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    Here’s the shortlist for the 2024 Baillie Gifford Prize for Nonfiction.

    Literary Hub

    October 10, 2024, 2:45pm

    Today, at an event at the Cheltenham Literature Festival, Peter Hoskin announced the shortlist for the 2024 Baillie Gifford Prize for nonfiction, which recognizes the best books in the category published in English in the UK over the past year.

    “The six shortlisted books showcase a breathtaking range of subjects and styles, expand our understanding and challenge our perspectives,” said Isabel Hilton, chair of judges, in a press release. “Each one demonstrates exceptional scholarship and compelling narrative and offers profound insight into some of the most pressing issues of our time. It is a shortlist that we celebrate as a testament to the power of non-fiction to enlighten, engage and inspire us. Choosing a winner will be a daunting task but one that we embrace with enthusiasm.”

    The winner will be announced on November 19, and will receive £50,000; each other shortlisted author will be awarded £5,000.

    In the meantime, here’s the shortlist:

    Rachel Clarke, The Story of a Heart

    Richard Flanagan, Question 7

    Annie Jacobsen, Nuclear War: A Scenario

    Viet Thanh Nguyen, A Man of Two Faces: A Memoir

    Sue Prideaux, Wild Thing: A Life of Paul Gauguin

    David Van Reybrouck, tr. David Colmer and David McKay, Revolusi: Indonesia and the Birth of the Modern World

    Here are the shortlists for the 2024 National Translation Awards in poetry and prose.

    Literary Hub

    October 10, 2024, 10:00am

    Today, the American Literary Translators Association announced its shortlists for the 2024 National Translation Awards, which celebrate “literary translators who have made an outstanding contribution to literature in English by masterfully recreating the artistic force of a book of consummate quality.” Prizes will be awarded in both poetry and prose.

    “Our judges had the very difficult task of narrowing down this year’s submissions to these two shortlists of impressive translations, ranging from the intimate to the epic in scale,” said Corine Tachtiris, ALTA’s Vice President, in a press release.  “In a year where AI is dominating the headlines, these translations all attest that AI will never be able to replace the artistry, nuance, and risk that characterizes the work of human translators.”

    The winners, who will each be awarded a prize of $4,000, will be announced in a ceremony on October 26th.

    In the meantime, here are the shortlists:

    Prose:

    Mathias Énard, The Annual Banquet of the Gravediggers’ Guild
    Translated from French by Frank Wynne
    New Directions (US), Fitzcarraldo Editions (UK)

    Tezer Özlü, Cold Nights of Childhood
    Translated from Turkish by Maureen Freely
    Transit Books

    Yu Miri, The End of August
    Translated from Japanese by Morgan Giles
    Riverhead Books (US), Tilted Axis Press (UK)

    Marosia Castaldi, The Hunger of Women
    Translated from Italian by Jamie Richards
    And Other Stories

    Juan Gómez Bárcena, Not Even the Dead
    Translated from Spanish by Katie Whittemore
    Open Letter Books

    Cheon Myeong-kwan, Whale
    Translated from Korean by Chi-Young Kim
    Archipelago Books (US), Europa Editions (UK)

    *

    Poetry:

    Pierre Alferi, And the Street
    Translated from French by Cole Swensen
    Green Linden Press

    Balam Rodrigo, Central American Book of the Dead
    Translated from Spanish by Dan Bellm
    FlowerSong Press

    Al-Saddiq Al-Raddi, A Friend’s Kitchen
    Translated from Arabic by Bryar Bajalan with the poet Shook
    The Poetry Translation Centre

    Ovid, Ovid’s Metamorphoses
    Translated from Latin by C. Luke Soucy
    University of California Press

    Ulrike Almut Sandig, Shining Sheep
    Translated from German by Karen Leeder
    Seagull Books

    Ostap Slyvynsky, Winter King
    Translated from Ukrainian by Vitaly Chernetsky and Iryna Shuvalova
    Lost Horse Press

    Read the 1934 Nora Neale Hurston essay that inspired next year’s Met Gala theme.

    Emily Temple

    October 10, 2024, 9:17am

    The Met Gala is being literary again. On Wednesday, the Metropolitan Museum of Art announced the Costume Institute’s spring 2025 exhibition, which also traditionally serves as the Met Gala theme: “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style.”

    First of all, according to Vogue, the exhibition draws from Barnard professor Monica L. Miller’s 2009 book Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic Identity, and “will feature garments, paintings, photographs, and more—all exploring the indelible style of Black men in the context of dandyism, from the 18th century through present day.” Miller will also be a guest curator for the show.

