Word: publishability
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...life. Meanwhile, Mailer's last book, The Gospel According to the Son, was, to put it mildly, not well received. In their previous collaborations, Mailer did the writing. On their new book, it's Schiller, who for good measure is so wildly productive that in September he will publish Cape May Court House, about a car crash that may have been a cover for murder. Posterity will have the final say, and we can assure you which way it will go, but for now it's Schiller who can preen...
Unlike many collections of poetry, which poets publish as soon as they have written enough to fill out a volume, many of the poems in Necessity are thematically intertwined—indeed inextricably linked to one another. The collection, Sacks explained, chronicles a journey extending, both physically and spiritually, from his South African roots to his current American home...
...really inventing anything,” he says, “but [rather] describing truths that were out there in a creative way.” Paying his friends minimum wage to read and critique “The Silent Revolution,” Keith was able to publish in the spring of 1968. Little did he know how far his work would spread...
...programs are often an administrative headache for students. The University should align the academic calendars of all of its graduate schools —or at minimum, put all classes on the same time schedule. It should reduce barriers to cross-registration, allow cross-registration on the web and publish a centralized calendar of events at Harvard, searchable by topic, and available to all students and faculty on the web. This infrastructure, along with a strong commitment to promoting cross-disciplinary exchange, is essential for equipping Harvard and its graduates with the tools necessary for the most perplexing problems...
...April, Holt/Metropolitan will publish "Elvis in Jerusalem: Post Zionism and the Americanization of Israel" by Tom Segev. PW says Mazel Tov, giving the book a starred review. "Segev presents a startling and necessary view of contemporary Israel: it is a place so Americanized that the old Zionist collective identity has been replaced by individualism and consumerism; it is a place of ethnic and religious turmoil where traditional Israeli identity has become painfully fractured...Zionism has been a success, Segev argues, and its time is past. But, he admits sadly, 'Palestinian terrorism seems to push Israelis back into the Zionist womb...