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Salon.com
August 11, 2000
Laura Miller
The death of the Red-Hot Center From literary giants tapping out the Great American novel through multiculturalism, Kmart realism and the Brat Pack to Oprah and your book club: A short history of fiction after 1960. mark for My Articles similar articles
PC Magazine
September 12, 2007
Anton Galang
The Sound and the Wiki The wiki movement goes literary, with thousands writing one novel. But can writing by committee produce better prose? mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
August 16, 2001
Laura Miller
Sentenced to death Is a snooty "sentence cult" sending the Great American Novel to hell in a pretentious purple handbasket? mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
December 4, 2000
Laura Miller
Older and better Critic David Kipen talks about the publishing industry's youth fetish and his list of 50 great authors over 50... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
August 8, 2000
Janelle Brown
E-book 'em! AtRandom publisher Jonathan Karp is looking for literary revelation -- and mass readership -- from digital books. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
April 3, 2002
Helen Macleod
Mirror, mirror Alas, now even the great Ian McEwan has succumbed to the dreary trend of writers writing novels about writers writing novels... mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
January 18, 2008
Clive Thompson
Clive Thompson on Why Sci-Fi Is the Last Bastion of Philosophical Writing If you want to read books that tackle profound philosophical questions, then the best -- and perhaps only -- place to turn these days is science fiction. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
August 8, 2001
Joe Mullich
Lost in translation "Planet of the Apes" spawns a whole new genre -- lame novelizations of movies based on good novels... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
July 25, 2000
Laura Miller
Slush, slush, sweet Stephen King doesn't realize the real-life horror he's unleashed on the public. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
April 17, 2002
Jonathon Keats
Return to sender A collection of letters to J.D. Salinger, many from well-known writers, shows how the author of "Catcher in the Rye" went from man to myth... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
July 30, 2001
M.J. Rose
E-book outcast The Web made me a successful author, but getting people to respect me as a "real writer" has been harder to come by... mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 2008
Philip Ball
Column: The crucible We are conditioned to look at anything scientific as though we were back at school anticipating an exam, even if we find it between the covers of a novel. In my novel The Sun and Moon Corrupted, I include equations and quotes from Einstein's 1905 paper on special relativity mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
September 5, 2001
M.J. Rose
Your ad here Dismayed authors respond to the news that a fancy jeweler paid a noted novelist to put its products front and center in her new book... mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
Luc Gougeon
How to be a Complete Man Although growing to be a complete man involves different aspects of life, reading books is certainly as important as the next thing. After all, culture is valued in our society and people will respect and admire you for possessing some. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
August 11, 2000
Andrew O'Hehir
Stephen King A master of plot mechanics, he revived the moribund genre of horror literature and became the richest writer in history. We could do worse. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
April 24, 2001
Charles Taylor
Show and tell Moviegoers and readers ought to learn to love the book and the film... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
October 18, 2001
Laura Miller
Stephen King, go home! The master of horror should forget hideous other worlds and stick to refrigerator magnets... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
October 5, 2000
Gary Krist
"On Writing" by Stephen King Thankfully, if inexplicably, his how-to guide contains the harrowing true story of his nearly fatal car accident. But did we really need the best horror writer alive to explain his position on adverbs? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 20, 2008
Alyce Lomax
Making Books Interesting Again Amazon proves its influence in the book publishing world shouldn't be underestimated. mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
August 1, 2012
Poe & Hill
Novel Mistakes Today, if you want to be an author, you have to ask yourself only one question: Do you have a story to tell? Here are some tips to help you avoid the pitfalls many first-time novelists encounter. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
Mark Horowitz
Nabokov's Final Riddle: Literary Prank Master's Post-Mortem Novel He may be dead, but this fall Vladimir Nabokov is back with a new novel, The Original of Laura -- or at least the beta version. mark for My Articles similar articles
Information Today
October 8, 2009
EBSCO Expands Coverage With New Literary Reference Center Plus The database expands upon EBSCO's Literary Reference Center and provides additional content including more than 1,100 reference books and more than 125 literary periodicals. mark for My Articles similar articles
Information Today
May 31, 2005
Barbara Quint
Google Library Project Hit by Copyright Challenge from University Presses Extending the Google Print program to the digitization of five of the world's largest university research libraries, including copyrighted as well as non-copyrighted material, would inevitably seem to lead to a challenge of copyright violation. Oddly enough, the challenge has come from the less commercial publishers--the nonprofit university presses. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 2008
Richard Van Noorden
Editorial: Fiction failure Rare as it is for chemistry and its ideas to star in fiction, it's rarer still to find a story with a character who happens to be a chemist, but is also simply a well-rounded human being. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
February 27, 2002
Dorman Shindler
The outsider Dan Simmons, whose novels range from science fiction to thrillers, talks about the feebleness of today's "serious" fiction and what we can all learn from Tom Wolfe... mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
February 27, 2006
Burt Helm
Digital Books Start A New Chapter Lighter devices, better displays, and the iPod craze could make digital books best-sellers. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
November 16, 2000
Laura Miller
And the winner is ... The drama and the dish behind the literary prizes that shape what America reads... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
November 26, 2002
Charles Taylor
Kiss Miss Marple goodbye Scottish mystery author Val McDermid talks about the tough reality of life in today's Britain and why crime writers, not literary novelists, are the ones facing up to it. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
November 2012
G. Pascal Zachary
Unleash Your Inner Asimov Write a story, make a video, invent the Next Big Thing. A small but growing cadre of savvy technologists argue that, at least in measured doses, encounters with imaginary worlds and futuristic devices could have a decisive influence on innovation. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
May 28, 2002
Tom Bissell
I'd prefer not to My list includes Toni Morrison, Henry James, Faulkner and Beckett. Why are there some great writers we just cannot read? mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
October 6, 2000
Stanley Crouch
Living color The critic and author of "Don't the Moon Look Lonesome" picks eight great books that get race right. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
August 2004
Spencer Reiss
Ping: Just One Question Would Moby Dick be better if Melville had used a word processor? mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
Kyle Darbyson
Classic Book Adaptations The following five book adaptations are classic films because they did the seemingly improbable: They took highly regarded source material, stayed largely true to each novel and still delivered films that will reward the viewer each time he revisits them. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
September 16, 2002
Christopher Dreher
Bribes, threats and naked readings In a world where more and more new books get less and less attention, authors will do anything to promote their work. mark for My Articles similar articles
Searcher
January 2001
Carol Ebbinghouse
Final Hours: Tasini Goes to the Supreme Court The United States Supreme Court has announced it will hear the appeal New York Times v. Tasini. In hearing this case, the Supreme Court will decide the rights of freelance authors and perhaps the future of digital content... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
June 21, 2001
David Galef
Technical difficulties What if the damsel in distress had a cellphone or Romeo had a pager? Modern gizmos make plotting a nightmare for writers... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
June 5, 2000
Craig Offman
$1.4 million sight unseen Steven Spielberg and Pocket Books paid big money for a manuscript they hadn't read. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
March 2007
Zorpette & Ross
The Books That Made A Difference Leading technologists name the novel that influenced them the most: Vinton Cerf, Google: The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien... Donald Christiansen, President of Informatica: War and Remembrance, Herman Wouk... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles