February and be on display until the end of June at the museum dedicated to his life and work in London, the BBC reports. The new show includes “a blubber-stained copy” of David Copperfield (1850) brought to Antarctica by Captain Scott’s 1910–1912 Terra Nova expedition, preliminary illustrations for the first publication of A Christmas Carol (1843), personal effects, photographs, and other treasures. The exhibition marks one hundred years since the establishment of the Charles Dickens Museum, which is located in the property where Dickens lived from 1837 to 1839. 

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1.3.25

Bethanne Patrick writes for the Washington Post about V. V. Ganeshananthan’s Brotherless Night (Random House, 2023) and how the novel illuminates the experiences of civilian women during the decades-long civil war in Sri Lanka. Ganeshananthan says she wanted “to put those women at the center…. Students, dissidents, health-care workers, people living in proximity to those bearing arms, people displaced from their homes, all of that.” She adds, “my novel is in part about a woman’s mind and consciousness. I’m thrilled to get the opportunity to go beyond why that’s a worthy topic and delve into what she thinks, the very real and varied kinds of labor she undertakes in a world that would try to give her less agency than she would seize for herself.” Brotherless Night has received multiple awards including the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction and Women’s Prize for Fiction in 2024, and the Asian Prize for Fiction in 2023.

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1.3.25

NPR reports on the most-borrowed books from public libraries in 2024. The list includes Kristin Hannah’s The Women (St. Martin’s Press, 2024), Rebecca Yarros’s Fourth Wing (Red Tower Books, 2023), and Emily Henry’s Happy Place (Berkley, 2023). The most checked-out adult book in New York City was Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (Knopf, 2022) by Gabrielle Zevin.

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1.2.25

The Louisiana Supreme Court ruled that Amanda Jones’s 2022 defamation case against two men who accused her of promoting pornography to children can continue, Publishers Weekly reports. Jones, a school librarian, spoke up against proposed book bans and the censorship of books about LGBTQ people and people of color. After the men claimed she was advocating to make pornography accessible to children and grooming them, she filed a defamation lawsuit. After multiple dismissals and denied appeals, the Louisiana Supreme Court ordered the appeals court to hear the case on the merits. One of the justices filed a concurrence, stating, “The burden will be on defendants to prove that plaintiff did in fact do the acts they have publicly accused her of.” Jones is not seeking significant damages—just $1 and an apology. “We teach our children to report and speak out against bullying, and that is what I am doing,” she said.

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1.2.25

The recently restored Notre-Dame cathedral is displaying its library of medieval manuscripts, prints, and books at the Musée de Cluny in Paris until March 16, 2025, Fine Books & Collections reports. The collection features theology texts, church history, canon and civil law, biblical and liturgical books, as well as the works of classic authors.

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1.2.25

Emily Eakin writes for the New York Times about the “plagiarism plot” in contemporary literature. Referencing works such as Yellowface (William Morrow, 2023) by R. F. Kuang, A Lonely Man (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2021) by Chris Power, and Colored Television (Riverhead Books, 2024) by Danzy Senna, among others, Eakin writes, “it would be possible to assemble an entire library of diverting and accomplished contemporary work fixated on literary imitation, appropriation, and theft.” While she understands the “anxiety of influence” for writers of fiction as a “hazard of the trade,” Eakin argues that the presence of these stories has oversaturated the literary landscape.

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Week of December 23rd, 2024
12.27.24

The Charles Dickens Museum has announced that Frankie Kubicki, its current deputy director, will become director of the museum in March 2025, Fine Books & Collections reports. “I am truly delighted and honored to be stepping into this new role and to be able to help to shape the future of this special place,” Kubicki said, adding, “Charles Dickens is as compelling as he ever has been and the issues and themes that absorbed him remain strikingly relevant.” 2025 marks the centennial of the museum at 48 Doughty Street, Holborn, the only remaining London house in which Dickens lived.

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12.27.24

The BBC has compiled a list of the twenty-four best books of 2024. The list includes Martyr! (Knopf) by Kaveh Akbar, Small Rain (Farrar, Straus and Giroux) by Garth Greenwell, and All Fours (Riverhead Books) by Miranda July, among other titles. (Read “The Triumph of a Heart: A Profile of Garth Greenwell” in the September/October 2024 issue of Poets & Writers Magazine).

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12.27.24

Alexandra Alter writes for the New York Times about intricately designed books with decorated borders and other artistic effects—a trend that started in romance and fantasy but has now spread throughout the publishing industry. “Publishers are investing in colorful patterned edges, metallic foil covers, reversible jackets, elaborate artwork on the endpapers, ribbon bookmarks and bonus content,” Alter writes. “Deluxe editions have also proliferated because of TikTok, which has reshaped book publishing and marketing strategies,” especially when appealing to younger audiences.

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12.26.24

Freedom to Read activists celebrate a major legal victory in Arkansas in the fight against book bans, Publishers Weekly reports. Timothy Brooks, a federal judge in Arkansas, found the polarizing “harmful to minors law,” which aims “to protect younger minors from accessing inappropriate sexual content in libraries and bookstores” unconstitutional. Brooks added that the law “will only achieve that end at the expense of everyone else’s First Amendment rights” and that the law “deputizes librarians and booksellers as the agents of censorship.”

