Ever get furious about a book that was too long for its own good, or about a book that was full of falsehoods, or about a book you thought was great but other people didn’t care for?
Okay, so maybe “rage” is a strong word for today’s lit links, but there’s something of frustration about them all.
First we have author Ian McEwan complaining that very few novels earn their length, and that he prefers shorter works that (aligning with the ethos of Poe) can be read at one sitting. (Good news for those of us who aren’t afraid to write novellas!)
The Atlantic takes on non-fiction publishing with a piece on the lack of rigorous fact-checking, which calls into question whether most non-fiction should be more honestly marketed as fiction.
National Public Radio examines how F. Scott Fitzgerald‘s The Great Gatsby (in the fine American tradition of Moby-Dick) went from flop to The Great American Novel.
Lastly, what if you learned that some of your favorite authors were writing novels that were going to be sealed away in a vault for a hundred years so that you’d be long dead before anyone could read them? Well, it’s happening! Rage on!
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Style guide: Texts, performances, and periodicals (including websites) are italicized. Key persons are in bold.
Bikram Yogurt (heated to 105°F for 90 minutes) … not such a good idea.
Today’s links are all about fairness and seeing both sides of the issue!
If your fingers hurt too much to squeeze a bike horn in a dark place, you might have Harpo Tunnel Syndrome.
To get with the loving and giving, we start off with two bits of good news for folks on the autism spectrum.
nymo- [prefix from Aeolic Greek ὄνυμα “name”] /NIM-ō/ similar to the suffix -onym, meaning a specific type of name or word (as in acronym, synonym, exonym), nymo- indicates that which belongs to a type in name, but not necessarily in reality.
If you’re easily upset by controversy, you might want to skip today’s literary links!
Today is the anniversary of the first flying of the US flag, in 1777 during the Revolutionary War battle at Cooch’s Ridge. And this is a star-spangled day of links, highlighting both America’s own literary culture and America as a magnet for writers and writing from around the world.