Book news

Bookscans Review No.4

Some critics will write 'Maya Angelou is a ‘natural writer' - which is right after being a natural heart surgeon. — Maya Angelou

The plight of independent bookstores. St. Mark's gets a new lease but a New Hampshire shop struggles to stay open.

Congratulations! Esi Edugyan of Victoria has won the 2011 Scotiabank Giller Prize for her novel, Half-Blood Blues.

Nobel Prize-winning Daniel Kahneman reveals the built-in kinks in human reasoning—and he’s Exhibit A.

Lee Duran: Myths of book selling, pricing exposed. "Times have changed even more than I thought."

The English forest that inspired Tolkien. A look at the locations that informed novelists, from Faulkner to Woolf.

There is plenty of evidence that Shakespeare was somewhat less than a sensitive poet and entirely honest citizen.

Nicholas Evans, author of The Horse Whisperer on the event that nearly killed him - and almost tore apart his family.

As the Queen prepares to mark the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible Peter Mullen scorns its modern rivals.

The End of Borders and the Future of Books. An inside look at the real reasons for the once-beloved chain's demise.

Congrats! G-G winner Patrick deWitt says grant ‘saved’ him.

deWitt
Patrick deWitt

Bookscans Review No.3

If you know what you are going to write when you're writing a poem, it's going to be average. — Derek Walcott

High-school biology teacher Alexis Jenni won France's top literary award, for his first novel, The French Art of War.

The Better Angels of Our Nature. Psychologist Steven Pinker tells us that we are living in the least violent era ever.

Alice In Wonderland’s influence on visual art and more. Why do Lewis Carroll’s books still have such a hold on us?

Home to 12 Nobel laureates and 6 Booker winners, Faber & Faber hires Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker as editor-at-large.

In Ranganathan's The Five Laws of Library Science he formulated the principles for the use of library materials.

Charles Dickens was the Victorian era's most beloved writer, but even he couldn't live up to its unforgiving morals.

Dickens

Charles Dickens


New book on "The Puzzle of Left-handedness." Lefties have lifespans nine years shorter than average. Why?

Transgressive fiction is a genre of literature that focuses on characters who feel confined by the norms of society.

On November 2, CBC celebrates its 75th anniversary. The celebration includes a look at 75 years of CanLit.

"History of Science Fiction" maps the genre from its roots in mythology to the calcified space opera epics of today.

How does fiction influence your life? Meet the 101 most influential people who never lived.

A website about constructing metal book clasps, bosses and other hardware, showing book clasp repair and restoration.

World’s 10 greatest bookshops. The best spots to browse, buy, hang out, find sanctuary among the shelves.

In 1938, Tolkien planned to release The Hobbit in Germany. The publishers asked if he was Aryan. This was his response.

Kindle makes for heavy reading. It has been revealed that the Amazon e-book reader weighs more when it is fully loaded.

Ask your question and find the right book. Book database built around "how-to" themes.

Bookscans Review No.2

Books are the carriers of civilization. Without books, history is silent, literature dumb, science crippled, thought and speculation at a standstill. They are engines of change, windows on the world, lighthouses erected in the sea of time. — Barbara W. Tuchman

Fascinating excerpt from Vivian Gornick's forthcoming book:
Emma Goldman: Revolution as a Way of Life.

In a networked world, can a book go viral? Behind the Jarvis/Morozov spat is a book tour made for the digital age.

Shakespeare invented over 1700 words. Here's ~100 he coined, hyperlinked to the play and scene from which it comes.

Here's an interesting A.I. librarian: "Madam, I've just finished reading __ by __ . What should I read next?"

What do Shakespeare, Keats and Dickens have in common, apart from being great writers? None of them went to university.

Top banned books of last decade. These are five of the top banned books in American high schools.

Prettier eBooks? Kindle Format 8 supports new formatting capabilities that mean design-centric e-books will pop.

Telegraph Head of Books Gaby Wood on judging the Man Booker Prize 2011: seven months to read 138 novels.

Open Text Book: A registry of textbooks that is free for anyone to use, reuse and redistribute.

Found in Books: People have found teeth, money, and bacon inside their books.

jobs
Steve Jobs


Steve Jobs biography comes to Kindle early. Kindle users might want to fire up that e-reader ASAP.

Priscilla Hart: "Farewell, Borders – lights out." A journalist examines her grief over the disappearance of Borders.

When The Hobbit was first published, JRR Tolkien provided a set of wonderful illustrations. See them here.

Beckett: “I know no more about this play than anyone who manages to read it attentively. I do not know who Godot is."

Is reading on the loo bad for you? Public health study by Ron Shaoul lifts the lid on toilet reading once and for all.

Archive of book cover designs. Sort 1351 jacket covers by author, title and more.

eBook indexes continue to flourish: "446 Places for Free Books Online."

From Stuart McMillen, an illustrated comparison I used to ponder as a teenager: "Aldous Huxley versus George Orwell."

"The book business deserves to die if for no other reason than that its business model is something out of the 1930s."