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12.26.24

In an interview with the Creative Independent, writer and literary agent Jaclyn Gilbert discusses resisting the pressures of the market while honoring nuance and offering feedback. In 2021 Gilbert founded Driftless Literary, an agenting collective dedicated to supporting authors as they develop experimental and genre-bending work. “Driftless began as an experiment for creating a process-driven space for empowering authors to stay true to their vision in ways the traditional market hasn’t yet made space for,” Gilbert says, adding that her goal when providing feedback “is for it to be always generative.” In considering how polarized the political climate is today, she wonders, “why can’t we allow multiple points of view to coexist in a given work, just as we allow paradoxical dualities to coexist in our human condition as we navigate our mortality, grief, and loss?”

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12.26.24

Poet Michael Palma published a translation of The Divine Comedy (Liveright) this month that includes several changes to his 2002 translation of Dante’s Inferno (Norton), NPR reports. In the new translation, Palma retains the terza rima rhyme scheme Dante invented: The first and third lines of each stanza rhyme, and the second line sets up the rhyme scheme in the following tercet. Palma says that without reproducing the rhyme scheme, “You’re losing the music of the poem.”

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12.23.24

Lily Meyer writes for the Atlantic about how recent books on parenting offer divergent views on fatherhood. Meyer notes that most books explore the father-son relationship from the perspective of the son, citing authors such as John Updike, Philip Roth, Richard Ford, Junot Díaz, and others. However, Meyer focuses her essay on books by two contemporary male authors who underscore their transformations into fathers: I Will Do Better: A Father’s Memoir of Heartbreak, Parenting, and Love (Abrams Press, 2024) by Charles Bock, and Childish Literature (Penguin Books, 2024), by Alejandro Zambra. Meyer writes about “the philosophical distinction between Childish Literature and I Will Do Better: The former is exterior, the latter interior.”

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12.23.24

Literary agent Richard Curtis has chronicled the state of publishing in Hudibrastic verse for nearly forty years, and to honor the end of this tradition, Publishers Weekly has compiled all the installments published in the magazine over the years. Among his many influential poems, Curtis published a prescient installment in 2007 that observed publishers turning their authors into “brands” and his last poem to close out 2024 shares insights about the rise of book bans and generative AI.

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12.23.24

Bloom, a romance publisher that was founded in 2021, landed twenty-five books on the best-seller list this year, the New York Times reports. E. L. James, the author of the Fifty Shades of Grey series, was the first writer to join the press, which helped Bloom solidify its brand and attract submissions. The press took on self-published authors who already had an online fan base and helped them distribute their books, becoming the fastest-growing imprint in romance.

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Week of December 16th, 2024
12.20.24

The New York Times has published a list of books their readers loved in 2024. The list includes All Fours (Riverhead Books) by Miranda July, Creation Lake (Scribner) by Rachel Kushner, and Blue Ruin (Knopf) by Hari Kunzru, among other titles.

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12.20.24

According to data from over twelve hundred publishers, book publishing sales increased over 8 percent in October, Publishers Weekly reports. Adult fiction sales rose 17.5 percent, with hardcover sales increasing 28.2 percent and digital audiobook sales rising 25.7 percent. Adult nonfiction sales fell 0.5 percent, with hardcover sales dropping 2.4 percent and digital audiobook sales rising 9.9 percent.

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12.20.24

Ron Charles writes for the Washington Post about how a shared library serves “as an index” of “bound lives.” He narrates his love story with his wife Dawn and how “reverence for the written word was always [their] lingua franca,” adding “literature seemed to us like a perfectly natural way to sanctify a new marriage.”

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12.19.24

In an interview with Electric Literature, three literary translators discuss writing their debut novels and how their backgrounds in translation shaped the creative process. Bruna Dantas Lobato, the author of Blue Light Hours (Black Cat, 2024), says her work in translation pushed her to consider “narrative possibilities beyond American conventions” and “emboldened [her] to take risks.” Mike Fu, the author of Masquerade (Tin House, 2024), says that in moments of his novel he “did try to parrot a certain kind of diction commonly seen in English translations of early-twentieth-century Chinese literature.” Julia Kornberg, the author of Berlin Atomized (Astra House, 2024), says that her experience with translation gave her and her translator “tremendous freedom” because they “don’t have a ‘sacred’ vision of the original or of what translation should be.”

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12.19.24

In the centennial of James Baldwin’s birth, Brooklyn Public Library has opened an exhibition titled Turkey Saved My Life—Baldwin in Istanbul, 1961–1971, Fine Books & Collections reports. The exhibition, which will run until February 28, 2025, features rare photographs by the Turkish photographer Sedat Pakay and commemorates an important chapter in Baldwin’s life. During his time in Turkey, Baldwin wrote some of his most renowned works, including Another Country (Dial Press, 1962) and The Fire Next Time (Dial Press, 1963).

