Wednesday Morning LitLinks

John Campanelli snags a rare interview with ‘Calvin and Hobbes’ creator Bill Watterson. (Cleveland Plain Dealer)

Carolyn Kellogg comments on agent Nathan Bransford’s avalanche of queries received while he was out on vacation. (LATimes)

D.A. Powell wins the $100,000 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award. (LATimes)

Federal appeals court clears John Grisham of libel charges. (KXII.com)

Andrew Lindstrom shares “45 beautifully designed book covers.” (WellMedicated)

Julie Greicius examines the work of Katherine Harris Bradley and Edith Emma Cooper, who wrote poetry under the shared pseudonym “Michael Field.” (The Rumpus)

Cornish, New Hampshire townsfolk remember JD Salinger not as a recluse, but as one of them. (NYTimes)

Canadian writers say their piece on the Google Book issue. (Publishers Weekly)

Salinger portrait now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery. (NYTimes)

Evan Maloney explores the difficulty of creating young narrators who don’t sound phony. (Guardian Books Blog)

One Response to “Wednesday Morning LitLinks”

  1. Jamie Mason Says:

    Those book covers are terrific.

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