Daily News from Poets & Writers
Dybek and Cole Receive $500,000 "Genius" Fellowships
The MacArthur Foundation recently announced that poet and fiction writer Stuart Dybek and poet and publisher Peter Cole are among the twenty-four recipients of this year’s “genius” fellowships.
NEA Launches Initiative to Celebrate Historic Poetry Sites
The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) unveiled yesterday a pilot initiative to celebrate national historic sites related to poetry. As part of the NEA’s Big Read, the new program will give Extraordinary Action grants to encourage communities to commemorate American poets in the regions in which they lived.
National Book Foundation Names This Year's "5 Under 35"
The National Book Foundation announced yesterday the names of five young fiction writers who will receive "5 Under 35" awards.
Fans in Los Angeles Try to Save Bukowski's Historic Bungalow
Fans of Charles Bukowski are urging the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Commission to preserve the house the late poet and novelist rented from 1963 to 1972 in East Hollywood, California.
Palatella Succeeds Shatz as Nation's Literary Editor
The Nation recently announced that books editor Adam Shatz is stepping down after four years to take a position at the London Review of Books. Shatz will be succeeded by John Palatella, who will be the magazine's new literary editor covering books and the arts.
More Fiction From James Frey: HarperCollins to Publish Novel
Didion and Gross to Receive Special Honors at the National Book Awards
The National Book Foundation announced yesterday that Joan Didion and Terry Gross will receive distinguished honors at the 58th National Book Awards ceremony on November 14.
AuthorHouse Acquires Competitor iUniverse
Self-publishing company iUniverse was recently acquired by one of its competitors, the Bloomington, Indiana-based AuthorHouse, Publishers Weekly recently reported.
Judges Announce Finalists for the 2007 Man Booker Prize
On Thursday, the judges of the Man Booker Prize announced the names of the six finalists for the 2007 award.
Turcotte Family Settles With Burroughs, St. Martin's in Running With Scissors Suit
On Wednesday, the family portrayed in Augusten Burroughs’s book Running With Scissors settled their lawsuit against the author and his publisher. The Turcotte family, with whom Burroughs lived as a teenager, filed suit two years ago seeking over $2 million in damages for defamation.
Independent Magazine Distributor Closes its Doors After Sixty Years
Faye Kosmidis, the owner of Bernhard DeBoer, Inc., recently announced that the independent magazine distribution company was closing its doors after sixty years in business.
Bangladeshi Author Faces Criminal Charges After Last Week's Attack
Four Debut Novelists Among 2007 Man Booker Semifinalists
The judges of the 2007 Man Booker Prize announced their longlist of semifinalists yesterday.
Wisconsin Media Technician Wins Contest for Worst Writing
Jim Gleeson, a forty-seven-year-old media technician from Madison, Wisconsin, was recently named winner of the 25th annual Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest, but it’s unlikely that the distinction will earn him any book deals. The award, sponsored by San Jose State University, is given for the year’s worst writing.
Judge Orders Albert to Pay $350,000 to Film Company
Loft Literary Center Finds New Director
The Loft Literary Center announced yesterday that Jocelyn Hale will be the nonprofit organization's new executive director.
Mummy Love Poems Found in South Korea
Anthony Hopkins, Angelina Jolie to "Star" In Adaptation of Beowulf
A film adaptation of the Old English epic poem Beowulf is set to release on November 16. Directed by Robert Zemeckis—the man who gave audiences Back to the Future (all three parts) and Forrest Gump, for which he won an Oscar, among many others—the movie version of Beowulf owes more to the style of filmmaking he utilized in The Polar Express.
NEA Appoints Grants Director as Literature Department Expands
Jon Peede, the former counselor to the chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), was recently appointed director of grants programs, a newly created position in the organization’s literature department.
D.C. Honors HIV/AIDS Caregivers With Poetry by Whitman, Miller
The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority and the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities unveiled a public art project featuring the poetry of Walt Whitman.
Two Publishers, One Big and One Small, Make Their Moves
Two publishers in New York—the major house Farrar, Straus and Giroux (FSG) and the independent press BOA Editions—are moving foward in new locales.
Mediabistro Sold for $23 Million
On Monday, founder Laurel Touby sold Mediabistro, the Web site serving freelance writers, editors, designers, and other media and creative professionals, for $23 million to Jupitermedia Corporation, an Internet research company that owns several media Web sites.
Glass Sets Cohen's Poems to Music
Last Saturday night, the poetry of Leonard Cohen and the melodies of Philip Glass were featured in the New York City premiere of Book of Longing, a ninety-minute concert at Lincoln Center.
Writer From Uganda Wins 2007 Caine Prize for African Writing
The judges of the Caine Prize for African Writing announced yesterday that Monica Arac de Nyeko, a twenty-eight-year-old fiction writer from Uganda, won this year's prize for her short story "Jambula Tree," from her collection African Love Stories (Ayebia Clarke Publish...



