#stacey-nightingale

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Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
15 hours ago

On Memoir by Blake Morrison review lessons in life writing from a master

Life writing encompasses personal and collective experiences, requiring careful navigation of emotions and events.
Arts
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

Douglas Stuart on the Push and Pull of an Old Life Versus a New One

The story 'A Private View' explores themes of class, art, and personal identity through a museum setting.
Writing
fromVulture
5 days ago

It Would Be Crazy If Your Brain Doctor Wrote The Housemaid

Freida McFadden, a best-selling author, is actually Sara Cohen, a doctor who treats brain disorders.
US Elections
fromemptywheel
6 days ago

The Maggie and Swan JD Vance Fan-Fic - emptywheel

Trump's actions may signify the decline of American hegemony or lead to regime change in the US.
fromAnOther
1 week ago

Night Stage: Anatomy of a Modern Erotic Thriller

The illicit thrill of hidden desires definitely propels Night Stage, a riveting queer noir about an up-and-coming actor Matias and an aspiring politician Rafael who begin hooking up in public spaces.
Film
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Getting Older with Clare Barron and Anne Kauffman

The tragicomic look at two lives on hold struck a chord; its depiction of a family bickering and bantering, and of the risks of intimacy, felt specific and true.
Cancer
#emma-straub
fromBustle
1 week ago
NYC music

Emma Straub's New Novel Is For Grown Women Who Once Fangirled Over Boy Bands

fromEntrepreneur
2 weeks ago
Books

The Secret to Actually Finishing That Passion Project? Treat It Like You Work in a Coal Mine, Says This Best-Selling Author.

NYC music
fromBustle
1 week ago

Emma Straub's New Novel Is For Grown Women Who Once Fangirled Over Boy Bands

Emma Straub's novel American Fantasy explores middle-aged women's nostalgia and joy through a fictional boy band cruise experience.
Books
fromEntrepreneur
2 weeks ago

The Secret to Actually Finishing That Passion Project? Treat It Like You Work in a Coal Mine, Says This Best-Selling Author.

Focus on ideas that can sustain long-term commitment rather than chasing every clever thought.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Helen DeWitt turns down $175k Windham-Campbell prize over promotional requirements

Helen DeWitt declined the Windham-Campbell prize due to promotional requirements amid personal struggles, emphasizing the difficulty of such obligations for writers.
Books
fromItsnicethat
5 days ago

Lizzy Stewart's The Wreck tells a messy love story like only an illustrator could

Lizzy Stewart's second illustrated novel, The Wreck, blends comic panels, prose, and illustrations to explore complex themes of friendship and communal living.
Parenting
fromScary Mommy
1 week ago

If You Need ChatGPT To Tell Your Kids A Bedtime Story, You're Cooked

Using AI for bedtime stories may deprive parents and children of meaningful bonding moments.
Media industry
fromInc
2 weeks ago

Should You Hire a Writer or Use AI? Here's Why Journalists Still Win

Investing in journalists enhances content quality through expertise, relationships, and engaging storytelling, which AI cannot replicate despite its efficiency.
Film
fromVulture
1 week ago

The Twist in The Drama Is Not the Problem

The film features a controversial plot twist involving a character's past plan for a school shooting, sparking significant online speculation and backlash.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

Ghostwriting Is Good, Actually

Ghostwriting, when done by humans, can provide valuable support to authors and help share unique perspectives.
fromEmilysneddon
2 weeks ago
Typography

Fran Sans Essay - Emily Sneddon

Fran Sans is a display font inspired by the unique destination displays of San Francisco's diverse public transit system.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Children's author Philip Stead chats about his new book

Bernadette embarks on a quest to find a missing goat to save her friend and prevent the king from eating turtle stew.
Film
fromVulture
1 week ago

The Drama Is Too Cowardly to Commit to Its Provocative Premise

The film presents a dark romantic comedy featuring complex characters and a central premise that challenges audience expectations.
Film
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

The Drama Surrounding "The Drama"

Fans gathered for the New York premiere of 'The Drama' starring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson, showcasing excitement and anticipation despite the cold weather.
Books
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Coping With the Up-and-Down Arc of a Prolific Writer's Life

Merrill Joan Gerber's latest book reflects her writing journey from the 1960s to the present, showcasing selected stories from her extensive career.
Relationships
fromScary Mommy
4 weeks ago

Romance Duo "Christina Lauren" Talk About Romance Versus Reality & The Current Projects

