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.

6.30.25

Joseph Bernstein writes for the New York Times about why men have stopped reading fiction and considers efforts by book clubs, publishers, and booksellers to combat the trend. Bernstein writes, “for men to read more fiction as the world of the novel exists today would not just require more stereotypically masculine subject matter. It might be a matter of men approaching their reading lives a little more like women do—getting recommendations online from celebrities and influencers, browsing together, forming book clubs.”

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6.30.25

Kyle Chayka writes for the New Yorker about recent studies that demonstrate how AI is homogenizing our thoughts and writing. One study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that people who used ChatGPT to write an essay demonstrated less brain activity than those who did not. Another finding was that the texts produced by AI converged around common words and ideas. “A.I. is a technology of averages,” Chayka writes, “large language models are trained to spot patterns across vast tracts of data; the answers they produce tend toward consensus, both in the quality of the writing, which is often riddled with clichés and banalities, and in the calibre of the ideas.”

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6.30.25

Clare Mulroy writes for USA Today about Julia Whelan—a voice actor narrating the audiobooks for a range of best-selling contemporary novels. Whelan has narrated Atmosphere (Ballantine Books, 2025) by Taylor Jenkins Reid, Great Big Beautiful Life (Berkley, 2025) by Emily Henry, and Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil (Tor Books, 2025) by V. E. Schwab, among other titles. Whelan discusses her path to narrating dozens of books per year, the threat of AI encroaching on the audiobook industry, and Audiobrary, the audio platform she founded that applies publishing models with royalties to both narrators and authors.

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6.30.25

The Supreme Court has ruled that parents can opt their children out of classes using LGBTQ+ books on religious grounds, Publishers Lunch reports.

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Week of June 23rd, 2025
6.27.25

James Hill writes for the New York Times about the Parisian Atelier Devauchelle, where bookbinding is a communal art. The women who run the atelier sew and create new bindings, restore torn pages of books, and create slipcovers and special boxes to conserve fragile editions. The workshop is located near Drouot, an auction house that sells antiquarian books.

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6.27.25

The Community of Literary Magazines and Presses (CLMP) has announced the 2025 CLMP Firecracker Awards—annual prizes that celebrate the work of independent literary publishers. Obligations to the Wounded (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2024) by Mubanga Kalimamukwento won the prize in fiction, Low: Notes on Art & Trash (Fonograf Editions, 2024) by Jaydra Johnson won the prize in creative nonfiction, and Mirror Nation (Wave Books, 2024) by Don Mee Choi won the prize in poetry. Each winner in the book categories receives $2,000 to be split evenly between the press and the author. Revel, a biannual magazine based in Atlanta, won the award for best debut magazine, and Circumference, a biannual journal founded in 2020, won the award for general excellence in magazines. Each winner in the magazine categories receive $1,000.

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6.27.25

Alex Reisner writes for the Atlantic about how tech companies developing LLMs pose “an existential threat to the media, and to the livelihood of journalists everywhere.” Reisner writes that chatbots “have proved adept at keeping users locked into conversations...by answering every question, often through summarizing articles from news publishers,” and cites one study that found Google’s AI overviews have reduced traffic to outside websites by more than 34 percent.

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6.26.25

Though bookseller James Daunt has received widespread praise for rehabilitating Barnes & Noble (B&N) since he was named CEO in 2019, many independent publishers are frustrated with how little attention B&N has paid to their lists, Publishers Weekly reports. Nearly every one of the dozen independent presses Publishers Weekly interviewed said that their business with B&N has dropped significantly since Daunt took over, though all the indies emphasized they are glad B&N is in business. As one nonfiction publisher said, “Daunt’s entitled to running his business as he sees fit. Opening more stores is good. Sales being up is good. What he is doing is working—it’s just not working for us.”

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6.26.25

A group of authors including Jonathan Alter, Mary Bly, and Jia Tolentino has filed a lawsuit against Microsoft, arguing that the tech company used the Books3 pirate database of almost 200,000 books to train its LLM, and knowingly infringed on copyrighted material, Publishers Lunch reports.

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6.26.25

Jenny Singer writes for the Washington Post about the BookTok phenomenon of the “book boyfriend,” as romance book sales continue to soar. The term refers to characters “who seem to have stridden, galloped, or brooded onto the page from somewhere in the recesses of the reader’s deepest desires,” Singer writes. “Simply put, a book boyfriend is a character you can’t stop thinking about—and longing for—beyond the page.” Singer notes the history of idealized and problematic book boyfriends, adding that the trend even existed in 1848 when “a literary magazine reported that ‘New England states were visited by a distressing mental epidemic, passing under the name of the Jane Eyre fever.’”

