Thursday Morning LitLinks

Tom Shone examines what happens when novelists sober up. (More Intelligent Life)
Is the internet killing storytelling? (Times Online)
Little Britain star David Williams talks about the influence of Roald Dahl on his own work (which is now shortlisted for the Dahl prize). (The Independent)
Alison Flood looks back at the children’s books we loved—and the ones maybe we shouldn’t have. (Guardian Books Blog)
Will eBooks have a happy holiday season? (Washington Post)
Abigail Deutsch presents a schmoozer’s guide to literary gatherings. (The Poetry Foundation)
Simon and Schuster kicks off its eGalley system, allowing reviewers and the media to access digital review copies. (GalleyGrab)
Ravenous Romance wants your NaNoWriMo masterpieces. (GalleyCat)
Has the memoir killed the novel? (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Facing an uncertain future, Utah State University Press, putting most of its publications online for free and becoming part of the university library. (Inside Higher Ed)
Things are looking up for HarperCollins as profits rebound. (Publishers Weekly)
On this day in 1943, Sam Shepard was born. (Today in Literature)

