November 2008

George Orwell’s 1949 Reading List

I just finished reading David Lebedoff’s THE SAME MAN: GEORGE ORWELL & EVELYN WAUGH IN LOVE AND WAR (Random House 2008), a double biography that argues that Orwell, aka Eric Blair (liberal/radical, anti-status, atheist) and Evelyn Waugh (social climber and party boy, strict and self-tormenting Catholic) actually had much in common, including a dread that […]

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AND NOW FOR SOME GOOD NEWS

As we’re hammered by news of plummeting sales and other publishing woes, it’s nice to know that two Alaskan authors are among twelve recipients of the Rasmuson Foundation’s Individual Artist Awards. Gretchen Deimer of Wasilla received funds to promote her new book of poetry, Between Fire and Water; Ice and Sky. Maia Nolan of Anchorage

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NO MORE ACQUISITIONS

In a move said to be unprecedented in publishing, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt has announced an indefinite moratorium on manuscript acquisitions. Not just unsolicited manuscripts – all submissions, though Vice President of Communications Josef Blumenfeld said “the right project” might still go before a review board. Blumenfeld tagged the company’s decision to shut off the spigot

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BOOKFORUM

I just received the latest copy of Bookforum, with my review of Willie Hensley’s Fifty Miles from Tomorrow: A Memoir of Alaska and the Real People. As I wrote in the review “…Hensley’s memoir is a compelling tale of doing what had to be done and recognizing the spiritual depth and profound love it takes

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Endure Part II

Oh, irony of ironies. After talking about the endurance needed in order to write and be published, I spent today reading an article that makes everything look even darker than I thought. (Note, if you’re not interested in publishing economics, stop reading; I promise a return to the subject of Alaska books next week.) Somehow,

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ALASKAN AUTHORS WEEKLY ROUND-UP

Attention, young Alaskan authors. The Oakland Public Library is once again sponsoring a short story contest exclusively for teens. Your 1500-word submission must include “May I call you a cab?” You folks in Bethel, the cab capital of Alaska, could do a lot with that line. Speaking of young writers, few Alaskans have done more

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JUST ONE BOOK

What if you could write only one book? One shot at your best story? What would it be? What if’s can be silly, but this one’s worth pondering. Heart-driven books are the ones worth writing. And reading.

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