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6.26.25

In Bartz v. Anthropic, a federal judge in California has ruled that AI training constitutes fair use when using legally acquired copyrighted books but violates copyright law when downloading pirated copies for permanent storage, Publishers Weekly reports. In a statement responding to the ruling, the Authors Guild said: “While the Authors Guild is relieved that the court recognized Anthropic’s massive, criminal-level, unexcused e-book piracy for what it is, the decision that using pirated or scanned books for training LLMs is fair use” contradicts copyright law and “ignores the harm caused to authors and the value of their works due to market saturation by LLM-generated content that competes with human authors.”

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6.25.25

In the Poets on Translation series in Poetry, Heather Green writes about translating the work of Tristan Tzara and “using new sounds to root a poem in a partially shared soil of linguistic meaning.”

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6.25.25

Meg LaBorde Kuehn, the publisher and CEO of Kirkus Reviews, is leaving the company, effective July 11, Shelf Awareness reports. Judy Hottensen, who stepped down as vice president and associate publisher of Grove/Atlantic on January 1, will serve as interim CEO.

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6.25.25

To celebrate the centennial of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald scholars and fans joined a boat tour around Manhasset Bay that shows how little the place has changed since 1925, the New York Times reports.

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6.25.25

A Russian missile and drone attack on Kyiv on June 17 destroyed Ukrainian Priority Publishing, a Ukrainian publishing house, Publishers Weekly reports. The attack, which killed twenty-eight people, came just after the thirteenth International Book Arsenal Festival was held in Kyiv. The literary festival attracted thirty thousand attendees, including over a hundred publishers and six bookstores.

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6.24.25

Digital audiobook sales, which have been the primary driver of sales since Spotify entered the market in November 2023, sank in April, Publishers Weekly reports. Total revenue across 1,325 publishers saw a 4 percent overall decline compared to April 2024 due, in part, to a 12.5 percent drop in digital audiobook sales across both the adult and children’s/YA categories. Adult trade fiction digital audio sales dropped 9 percent in April, and adult nonfiction digital audio sales dropped 17.6 percent.

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6.24.25

Citing the recently published book Toni at Random: The Iconic Writer’s Legendary Editorship (Amistad, 2025) by Dana A. Williams, Clint Smith writes for the Atlantic about how Toni Morrison transformed publishing as an editor at Random House. Smith writes: “How Morrison handled the pressures of wielding her one-of-a-kind influence is fascinating—and, in retrospect, telling: As an editor, she was not just tenacious, but also always aware of how tenuous progress in the field could be…. Morrison’s mode was to be relentlessly demanding—of herself, her authors, and her Random House colleagues. She tailored her rigorous style to the varied array of Black writers she didn’t hesitate to pitch to her bosses.”

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6.24.25

A new prize for translated poetry has been launched by Fitzcarraldo Editions, Giramondo Publishing, and New Directions, the Guardian reports. The biennial Poetry in Translation Prize will award an advance of $5,000 to be shared equally between the poet and translator. The winning collection will be published in the U.K. and Ireland by Fitzcarraldo Editions, in Australia and New Zealand by Giramondo, and in North America by New Directions. Submissions are open from July 15 to August 15 to poets writing in any language other than English. The winner will be announced in January 2026 and publication of the winning collection is scheduled for 2027.

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6.23.25

NetGalley has launched a consumer marketing platform called Booktrovert, Publishers Weekly reports. Booktrovert will offer e-book giveaways, reader activities, promotional and preorder campaigns, purchase links, and more. The platform will target general readers as opposed to industry professionals. Publishers will be able to create campaigns through a self-service interface within their NetGalley accounts and receive customer analytics and demographic data.

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6.23.25

Authors are posting videos of themselves editing their manuscripts on TikTok to refute allegations that they are using generative AI and to bring readers into the drafting process, Alana Yzola reports for Wired. “The publishing market is expected to grow by $18.9 million between now and 2029, according to market research firm Technavio, partially due to an influx of self-published authors,” Yzola writes. “But with scammy rewrites and digitally fabricated authors entering the market, artificial intelligence has made searching for human-made content more difficult, causing independent authors to combat what some are calling an AI-generated ‘witch hunt.’”

