Air India crash: Doomed jet in Australia just days ago
The same Boeing 787 which crashed in India killing many had travelled to and from Australia less than a week ago carrying hundreds of passengers.
How do freelance writers make ends meet? By compiling news of the horse racing industry and writing werewolf erotica...
Washington D.C.’s Wilson Center for International Scholars has been dismantled. What will happen to its 30,000 books?... more »
W.A.S.T.E. Not John Scanlan looks for the future in the dustbins of history
Shaviro: Now Is Now, And Then Is Then—A Memoir
An ongoing archive of Abandoned Blogs

I often wonder what happened to many of my peers & why they abandoned their blogs without warning. I don’t like to think about it for too long though. You can look through the blog graveyard here, see if you recognise any.
A Person With No Public Appeal'
Interviews with writers are now accepted as a discrete literary form, like rondeaus and villanelles, probably for the same reason people read the biographies of writers whose work they have never read. I suppose the Paris Review encouraged the trend starting in the Fifties by publishing an interview in each issue – T.S. Eliot! Evelyn Waugh! – and lending them further respectability by periodically collecting them between hard covers. The point of an interview is to encourage an impression of intimacy with people we are unlikely ever to meet, though most writers in my experience are not memorably articulate speakers. I’m not being a snob. If I admire and enjoy a writer, I will seek out and usually read his or her interview, just as I read the biographies of cherished writers. I have no problem with the higher gossip, so long as I don’t take it too seriously.