Christina Lauren co-authors normalize intimate wellness discussions through romance writing and partnerships, emphasizing realistic female experiences in both fiction and real life.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Permanence by Sophie Mackintosh review high-concept adultery fable

Sophie Mackintosh's novel Permanence explores desire and infidelity through a surreal narrative of a couple trapped in a fantasy world.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
4 weeks ago

The Shift That Happens When You Write a Non-Fiction Book

Writing a book transforms tacit knowledge into explicit frameworks, forcing experts to articulate intuitions they've developed through experience into clear, communicable ideas.
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Catherine Lacey Reads "Rate Your Happiness"

Catherine Lacey reads her story 'Rate Your Happiness,' from the April 13, 2026, issue of the magazine, highlighting her narrative style and thematic depth.
Books
Women
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

The Feminist Visionary Who Lost the Plot

Elizabeth Cady Stanton's experience of discrimination at the 1840 World Anti-Slavery Convention catalyzed her feminist activism, though her sense of intellectual superiority later contributed to bigoted views.
#literature
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago
Books

Unconventional Novels About Conventional People

Aging revolutionaries and conformists share parallel narratives of disillusionment and the loss of youthful dreams in recent literature.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Unconventional Novels About Conventional People

Aging revolutionaries and conformists share parallel narratives of disillusionment and the loss of youthful dreams in recent literature.
Psychology
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Readers reply: which are more like life, novels or films?

Films and novels employ fundamentally different narrative techniques to convey character psychology, with neither medium inherently more realistic than the other due to their diverse stylistic approaches.
Film
fromVulture
3 weeks ago

Project Hail Mary Needs About 39 Percent Fewer Jokes

Project Hail Mary is an entertaining science-fiction adventure that balances humor with an intriguing apocalyptic story about stopping star-eating organisms threatening Earth.
Books
fromwww.newyorker.com
2 weeks ago

Cassandra Neyenesch Reads Enough for Now

Cassandra Neyenesch is a Brooklyn-based writer and curator with a debut novel titled A Little Bit Bad, set to be published in May.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Children and teens roundup the best new picture books and novels

Bear finds hope in a tiny seed after his forest disappears, needing help from other animals to nurture it.
Books
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Fiction Is Indispensable to Life's Journey

Fiction is essential for emotional connection, learning, and social cognition, allowing us to escape reality and engage deeply with narratives.
Arts
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Mundane, magic, maybe both a new book explores 'The Writer's Room'

Writer's rooms and homes serve as cultural spaces that inspire visitors seeking connection to literary legacies, though the experience varies between magical and disappointing depending on accessibility and personal connection.
Books
fromBustle
2 weeks ago

The 10 Best New Books About Women Breaking The Mold

Successful women often defy expectations, and quieter forms of rebellion deserve recognition alongside visible rule-breakers.
fromMedium
1 month ago

Things that don't matter when you write

To deny one's own experiences is to put a lie into the lips of one's own life. It is no less than a denial of the soul. The concept I stick to - my core principle - is simple: I write in plain English, and only when I actually have something to say.
Writing
Writing
fromBusiness Matters
1 month ago

Mara Naaman: A Literary Voice Shaping Culture

Building a life around ideas means prioritizing process and learning over outcomes and external validation, enabling deeper intellectual and creative growth.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

The Names author Florence Knapp: I'd love to write with Maya Angelou's warmth'

Emotional storytelling profoundly impacts readers, creating shared experiences and inspiring future writers through the exploration of relationships and human complexities.
Music
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Why music has become such a big part of the romance novel reading experience

Romance novel readers increasingly use pop music playlists to enhance their reading experiences, creating a community that bridges book fandom and music fandom, exemplified by Charli XCX's Wuthering Heights album.
Books
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Author Luke Kennard talks about his novel, 'Black Bag'

Luke Kennard's novel 'Black Bag' fictionalizes a 1967 psychology experiment where a silent, bagged actor in a classroom gradually becomes liked by students through repeated exposure, exploring how familiarity transforms perception.
Television
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

What a Reality-TV Novel Understands About Reality

Treating life as a narrative and manipulating that narrative can lead people to sacrifice their humanity for drama.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
4 weeks ago

A New Direction for the Trans Novel

A dying woman's opioid-induced memories reveal her deep resentment toward her trans child, exposing how her accumulated life disappointments have narrowed her worldview to rigid gender expectations.
Parenting
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

What Makes a Good Mother?