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6.23.25

BookTok has had multiple controversies in the last month: accusations of plagiarism, AI use, and author bullying, NBC News reports. Beverly, a romance novel by author Laura J. Robert, had been gaining traction on BookTok, but many content creators removed their positive endorsements of the book after allegations that Robert had plagiarized R.J. Lewis’s 2016 title, Obsessed. The author Victoria Aveyard recently posted a video alluding to another author using generative AI in a novel but did not name the writer. And Author Ali Hazelwood was cyberbullied after making a comment about who Katniss Everdeen, the protagonist of the Hunger Games series, should have ended up with romantically.

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Week of June 16th, 2025
6.20.25

Five years after it was discontinued along with the industry trade show BookExpo, BookCon will return to New York City’s Javits Center next April, according to ReedPop, a boutique arm of events organizer Reed Exhibitions. Jim Milliot of Publishers Weekly reports that Jenny Martin, “who headed up the earlier iteration of BookCon as well as BookExpo,” will serve as event director. Milliot writes: “Martin stressed that the revived event will bear no resemblance to BookExpo, an industry trade show, saying that the BookCon team is ‘focused wholly on delivering a consumer event.’”

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6.20.25

PEN America has compiled “A Travel Ban Reading List” that includes more than fifty titles “by authors with ties to the 19 countries affected by President Trump’s travel ban.” Sabir Sultan, director of the World Voices Festival and Literary Programs at PEN America, writes, “Writers record their ideas, their fantasies, and mirror our collective realities. Through engaging with books we learn about ourselves and the world. We see clearer the complex tapestry of people, histories, and national borders that shape our daily lives. We are inspired to see new possibilities. Let this list inspire you to read and explore.”

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6.20.25

A book publisher that was launched in 2023 to take advantage of the success of #BookTok, appears to be closing, the Bookseller reports. 8th Note Press, which is owned by Chinese tech company ByteDance, had acquired the rights to more than thirty novels and also announced a print publishing arm in partnership with Zando, the independent publishing company that recently acquired Tin House. However, Matilda Battersby of the Bookseller writes, “[A]uthors and agents are currently negotiating the return of rights to titles acquired by the publisher, and the business’ digital presence has apparently been quietly deleted.”

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6.20.25

Sourcebooks, the sixth-largest book publisher in the United States, made the list of the Best Workplaces of 2025, according to Inc. magazine, whose editors took into account “benefits, growth opportunities, and team values,” among other qualities, to compile the list. 

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6.18.25

Clare Mulroy writes for USA Today about how the Trump administration could change the way we read—from book bans to border policies and anti-DEI efforts that affect authors. Mulroy describes authors who, shaken by new immigration and border policies, are canceling tours and events in the U.S., budget cuts that have affected libraries and other public humanities programs, and legal actions that permit educational censorship and book bans.

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6.18.25

The writer Henrique Alvarellos has overseen the reproduction of a groundbreaking book of Federico García Lorca’s homoerotic sonnets, the Guardian reports. In 1983, dozens of selected readers received the first edition of the Sonnets of Dark Love, a red booklet of poems penned by Lorca fifty years earlier. The people behind the publication never revealed their identities. But their plan to pressure Lorca’s family into releasing the poet’s sonnets in the original Spanish worked. A year after the secret publication, which was sent to Lorca experts, cultural figures, and journalists, Lorca’s family consented to the publication of all the sonnets. To commemorate the anonymous project, Alvarellos has produced a facsimile edition of that 1983 booklet.

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6.18.25

Joshua Rothman writes for the New Yorker about how AI may bring the age of traditional reading to an end. He traces a history through various technological developments like e-books and audio narration, writing, “The old-fashioned, ideal sort of reading—intense, extended, beginning-to-end encounters with carefully crafted texts—has become almost anachronistic.” Rothman wonders, “What will happen to reading culture as reading becomes automated?” In such a world, he writes, “It will be difficult to separate the deep readers from the superficial ones…. Text may get treated like a transitional medium, a temporary resting place for ideas.”

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6.17.25

Kelly Jensen writes for Book Riot about the Government Accountability Office’s conclusion that Trump overstepped his authority by dismantling the Institute for Museum and Library Services (IMLS). The Government Accountability Office, an independent, nonpartisan agency of the U.S. legislative branch that audits the federal government, found that the Trump administration violated the 1974 Impound Control Act (ICA), a tool of federal checks and balances that requires the president to execute legislation that Congress passes. Violations of the ICA are liable to legal action by the U.S. Comptroller General.

