They might be a harbinger of the downfall of civil society, but they’re awfully convenient.
Evidence of anti-gay bias by Amazon has snowballed at an impressive rate, but now it’s time to give the company the time to respond.
The short-story-collection-as-debut-work has a lot of possibility, heightened by the prospect of buying a short story on your Kindle for a dollar.
Supplementing faith with science.
How different are the teen vampire romance novels from Dickens’ work?
The success of Graywolf is not just a good news story in a bad news cycle, it is a validation of their small-batch editorial philosophy.
How can a game—so simple on its face—be the subject of so much fantastic, engrossing, downright smart literature?
An elegant cover lifts the book out of the ghetto of a thing produced into the rarified realm of something crafted.
The New York Times columnist has a lot of friends. But does his penchant for quoting them in his column run counter to the paper’s anonymous sources policy?
Sony one-ups Amazon, Clay Shirky talks crazy, Robert Irwin gets recognized, and Gawker finds time to dis VQR.