The daily lowdown on books, publishing, and the occasional author behaving badly.
For more than six decades, the heart of a Beat literature classic had been thought lost, dropped overboard a houseboat. Turns out, the letter that helped inspire Jack Kerouac's On the Road has now reportedly resurfaced — not from the sea, but from an unopened envelope buried in a defunct publisher's office.
The Associated Press reports
In a 1968 interview featured in The Paris Review, and noted by the AP, Kerouac raved about the letter's contents. "It was the greatest piece of writing I ever saw, better'n anybody in America, or at least enough to make Melville, Twain, Dreiser, Wolfe, I dunno who, spin in their graves."
Fellow friend and Beat great Allen Ginsberg had supposedly lent the letter to a friend, who in turn had let it meet a watery end. Instead, Ginsberg apparently tried to get it published by sending it to a San Francisco press, where it languished for years until the publisher's closure.
The auction house
Profiles in History
Lemony Snicket Keeps His Word: In contrition for
jokes he made
"It would be heartbreaking for the #NBAwards conversation to focus on my behaviour instead of great books," Handler added. "So can we do this? Let's donate to #WeNeedDiverseBooks to #CelebrateJackie. I'm in for $10,000, and matching your money for 24 hours up to $100,000. Brown Girl Dreaming is an amazing novel and we need more voices like Jacqueline Woodson."
On Monday,
the We Need Diverse Books campaign confirmed
McBride Picks Up Faber: Awards season rolls on — and so too does Irish novelist Eimear McBride, whose debut A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing has won the
Geoffrey Faber Prize
Apple Settlement Stands: A federal judge has green-lit a $450 million settlement reached between Apple, consumers and consumers' lawyers over the company's handling of e-book prices. The settlement was born of charges that Apple had conspired with publishers to raise those prices. The approval was handed down Friday, though
The New York Times notes
Flipping Ahead
New in print (and screen)
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