    “Dandyism, for the unacquainted, is an exuberant attention to dress,” writes Vogue‘s Nicole Phelps.

    In advance of [Wednesday’s] announcement, Miller said another definition is “dressing wisely and well.” She described Black dandyism as “a strategy and a tool to rethink identity, to reimagine the self in a different context. To really push a boundary—especially during the time of enslavement, to really push a boundary on who and what counts as human, even.” The history of Black dandyism that the exhibition showcases will “illustrate how Black people transformed from being enslaved and stylized as luxury items, acquired like any other signifier of wealth and status, to autonomous self-fashioning individuals who are global trendsetters.” If, as Miller has argued, the Black dandy originates in the space between hyper-visibility (on the red carpet, say) and invisibility (in establishment institutions like The Met), this show is poised to address that.

    The exhibition, Phelps tells us, will be “arranged by 12 characteristics of Black dandyism, an organizational principle informed by a 1934 Zora Neale Hurston essay, “The Characteristics of Negro Expression.” The sections will tell the story of the Black dandy’s evolution over time via not just garments and accessories, but a range of media that includes drawings, paintings, photographs, and film excerpts.” If you, like us here at Lit Hub, enjoy doing the extra credit reading, you can find Hurston’s essay here.

    Colman Domingo, Lewis Hamilton, A$AP Rocky, Pharrell Williams, and Anna Wintour will co-chair, with LeBron James as honorary chair. The specific dress code has yet to be announced.

    [h/t The Cut]

    Han Kang has won the Nobel Prize in Literature.

    Emily Temple

    October 10, 2024, 7:26am

    Today, the Swedish Academy awarded the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature to Han Kang, “for her intense poetic prose that confronts historical traumas and exposes the fragility of human life.”

    Han Kang was born in 1970 in South Korea. In 1993 she made her literary debut as a poet, and was first published as novelist in 1994. In 2016, she broke out into the English-speaking literary world with Deborah Smith’s translation of The Vegetarian, originally published in 2007, which Daniel Hahn called “a bracing, visceral, system-shocking addition to the Anglophone reader’s diet,” and which won the International Man Booker Prize. (It also made Lit Hub’s list of the best debut novels of the decade.)

    Kang, according to the Academy, “confronts historical traumas and invisible sets of rules and, in each of her works, exposes the fragility of human life. She has a unique awareness of the connections between body and soul, the living and the dead, and in her poetic and experimental style has become an innovator in contemporary prose.”

    (Did you bet correctly? Someone out there must have…)

    Read an excerpt from Kang’s most widely-read book in English, The Vegetarian, translated by Deborah Smith, here.

    Read Han Kang on violence, beauty, and the (im)possibility of innocence, in conversation with Bethanne Patrick, here.

    Ill. Niklas Elmehed © Nobel Prize Outreach

    Threatened with eviction, a Brooklyn comic shop raised almost $90K to stay open.

    James Folta

    October 9, 2024, 1:14pm

    Image from Desert Island’s fundraiser.

    Here’s some good news to brighten your Wednesday: after being threatened with eviction, beloved indie comic shop Desert Island raised nearly $90,000 in three days to keep the shop in business.

    The outpouring of support from Desert Island’s community of shoppers, fans, and artists is a testament to how essential the shop has become. The 16-year-old store and its owner Gabe Fowler are an oasis in New York for comics, art, events, and weird, beautiful window displays.

    Recently the Brooklyn store’s landlord alerted Gabe that the liquor store down the street wanted to buy out Desert Island’s lease, offering to pay more in rent. The landlord gave the store a deadline to match that higher rent, or vacate.

    But in just a few days, Desert Island was able to raise more than enough money to keep the shop open. The funds will go towards a renewed lease, or moving and building out the shop in a new location — I would also feel a bit shaky about sticking with this landlord.

    And as a fun wrinkle, Gabe added on the GoFundMe page that “with money in excess of our goal, we’ll edit and publish a free comics anthology in which all the artists get paid.” That’s community, baby!

    It’s a happy ending, and we wish Desert Island many more years of business. And with rents going up everywhere, there’s never been a better time to visit your local comic shop: Desert Island in Brooklyn, The Million Year Picnic in Cambridge, Floating World in Portland, The Beguiling in Toronto, Atomic Books in Baltimore, or Secret Headquarters in LA. Support your local shops!

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