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12.19.24

The Authors Guild has released a statement on AI licensing agreements for authors. The statement asserts that AI training is not covered under standard publishing agreements, subsidiary rights do not include AI rights, authors retain copyright of their original works, publishers must seek permission from authors before striking deals with AI companies, authors should get a majority share in AI licensing deals, and that the Authors Guild is a plaintiff in a lawsuit against companies that have blatantly violated copyright.

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12.18.24

Sophia Nguyen writes for the Washington Post about how young readers have been inspired by craft videos on social media and discovered the old-fashioned art of bookbinding. “They’re turning paperbacks into hardbacks, re-casing them in cloth or leather, and adding foil, vinyl, or even LED lights to the covers,” Nguyen writes. Publishers, too, are joining the trend with limited editions: “Packaged in a luxe format, debuts and reissues alike have broken through to the bestseller lists.”

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12.18.24

Next fall Kiran Desai will publish her first novel since she wrote The Inheritance of Loss (Atlantic Monthly Press, 2006), which won the Booker Prize, the Associated Press reports. Her forthcoming book The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny will be published by Hogarth in September.

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12.18.24

Liz Pelletier, who transformed Entangled Publishing from a “scrappy digital-first startup” into a “publishing powerhouse” has been named Person of the Year by Publishers Weekly. Four notables have also been named by Publishers Weekly, including Regina Brooks, the CEO of Serendipity Literary Agency and president of the Association of American Literary Agents; Skip Dye, a senior vice president of Penguin Random House; Mary Gannon, the executive director of the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses; and Nigel Newton, the founder and CEO of Bloomsbury Publishing.

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12.17.24

Hilton Als writes for the New Yorker about Belle da Costa Greene, who became the first director of the Morgan Library & Museum in 1924, and how the talented archivist concealed her own history. An exhibition titled “Belle da Costa Greene: A Librarian’s Legacy,” co-curated by Erica Ciallela and Philip S. Palmer, will be on view at the Morgan Library & Museum until May 2025.  “Although her parents were Black, the light-skinned Greene passed as white, attributing her olive coloring to a Portuguese grandmother or to a father with ‘Spanish Cuban’ blood,” Als writes. “Greene’s tale is part of the legacy of passing in this country, and it’s alternately heartbreaking, infuriating, and astonishing to walk through a show devoted to a life that was built on repression and erasures.”

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12.17.24

Meg Day, the Guggenheim’s poet in residence for 2024, is highlighting the work of Deaf and hard-of-hearing artists at the museum, the New York Times reports. At an event on December 11, some of these poets, including Noah Buchholz, Raymond Luczak, Abby Haroun, and Raymond Antrobus, who “compose to various degrees” in signed language and English, performed their poems on the ground floor of the Guggenheim. An exhibition titled “Ekphrasis in Air,” presented on the sixth floor of the rotunda and on view until March 9, 2025, features three video screens projecting poems in American and British Sign Languages, including those by Day, Haroun, and Douglas Ridloff.

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12.17.24

“The Accomplice,” a story by John D. MacDonald, who wrote The Executioners (Simon & Schuster, 1957), will be published for the first time in the Strand Magazine, the Guardian reports. “The Accomplice” was found in the archives at the University of Florida in Gainesville, and follows a young man “caught in a moral dilemma, torn between loyalty to his employer, his strange fascination with a one-of-a-kind femme fatale, and the lure of material gain,” says Andrew Gulli, managing editor of the Strand. MacDonald published seventy-eight books and hundreds of stories over the course of his life and died in 1986.

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12.17.24

J. D. Biersdorfer has created a quiz for the New York Times in which readers can test their knowledge of Charles Dickens’s nineteenth-century London. The quiz focuses on locations and landmarks around the city that are mentioned in five of Dickens’s books.

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12.16.24

Dwight Garner, a critic for the New York Times writes about Percival Everett’s poetry in the wake of Everett’s 2024 National Book Award in Fiction. In addition to dozens of novels, Everett has published six poetry books. Of Everett’s verse, Garner writes, “The best of it puts on display his deep reading and his willingness, so often apparent in his fiction, to tinker with the reputations of characters both historical and literary.”

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12.16.24

Michael S. Roth writes for the Atlantic about the neurologist and author Oliver Sacks, whose letters were published by Knopf in November. Roth writes that Sacks “discovered in himself an almost uncanny ability to pay attention to the lives of people most doctors want quickly to analyze, classify, and medicate.” Roth also emphasizes how Sacks’s correspondences reveal “a man who feared abandonment and craved acknowledgment but discovered through his practice the rewards of his great gifts of feeling, of thoughtfulness, and of care.”

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12.16.24

John Ingram has received the 2024 Frederic G. Melcher Lifetime Achievement Award, Publishers Weekly reports. John Ingram oversaw the transformation of Ingram, which was founded in 1970 as a book wholesaler and has grown into a $2 billion publishing operation. His vision for the company is aligned with its customers: “The better our customers do,” he says, “the better we do.”

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