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Nicknames I Have Known (Or: An Elegy for the Mooch)
by Alex Norcia
There was Joe Bugs, an exterminator and small-town mayor, whose one daughter married my uncle. There was Ernie the Attorney, who grew up with Pop and became the family lawyer. There was Satellite Bob, who installed and fixed his televisions for decades. There was Video Bob, too (before my time), and there was Ralphie Boy (a hefty man, so large and so old, it’s nearly impossible to imagine him as a child).
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August Preview: The Millions Most Anticipated (This Month)
by Editor
Here’s what we’re looking out for this month.
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- recent articles
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Put Down the Controller: Five Novels About Video Games 2
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Chronicling Life’s White Machine 10
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Requiem for a Reader 0
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When Capitalism and Christianity Collide in Fiction 2
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Brevity Is the Soul of It: In Praise of Short Books 0
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The Booker’s Dozen: The 2017 Booker Longlist 8
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Where Randomness and Madness Reign 0
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The Church of Reformed Libertines 1
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Apocalypse Then: Meet the Original Rapture Novels 9
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Heretics in the Marketplace 0
- View All
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Must-Read Poetry: July 2017 1
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How Can Historical Fiction Be Feminist? 8
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Epic Fail: Bad Art, Viral Fame, and the History of the Worst Thing Ever
Mark O'Connell looks at Tommy Wiseau’s "The Room", the "Face-Palm Fresco Affair" and explores the secrets of viral fame.
Buy for $1.99
“Save everything, she said. Everything. When your archive gets bought, they pay by the cubic foot.” Sarah Manguso in The New York Times about drafts in an era of digital writing. And while we’re on the subject , here’s what Ben Fountain, Emily St. John Mandel, Emma Straub and a passel of other writers have to say about writing that elusive first draft.
0~Kirstin ButlerOut this week: Sour Heart by Jenny Zhang; Mrs. Fletcher by Tom Perrotta; The Seventh Function of Language by Laurent Binet; New People by Danzy Senna; Gravel Heart by Abdulrazak Gurnah; and White Plains by Gordon Lish. For more on these and other new titles, go read our most recent book preview.
0~Thomas Beckwith“His writings rarely make it to the US, and are resolutely for an Indian readership. They will win no prizes nor inspire dissertations. But for these reasons they represent the actuality of what many people in the world are reading today, outside of the newly sanctified category of the ‘global novel.’” Ulka Anjaria for Public Books on Chetan Bhagat, “possibly the most successful Indian English novelist ever” and largely unheard of in the west. For more fictional Desi perspectives, read Aditya Desai in our own pages on reading narratives of Indian women.
0~Kirstin Butler“For kids to be well-read, they need to be well-fed.” The New York Times reports on the trend of U.S. libraries providing summer meals to children.
0~Kirstin ButlerThe Digital Reader has done us all a solid on this summer Monday and put together a list of five blogs featuring bad book covers. Now That I’m a Ghost I’m Gay, indeed.
0~Kirstin ButlerRecommended Reading: Paula Marantz Cohen on Norman Mailer’s most infamous book review.
0~Thomas Beckwith“Take a quick break from the apocalyptic news and end your week with this list of books to eagerly anticipate (assuming the world doesn’t end) instead!” The Rumpus lists some books that could make you feel a little bit better.
0~Thomas Beckwith“[I]n the world of letters, it is hard to imagine a more seismic change than this one.” The New York Times announces that its longtime book critic Michiko Kakutani is stepping down after nearly four decades of reviews.
The Times also offers a roundup of her greatest hits, including writeups of Beloved, Infinite Jest, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, and Bill Clinton‘s memoir My Life:
The book, which weighs in at more than 950 pages, is sloppy, self-indulgent and often eye-crossingly dull — the sound of one man prattling away, not for the reader, but for himself and some distant recording angel of history.
This announcement was followed by the great news that repeat Year in Reading alumna Parul Sehgal will join Jennifer Senior and Dwight Garner as a Times book critic, leaving her position as senior editor of the NYT Book Review. Congratulations, Parul!
0~Kirstin Butler“In a world where reality has become stranger than fiction, actual books are no longer selling.” At The New Republic, Morgan Jerkins talks with agents, authors, booksellers, editors, and publicists about whether the Trump presidency is bad for the book business. And on that note, let’s revisit our own Bill Morris on book releases: “There are few iron facts in the crapshoot of the literary life, but here’s one: In book publishing — no less than in music, war, and sex — timing is everything.”
0~Kirstin Butler“I war-gamed out everything. My biggest fear was that somebody tries to play out my book and finds out it won’t work.” At The New York Times, Alexandra Alter writes about the new Minecraft novel by Max Brooks, author of World War Z: “In the process, he may have also created a strange new entertainment category, one that hovers somewhere between fan fiction, role-playing games and literature — a novel set in a game, that can itself be played within the game.” And while we’re on the topic of games, let’s also talk about geekdom and race.
0~Kirstin Butler“Now I get paid to do something I have loved since I was 4 years old. Other than my family, is there anything else I have loved so unconditionally, for so long?” Georgia Cloepfil in N+1 on the uncompromising, compromised life of the professional female athlete. See also: some thoughts about hosting the World Cup.
0~Kirstin Butler“Heidi Maier, the new superintendent of the 42,000-student Marion County public school district in Florida, said in an interview that she made the decision based on solid research about what works best in improving academic achievement in students.” In place of traditional homework, 20,000 elementary school students will spend 20 minutes reading a book of their choice each night, reports The Washington Post. Pair with T.K. Dalton on books, kids, and gender.
0~Kirstin Butler
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Read More The Millions Top 10 June 2017
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Lincoln in the Bardo George Saunders
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A Separation Katie Kitamura
- 3
Ill Will Dan Chaon
- 4
Men Without Women Haruki Murakami
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American War Omar El Akkad
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Scratch: Writers, Money, and the Art of Making a Living Manjula Martin
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Homesick for Another World Ottessa Moshfegh
- 8
The Nix Nathan Hill
- 9
Eileen Ottessa Moshfegh
The Millions Hall of Fame Read More
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