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6.17.25

Katya Zimmer writes for the BBC about the trend of people turning to “creative bibliotherapy”—tailored reading recommendations with the goal of improving mental health. Zimmer cites studies that find immersion in great literature can “help relieve, restore, and reinvigorate the troubled mind—and can play a part in relieving stress and anxiety,” but she also concedes that “the evidence that reading helps mental health is complicated.” Though readers tend to be less stressed, depressed, and lonely than non-readers, it is unclear if reading fiction improves well-being, or if people with better well-being are the ones reading fiction in the first place. What is more, some research points to the fact that books can actually trigger readers with the same addictions as the characters they are reading about. Yet another study found that people with depression reported better mental health after attending reading groups for poetry and fiction.

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6.17.25

Daniel Gumnit has been appointed executive director and CEO of Little Free Library, a nonprofit organization that is based in Saint Paul and dedicated to expanding book access, Publishers Weekly reports. Gumnit has previously served in leadership roles at nonprofits such as People Serving People, Twin Cities PBS National Productions, Children’s Cancer Research Fund, and most recently, Minnesota Alliance with Youth. In a statement, Gumnit said, “Our work—providing 24/7 book access; granting Little Free Libraries to underserved urban, rural, and Indigenous communities; and championing diverse books—has never been more urgent.”

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6.16.25

Ellen Oh reflects on the tenth anniversary of We Need Diverse Books in an interview with Publishers Weekly. She discusses the organization’s advocacy for sustainable diversity in all parts of the publishing industry, book banning, and the Trump administration’s assault on DEI initiatives, among other topics.

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6.16.25

The New York Public Library has announced Alexander Sammartino as the winner of the twenty-fifth annual Young Lions Fiction Award for his book Last Acts (Simon & Schuster). Sammartino will receive $10,000.

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6.16.25

Keith Woodhouse writes about an emerging literary subgenre he calls “climate assessment dramas,” Stephen Markley’s The Deluge (Simon & Schuster, 2023), and the future of climate fiction for Public Books. “Narrativizing climate change means writing about environmental catastrophe in a way that cuts against the grain of established environmental commitments,” he writes, “it means imagining unprecedented political dynamics from within the limits of our own political moment, and it means describing a near-totalizing phenomenon through what is inevitably a narrow aperture.”

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Week of June 9th, 2025
6.13.25

Nearly a million books in 254 languages from Harvard University’s library and troves of old newspapers and materials held by the Boston Public Library are being released to tech companies for AI training, the Associated Press reports. Jessica Chapel, the chief of digital and online services at the Boston Public Library, said, “OpenAI had this interest in massive amounts of training data. We have an interest in massive amounts of digital objects. So this is kind of just a case that things are aligning.” Digitizing is expensive, and tech companies can essentially fund projects librarians want to pursue anyway while benefiting from scores of valuable data.

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6.13.25

Yael van der Wouden has won this year’s Women’s Prize for Fiction for her novel, The Safekeep (Penguin, 2024), the Guardian reports. The nonfiction award went to Rachel Clarke’s The Story of a Heart: Two Families, One Heart, and the Medical Miracle That Saved a Child’s Life (Little, Brown, 2024). Each author received £30,000 (approximately $40,742).

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6.13.25

Parul Sehgal writes for the New York Times about biography and how the genre might withstand the threats AI poses to the literary world. “Where biography is a form built on the vagaries of human experience,” Sehgal writes, “artificial intelligence offers a form of knowledge stripped of experience.” She adds: “Even the boosters of AI readily concede its poor grasp of character or human motive, which is notoriously coiled, cloudy, contradictory. To understand motive requires some sense of the raw matter of experience, of its quiddity, of the body’s way of knowing and remembering.”

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6.12.25

The literary journal Lapham’s Quarterly is now attached to Bard College and will begin its revival with a website and podcast, Alexandra Alter reports for the New York Times. The journal is relaunching its digital presence and audio content under the editorial direction of writers Donovan Hohn and Francine Prose. Lewis Lapham, who founded the journal in 2007, died in 2024. Toward the end of his life, it was unclear if the journal would survive him—the journal was struggling financially, furloughed its staff, and stopped publishing issues. Lapham’s Quarterly’s “survival is all the more remarkable at a time when many literary journals are struggling,” Alter writes, especially due to new funding challenges presented by the Trump administration’s budget cuts to the NEA.

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6.12.25

Danielle Ofri writes for the New Yorker about why doctors write, and explores the history, ethics, and motivations of doctor-writing. Though physicians “write all day, every day—progress notes, consultations, assessments, referrals, appeal letters,” Ofri explains, “We write at a remove, cordoning off our inner world behind a cool clinical eye and protective professional jargon.” She adds: “Doctoring provides powerful tools for getting under the hood, but writing offers ones that dig into the interstitial spaces where our more utilitarian tools falter. And this might reveal an even deeper aspect to writing—an element of purely being human.”