The good-enough mother initially meets an infant's needs, then gradually withholds gratification to enable the child's development of a separate self.
fromBustle
2 months ago

'Finding Her Edge' Viewers Call Out An "Obvious" Mistake

Pair the thrill of an endlessly debatable YA love triangle with the frenzy for ice-rink romances fueled by Heated Rivalry, and you'll understand the buzz surrounding Netflix's Finding Her Edge. The new series, based on the book by Jennifer Iacopelli, follows an Olympics-bound figure skater as she navigates a love triangle between her former flame and current ice-dance partner, whom she's pretending to date for sponsorship opportunities.
Television
Books
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Patricia Cornwell on Crime and Creativity

Fear is the primary obstacle to creativity; overcoming it and persisting through rejection enables successful creative work.
Film
fromVulture
1 month ago

Is Pillion a Love Story? Maybe.

Pillion depicts a gay BDSM relationship between an introverted parking attendant and a leather-clad biker, exploring themes of self-discovery and emotional fulfillment without compromising authenticity or respectability.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The Writer's Secret Weapon

Swimming and physical exertion enhance creative thinking by muffling sensory input, boosting neurotransmitters, and enabling deeper, more original idea generation.
Books
fromwww.7x7.com
1 month ago

Locals We Love: Author Kristina Voegele's 'Annie in Retrospect' is a Love Letter to Our City and Ourselves.

A novel follows a woman who slips into her 25-year-old body with midlife knowledge, exploring identity loss, memory, and San Francisco's transformation through disorientation, grief, and acceptance.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Do writing retreats actually work? Reader, I finished my novel in style

Retreats provide concentrated time, restorative environments, purposeful walking, and peer support that accelerate progress on creative projects and relieve blocks.
Film
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Say It Again: A Treatment

Clara, a spy whose family and friends were repeatedly targeted by Russian gangs, travels to London and infiltrates M.I.6 to find a Russian double agent.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

I am here in the evening light

An enduring presence promises return through nature, offers land and comfort, and reframes endings as ongoing continuity amid memory and quiet dusk.
Books
fromBustle
1 month ago

The 10 Best New Books Of March

Spring 2024 brings diverse literary releases across romance, literary fiction, and debuts, featuring works by established authors like Abby Jimenez and Rebecca Serle alongside promising new writers.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

How to Put Sex in a Novel

Contemporary literary fiction increasingly avoids depicting heterosexual intimacy while queer novelists freely explore sex's complexities, as exemplified by Jan Saenz's unconventional novel about selling experimental orgasm-inducing pills.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Ben Markovits: I used to think any book concerned with people falling in love can't be very good'

Reading shaped formative years through detective stories, fantasy epics, and memoirs that provided companionship and escape during frequent moves and family transitions.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The National Year of Reading celebrates the joy' of books. But let's not forget they can also be deeply troubling, too | Charlotte Higgins

Research has linked reading for pleasure in childhood to a host of positive educational and socioeconomic outcomes. But now 14 years after the Department for Education, in a more innocent time, commissioned a chunky report on the matter—reading books for pleasure is an activity in crisis. The culprit usually blamed for this falling-off is the smartphone and its many short-term distractions; the mere presence of a smartphone in the room, recent research suggests, has an impact on our ability to concentrate.
Books
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

When Did Literature Get Less Dirty?

Philip Roth's Zuckerman Unbound functioned as a response to the controversial reception of Portnoy's Complaint, with Roth's protagonist expressing regret over writing sexually explicit material that drew accusations of anti-Semitism and misogyny.
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

A Biography Without 'The Boring Bits'

Sophia Stewart poses a choice that many biographers struggle with: "what to do with the boring bits."
Books
Books
fromMedium
2 months ago

How to start writing (like it's easy)

A profoundly immersive book can deeply alter readers and provoke self-doubt about one's own creative abilities.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

Tessa Hadley on the Power of Memory

A lasting friendship rests on shared sensibility, mutual trust to perceive and understand, and an affinity of insight beyond mere shared experiences.
Books
fromThe Nation
1 month ago

Has Contemporary Fiction Ignored the Working Class?

