In Defense of Common Sense, the first memoir by the former senator from West Virginia, will be published by St. Martin’s Press in September.
Dalva succeeds Heather Scott Partington, who has served as president of the National Book Critics Circle for the last two years and spearheaded the organization’s 50th anniversary celebrations.
After agreeing to accept a bid from Alliance Entertainment as part of a Chapter 11 reorganization, Diamond owners terminated the deal in favor of a joint offer from Universal Entertainment and Ad ...
A lawsuit filed in federal court on April 7 by the American Library Association and the American Federation of State, County, ...
Haruki Murakami and Hoda Barakat are among the winners of the 19th Sheikh Zayed Book Awards, which are awarded in eight ...
This year's six-book International Booker Prize shortlist comprises five novels and one short story collection translated from five languages. The winner will be revealed at a ceremony in London on ...
More than 750 attendees from 92 countries converged on the two-day Sharjah International Booksellers Conference to talk shop ...
The union, which represents workers at HarperCollins and the New Press, has petitioned the National Labor Relations Board to ...
Garth Greenwell’s Small Rain (FSG) has been named as the winner of the 2025 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction.
The second part of the U.S. Copyright Office's Report on Copyright and Artificial Intelligence maintains that copyrightability requires human authorship and that “material generated wholly by AI is ...
In the cascade of news about massive tariffs imposed on many of America's largest trading partners, books appear to have fared well—although experts say the situation remains very fluid.
State of America's Libraries report, the American Library Association found that George M. Johnson’s All Boys Aren’t Blue was ...