Most Popular
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Dongduk Women’s University halts coeducation talks
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Defense ministry denies special treatment for BTS’ V amid phone use allegations
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Russia sent 'anti-air' missiles to Pyongyang, Yoon's aide says
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OpenAI in talks with Samsung to power AI features, report says
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Two jailed for forcing disabled teens into prostitution
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Trump picks ex-N. Korea policy official as his principal deputy national security adviser
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South Korean military plans to launch new division for future warfare
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Gold bars and cash bundles; authorities confiscate millions from tax dodgers
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Kia EV9 GT marks world debut at LA Motor Show
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Teen smoking, drinking decline, while mental health, dietary habits worsen
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Writer Han Kang is longlisted for 2016 Man Booker Int'l Prize
South Korean fiction writer Han Kang has been nominated for the 2016 Man Booker International Prize, the first time for a Korean novelist.According to the announcement on the organizer's website Thursday, Han Kang's "The Vegetarian," translated by Deborah Smith, is among the 13 books contending for the 2016 prize.The longlisted candidates, picked from 155 authors from 12 countries, were selected by a panel of five judges who are renowned journalists and novelists. The annual contemporary fiction
March 10, 2016
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Milwaukeeans‘ struggle to find affordable housing
“Evicted” By Matthew Desmond Crown (432 pages, $28) For nearly a decade, Matthew Desmond has studied the relationship between eviction and poverty in a single American city: Milwaukee. The MacArthur Foundation awarded him a “genius” grant last year for his research, including the Milwaukee Area Renters Study he designed and supervised, which yielded this sobering conclusion: “Among Milwaukee renters, over 1 in 5 black women report having been evicted in their adult life, compared to 1 in 12 Hisp
March 10, 2016
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Sarah Bakewell on Sartre, de Beauvoir and existential philosophy
“At the Existentialist Cafe” By Sarah Bakewell Other Press (439 pages, $25) Here’s a startling thought. Consider what you are doing right now without realizing you’re doing it. For example, you are reading the English language written in the Roman alphabet, even though thousands of languages and writing systems have existed, and you would just as easily use one of them instead if you had been born in a different time or place. You are probably flipping pages of a newspaper or clicking through a
March 10, 2016
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Pulling back the curtain on Paul Kagame’s Rwanda
“Bad News: Last Journalists in a Dictatorship” By Anjan Sundaram Doubleday Books (208 pages, $25.95)In the early 1990s, the world watched in horror as Hutus and Tutsis slaughtered each other in Rwanda. When it ended, Paul Kagame was heralded as one of the leaders of forces that ended the bloodshed. As president since 2000, President Kagame has fooled much of the world into thinking his country is a happy democracy and has received tons of international funding because on the surface Rwanda shine
March 10, 2016
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Publishing’s lack of diversity fails readers: author Rai
HONG KONG (AFP) -- As the film and music industries grapple with the fallout from the race controversy that dogged the Oscars and the Brit Awards, English author Bali Rai warns publishing too has a serious diversity issue. The award-winning writer, who has Indian heritage but was born and grew up in Leicester, England, echoes critics of Hollywood and the Academy Awards when he suggests gatekeepers are only recognizing a narrow band of talent and ideas, which does not properly reflect society. He
March 10, 2016
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Korean works, writers to be featured at Paris Book Fair
Korea will be spotlighted as the guest of honor at the Paris Book Fair, to be held March 16-20 at the Paris Expo Porte de Versaille exhibition center, where a selection of Korean works will be displayed and some of the country’s most influential writers will be holding talks, the Korean Publishers Association said in a statement Wednesday. Some 60 works by 30 Korean authors will be featured, including the esteemed Hwang Sok-yong, who wrote the novel “Evening Star,” and Han Kang, whose novel “Th
March 10, 2016
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‘Renegade’ rule mom Heather Shumaker is back with new book
NEW YORK (AP) -- Homework? Ban it! Circle time? It’s not for every kindergartner. Forced sharing? How about letting a kid play with a toy until she’s done? Those are just a few of the ideas that Heather Shumaker advocates as “renegade” in a new book, “It’s OK to Go Up the Slide,” an extension of her first parenting guide, “It’s OK Not to Share.” Shumaker is the mom of two boys, ages 11 and 8, in Traverse City, Michigan. As a youngster, she was a student where her mother taught for 40 years in Co
March 10, 2016
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Oyeyemi's original stories pay weird, wonderful homage to reading
“What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours: Stories” By Helen Oyeyemi Riverheard Books (336 pages, $27) Midway through the third and strongest of the nine stories in Helen Oyeyemi’s breathtakingly bold and original “What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours” -- unlike any short story collection I've read -- one meets a girl reading a book on a plane. Because the plane is going “through a terrifyingly long tunnel of turbulence,” everyone else is “freaking out.” Asked if she’d noticed “we might be about to crash,” the
March 10, 2016
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Auctioneer to sell Hitler's personal copy of 'Mein Kampf'
CHESAPEAKE CITY, Md. (AP) -- A Maryland auction house says it is selling a copy of "Mein Kampf" that once belonged to Adolf Hitler and was taken from his Munich apartment at the end of World War II. News outlets report that Chesapeake City-based Alexander Historical Auctions LLC will offer Hitler's Nazi manifesto during its March 17 and 18 auction of more than 1,000 other WWII historical items. The red leather-bound book bears an inscription signed by 11 officers from an American field artillery