Work's grip on life demands vigilance; allowing career to consume identity risks losing oneself entirely to labor's demands.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Helen of Nowhere by Makenna Goodman review a perfect fairytale for our times

A dislocated professor abandons institutional life and retreats toward neo‑transcendental solitude in nature after losing job, spouse, and social standing.
Books
fromHarper's Magazine
1 month ago

Juvenile Impulse, by Becky Zhang

A retrospective narrative examines adolescent identity, desire, power dynamics, and authorial agency at a rigorous, hierarchical all-girls Southern California school.
#george-saunders
fromVulture
2 months ago

Agents Are Looking for the Next Heated Rivalry on Fanfic Sites

You may know the story by now: Rachel Reid began posting what would become Heated Rivalryon the fan-fiction site Archive of Our Own, one chapter at a time. Eventually, the Halifax-based author reportedly removed the posts, reworked the book, submitted it to publishers, and sold it in 2019 to Carina Press, a digital-first imprint at Harlequin. While the first book in her "Game Changers" series found a solid fan base among romance readers, no one expected just how many more would join them.
Books
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Lost Lambs by Madeline Cash review clever comedy for our conspiracy theory age

Tenderness combined with sharp satire provides a successful comic response to contemporary apocalyptic anxiety.
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The Writer's Magic Trick

A writer is a kind of magician. Their job is to create living, three-dimensional people out of the ordinary stuff of ink and paper. This is no easy task, because readers can't literally hear, touch, or observe a character. Everything that defines a human being in real life-the physical space they occupy, or how they smell, feel, and sound-is stripped away, replaced by description. But authors have one major, mystical advantage: They can show you what's happening inside of someone's brain.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

May We Feed the King by Rebecca Perry review a dazzling puzzle-box of a debut

We are initiated into a world in which historically accurate foodstuffs can be ordered online a half oyster shell, the exposed flesh shining as if with the freshest brine, is 31.25 for a single piece and begin to understand one of the most striking things about this novel: its insistence upon detail, its utter specificity, set against a deliberate lack of specificity regarding the larger details that the reader's mind naturally itches to fill in.
Books
fromTODAY.com
2 months ago

American Girl's Samantha is All Grown Up In New Novel. Elder Millennials Will Swoon

For those unfamiliar with the beloved heroine, Samantha is one of the first three historical characters introduced by American Girl in 1986. Samantha, Swedish immigrant Kirsten and WWII homefront heroine Molly demonstrated courage, compassion and resilience. Along with an 18-inch doll, each 9-year-old character was featured in a series of easy chapter books; kids could follow each fictional story as well as the historical context surrounding it.
Books
Books
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

The influence of the sleeper hit novel 'The Correspondent'

An epistolary novel follows a divorced woman in her 70s through letters that reveal her cranky, resilient personality and surprising late-life adventures.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Is listening to an audiobook as good as reading?

Audiobooks and comics are legitimate, effective forms of reading that expand access, boost literacy, and contribute significantly to the publishing industry.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Homeschooled by Stefan Merrill Block review a true Misery' memoir

Stefan Merrill Block's mother withdrew him from school in the 1990s under the guise of nurturing his creativity, but her homeschooling was actually driven by her own emotional needs and isolation rather than educational philosophy.
Books
fromWomen Writers, Women's Books
2 months ago

The Case for Self-Publishing, and Why It's Easier Now Than Ever Before - Women Writers, Women's Books

Self-publishing teaches more about publishing mechanics and provides greater control over a book's journey than relying on a traditional publisher.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

The Fine Balance Required of an 'Authorial Rant'

Lionel Shriver's political provocations increasingly overshadow her fiction; A Better Life reads like an op-ed and renders characters sociologically rather than psychologically.
Books
fromAnOther
2 months ago

Makenna Goodman's New Book Is a Gripping Portrait of a Disgraced Professor

Explores who gets to live the 'good life', interrogating rural idylls, identity, empathy, cancel culture, obsession, and the complexities of love.
Books
fromKqed
1 month ago

A New Mother's Descent Into Madness

A Black new mother's descent into paranoia and psychosis amid racial tension and isolation captures the harrowing realities of postpartum experience.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Seven Books to Read When You Have No Time to Read

Choosing absorbing, conveniently divisible books and small daily habits enables busy people to make consistent reading progress without strict goals.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Susan Choi: For so long I associated Dickens with unbearable Christmas TV specials'

The book that changed me as a teenager Donald Barthelme's Sixty Stories, because he was having such a good time and seemed so so smart, but was also mischievous and irreverent. It may sound corny but these stories made me grasp the existence of a world of art and literature. And Barthelme lived in Houston, where I was growing up, yet he was a major world writer.
Books
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