Tuesday Morning LitLinks

David Goodwillie chats it up with (the incredibly funny) Sam Lipsyte. (The Rumpus)
Holt will not, after all, attempt revisions of Charles Pellegrino’s The Last Train from Hiroshima. (MOBYLIVES)
The Spring 2010 issue of The Quarterly Conversation is now online, with with essays on Nobel laureate Herta Mueller, Jonathan Swift, Per Petterson and much more. (The Quarterly Conversation)
They’ve also announced the launch of their new blog. (The Constant Conversation)
Is Australia the last great hope for poetry? (Publishing Perspectives)
Jason Boog chronicles the fallout from Motoko Rich’s NYT weekend story on the math of the eBook. (GalleyCat)
The LGBTQ literary community gets a new online webzine and blog community with the launch of Lambda Literary. (Publishers Weekly)
Darragh McManus recounts his unlikely correspondence with Don Delillo. (Guardian Books Blog)
R.I.P. Barry Hannah, novelist, short story author and director of the University of Mississippi MFA program in creative writing. (The Oxford Eagle)
“On this day in 1930 forty-five-year-old D. H. Lawrence died in Vence, France. The medical cause was tuberculosis, but Lawrence at least partially believed that a lifetime of vilification was to blame: “The hatred which my books have aroused comes back at me and gets me here,” he told a friend, tapping his chest. “If I get the better of if in one place it goes to another.”" (Today in Literature)


AuthorScoop
March 2nd, 2010 at 11:32 am
Okay, now I want to read Sam Lipsyte.