March 9, 2016
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Korea to be guest of honor at 2016 Paris Book Fair
South Korea will take part in the Paris Book Fair next week as the guest of honor, as the country celebrates the 130th anniversary of diplomatic ties with France, the Seoul government said Wednesday.The fair is expected to help promote exchanges among publishers in South Korea and France, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism said in a release. The 36th edition of the annual trade fair is scheduled to be held at the "Paris Expo Porte de Versailles" exhibition center on March 17-20.Led by t
March 9, 2016
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J.K. Rowling launching 4-part series on wizarding school
NEW YORK (AP) -- J.K. Rowling has more magic on the way. The "Harry Potter" author is launching a series called "Magic in North America," a four-part backstory for this fall's film adaptation of the Potter prequel "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them." Announced on Rowling’s Web site, www.pottermore.com, "Magic in North America" will run in installments Tuesday-Friday on Pottermore. According to the Web site, the new series will tell of the North American wizardry school Ilvermorny and "bri
March 9, 2016
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Stories of race and immigration among PEN/Faulkner nominees
NEW YORK (AP) -- This year’s list of finalists for the PEN/Faulkner Award features stories of war, race and immigration. Nominees announced Tuesday for the $15,000 fiction prize include Viet Thanh Nguyen’s novel about a former spy for North Vietnam, “The Sympathizer”; Julie Iromuanya’s novel about a Nigerian in the U.S. who lies about his profession to his family back home, “Mr. and Mrs. Doctor”; and James Hannaham’s book on race and class, “Delicious Foods.” Two story collections also are final
March 9, 2016
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Amy Schumer book release announced
NEW YORK (AP) -- Amy Schumer's upcoming book has an indelible title.Gallery Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, announced Tuesday that Schumer is calling the book "The Girl With the Lower Back Tattoo." It’s scheduled to be released on Aug. 16. As the title might suggest, the essay collection will "feature personal and observational stories from Schumer that range from the raunchy to the romantic, the heartfelt to the harrowing," according to Gallery. Schumer's deal with Gallery was announced
March 9, 2016
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Why six political apostates left the Left
“Exit Right: The People Who Left the Left and Reshaped the American Century” By Daniel Oppenheimer Simon & Schuster (416 pages, $28) When Ronald Reagan joined the Hollywood Democratic Committee, it was riven with communists. Four decades later, of course, the Republican president stood in West Berlin and demanded of the communist bloc, “Tear down this wall!” His is the least intimately told of the six stories of political transformation in Daniel Oppenheimer’s sweeping, beautifully written but
March 3, 2016
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'Opening Belle' tells story of women of Wall Street
“Opening Belle” By Maureen Sherry Simon & Schuster (352 pages, $25) If you’ve seen the film “The Big Short” and noticed that it was all about the men who profited from the financial crisis of 2007-10, you may have wondered where all the Wall Street women were. Sure, there was that Goldman Sachs saleswoman and a couple of others, but most female roles fell into the category of exotic dancer or somebody's wife. You’ll find the women of Wall Street here, in the diverting “Opening Belle,” which is
March 3, 2016
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Charlotte Bronte cast as a fighter
"Charlotte Bronte: A Fiery Heart" By Claire Harman Alfred A. Knopf (480 pages, $30) Two hundred years after her birth, Charlotte Bronte's rage over social expectations for women and thwarted ambitions are as relevant as ever, and a new biography by Claire Harman makes the "Jane Eyre" author fresh and relatable to readers who might only think of the Brontes as figures long buried in tragic myth. Bronte and her sisters Emily and Anne published their poems and novels -- including "Wuthering Heig
March 3, 2016
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Toni Morrison receives $25,000 honorary award from PEN
NEW YORK (AP) -- Nobel laureate Toni Morrison has received an honorary prize named for another Nobel winner, the late Saul Bellow. PEN America, the literary and human rights organization, told the Associated Press on Tuesday that Morrison has been given the $25,000 PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American fiction. Morrison, 85, is known for such novels as "Beloved," "Song of Solomon" and "Jazz." "Revelatory, intelligent, bold, her fiction is invested in the black experience, in black li
March 2, 2016
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Multigenerational family saga of redemption
“A Doubter’s Almanac” By Ethan Canin Random House (576 pages, $28) Ethan Canin’s new multigenerational family saga is about the agony of the select few wired to master what seems indecipherable to mere mortals. Here math represents, among other things, a state of existential torment worthy of Sisyphus, who watched helplessly as his boulder kept falling back down the hill. “There’s no proof in mathematics that can’t be broken down into steps basic enough for a child of reasoning age to follow.
Feb. 25, 2016
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Brisk thriller set in exotic locales
“The Travelers” By Chris Pavone Crown (448 pages, $26) Edgar winner Chris Pavone has built a career on involving stories about people with deep secrets. Not so much the family secrets that are de rigueur in many thrillers -- though that often enters into his novels -- but more on secrets masked by a job requiring travel or relocating to another country. Will Rhodes roams the world writing articles for Travelers magazine, a glossy publication based in New York where Will lives with his wife, Chl
Feb. 25, 2016
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Debut novel depicts an unforgettable ‘Mind’
“Piece of Mind: A Novel” By Michelle Adelman Norton (304 pages, $25.95) “I was brain injured before it was trendy.” That’s the arresting first sentence of “Piece of Mind,” the title of Michelle Adelman’s debut novel and an apt description of the way Lucy -- its 27-year-old narrator -- sees herself. After being hit by a truck when she was 3, Lucy lost what she describes as her “executive functions,” including those that “relate to organizing, prioritizing, reasoning, disciplining, goal setting,
Feb. 25, 2016