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6.12.25

The New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture is celebrating its hundredth anniversary at a moment when Black history is under attack, the New York Times reports. The Schomburg Centennial Festival will take place on June 14, feature various literary and cultural events, and culminate with an outdoor block party and a performance by Slick Rick. The anniversary comes as the Trump Administration continues to attack diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts and decimate federal funding for libraries, museums, and arts organizations in service of what Trump calls patriotic history.

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6.11.25

The twelve board members of the Fulbright program have resigned after accusing Trump aides of political interference, the New York Times reports. The board members expressed concern that new appointees at the State Department, which manages the scholarship program, took illegal action by canceling awards to nearly two hundred American professors and researchers.

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6.11.25

Everand, the online e-book and audiobook subscription service subsidiary of Scribd, has acquired the online book club platform Fable, Publishers Weekly reports. All Fable employees will join Scribd, with Tony Grimminck, CEO of Scribd, taking over as the CEO of Fable, and Padmasree Warrior, Fable’s founder, moving into an advisory role.

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6.11.25

Elisa Gabbert writes for the New York Times about the joy of reading one poem in many different translations. Gabbert writes, “I love to see how different minds find (hugely or minutely) different solutions to the same set of problems.”

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6.11.25

Children’s reading enjoyment in the U.K. has fallen to the lowest recorded level in two decades, the Guardian reports. The decline is particularly evident in teenage boys. Of girls aged eight to eighteen, 39.1 percent said they enjoyed reading in their free time, compared to 25.7 percent of boys. Only one in three children aged eight to eighteen reported enjoying reading “very much” or “quite a lot” this year. The number of children that reported reading something daily in their free time has halved in the last twenty years, from 38.1 percent to 18.7 percent.

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6.10.25

Conduit Books & Ephemera, which was founded in 1993, is pursuing legal action against Conduit, a new press “focusing initially on male authors,” for infringing upon their trademarked name.

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6.10.25

A federal judge has denied a preliminary injunction in American Library Association v. Sonderling, a lawsuit that seeks to stop the destruction of the Institute of Museum and Library Services, Publishers Weekly reports. The court’s decision rested on an interpretation of the case that prioritized contractual issues over constitutional ones.

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6.10.25

Lambda Literary, the nation’s leading organization championing LGBTQ+ literature, has named Jozie (J. Clapp) Clapp as its new executive director. The former executive director of the LGBTQ Center of Durham in North Carolina, J. Clapp has worked in leadership positions for over a decade in nonprofits, fundraising and advocating for LGBTQ+ communities, especially BIPOC and transgender individuals. J. Clapp said, “It’s an incredible honor to lead this next chapter, ensuring LGBTQ+ literature continues to thrive and reflect our rich, diverse communities.”

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6.9.25

Pauline McLean writes for the BBC about the Victorian bookbinders who used arsenic, as well as mercury and chrome, to make striking green covers for books. Prolonged exposure to these books, which are stored in archives around the world, can cause low-level arsenic poisoning. The Poison Book Project, a collaboration in Delaware between the Winterthur Museum and the state university, compiled a list of titles that could harm humans. Inspired by this initiative, Erica Kotze, a preservative conservator at the University of St. Andrews, and Pilar Gil, a biochemist, developed a technology to examine thousands of historic books. The affordable testing device is designed to flash red when detecting toxic elements. The device will allow librarians and conservators to identify toxic books, safely store them, and still enjoy controlled access.

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6.9.25

Carla Hayden, the former Librarian of Congress, speaks out about her dismissal by Trump with CBS News. When reflecting on the efforts of the Trump administration to push out leaders and enforce budget cuts at cultural institutions, she says, “it’s part of a larger-seeming effort to diminish opportunities for the general public to have free access to information and inspiration.” She adds: “We like to say as librarians, ‘Free people read freely.’ And so, there’s been an effort recently to quelch that.”

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6.9.25

Sam Dolnick writes for the New York Times about the author James Frey and his relationship to art, truth, and public shaming after the scandal that followed the fabrication of some facts in his memoir A Million Little Pieces (Doubleday, 2003). Frey says he was “working in autofiction before that word existed.” This month he is publishing a novel called Next to Heaven (Authors Equity) about a swingers party and a murder.

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