Sarah Palin Snags Ziggy Honors
Maybe there was something about Ms. Palin that everyone had missed. Maybe the secret of her attraction would finally, suddenly, become dazzlingly clear to me.
Maybe there was something about Ms. Palin that everyone had missed. Maybe the secret of her attraction would finally, suddenly, become dazzlingly clear to me.
wowOwow | Joni Evans | Posted 11.24.2009 | Books
"Just write. That's what makes us a writer, is we write. I mean, if we don't do that we're not writers. And it's so important not to be discouraged, b...
Eileen Gittins | Posted 11.25.2009 | Books
For three years, Sullivan had been inviting his blog community to upload pictures of the view from their windows. He wanted to compile a selection of these images into a book that captures the breadth and width of the web.
Gretchen Rubin | Posted 11.23.2009 | Living
Doing these types of games can boost happiness -- even for people who don't consider themselves to be particularly "creative."
Joy Preble | Posted 11.23.2009 | Books
These are the humbling moments in the debut author journey. The ones that remind you to hang onto that day job.
John Lundberg | Posted 11.20.2009 | Living
If you read a review of Keith Waldrop's "Transcendental Studies: A Trilogy," this year's winner of the National Book Award, there's a good chance it will include the word "postmodern" or "avant-garde.
Beverlye Hyman Fead | Posted 11.21.2009 | Books
My granddaughter who was eight kept my book by her bedside and was fascinated with everything concerning it. One day she told her mother she wanted to do a book report on "I Can Do This."
Melanie Drane | Posted 11.19.2009 | Books
Mending is always accompanied by an element of risk. Something may function again, but differently, so that every successful re-use is accompanied by a sense of luck and relief.
Lorraine Duffy Merkl | Posted 11.19.2009 | Books
At age 51, I never thought I'd be "debuting". In fact, I thought I'd be on the downward slope of a successful advertising career. But, plans were meant for changing.
Judy Platt | Posted 11.18.2009 | Books
Your book's been published in the United States for an American audience. Someone who's mentioned in the book doesn't like what you've written and sues you for libel, but he doesn't sue you here, where the book has been published.
Xiaoda Xiao | Posted 11.16.2009 | Books
Under the strict censorship regulations of the current regime in China, the publication of any literary work that shows signs of penetrating in depth, or exposing the reality of prison life is forbidden.
Mark Coker | Posted 11.19.2009 | Books
Writers are artists, and artists are compelled to express themselves, even if only to an audience of one.
The Huffington Post | Amy Hertz | Posted 11.17.2009 | Books
I've been in publishing for more than 20 years, I've attended my fair share of writer's conferences and workshops, and in my experience, the poet Alle...
The Huffington Post | Amy Hertz | Posted 11.16.2009 | Books
These last two weeks seem to be all about books by non-writers and we felt it was time to change the conversation. We asked writers--colleagues and fr...
Joshuah Bearman | Posted 11.13.2009 | Media
Travel writing is mostly bad. It's partly the fault of the form. Sometimes, quality sneaks in. And every so often the glossies still let Paul Theroux into the works so as to keep their bonafides burnished.
Denise Brodey | Posted 11.13.2009 | Books
You can mourn the death of publishing or you can start bushwhacking a new book trail. These women certainly have.
Nat Benchley | Posted 11.13.2009 | New York
Anywhere there is printing these days (ink or pixels), you will find references to the Algonquin Round Table. So, what is it with the adulation of a bunch of "tipsy quipsters"?
Tom Alderman | Posted 11.13.2009 | Books
"Level 26: Dark Origins" is the first of it's kind, but it's just the beginning of a whole new species of hybrid books that may change the publishing landscape.
Therese Borchard | Posted 11.12.2009 | Books
Here I am. With my mission: to educate folks about mental illness and to offer support to those who, like myself, suffer from mood disorders.
Joshuah Bearman | Posted 11.11.2009 | Books
Like David Foster Wallace, Saunders appears in his own journalism as the bumbling journalist, but Saunders is more believable, which is to say that he is a bumbler, which is part of the charm.
Nathan Bransford | Posted 11.11.2009 | Books
Editors want to take authors to the next level or make a splash with a debut. Publishers want to gain traction with new electronic formats. Sales and marketing teams want to make a splash. Everyone is desperate for a hit.
Huffington Post | Steve Ross | Posted 11.11.2009 | Books
The following is a continuation of a Huffington Post interview with author Mary Karr on her new memoir, "Lit." You can read the first part here. Hu...
npr.com | Posted 11.10.2009 | Books
NPR has a host of great author interviews every week, and we thought we'd bring you the best of the recent ones. Listen below for three really great o...
The Huffington Post | Steve Ross | Posted 11.10.2009 | Books
The brouhaha that flared last week when "Publishers Weekly" announced its list of Top Ten Books of the Year, a list that garnered probably unwanted bu...
Cassie Ammerman | Posted 11.09.2009 | Books
There is a word that publicists love almost as much as "yes." And it's "no." Seems counterintuitive, right? But it's true. There is little I love more than a solid "no."
Gerald Sindell | Posted 11.25.2009 | Books