- We’ve already got several RSVPs for our NYC indie bookstore walking tour. Get all the details and RSVP if you want to be notified of any schedule changes.
- The Millions’ Collaborative Atlas of Book Stores and Literary Places is still being added to by our enterprising readers. London in particular is now bristling with points of interest including many bookstores and destinations like St Pancras’ Old Church, where you’ll find the graves of Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin.
- Wyatt Mason’s terrific profile of the poet Frederick Seidel is a must-read.
- Slate’s Troy Patterson describes the achievement of German sensation Wetlands in autoproctological terms.
- The William H. Gass site Tunneling posts some remarkable images of Gass’ home library, originally published in 2007 in St. Louis Magazine.
- L.J. Davis, financial journalist and author of the recently reissued novel A Meaningful Life, offers an insider’s look at house-flipping during booms… and busts.
- Is a two-novelist marriage sustainable? (from Canteen)
- And what’s up with J.D. Salinger these days, anyway? (via)
- Philip Hensher looks back at novels from the dawn of the Thatcher era.
- Can’t get enough of poet Nathaniel Bellows? Listen to him read.
- Is Barnes & Noble hoping to arrive better late than never to the ebook reader party?
- “Wendell Steavenson went looking for remorse among the men who served Saddam Hussein. Her fruitless search, George Packer writes, has produced one of the few lasting works to come out of the Iraq war.”
- Google gets even better at scanning books.
- Green Apple Books talks about “cool books we’ll never sell.”