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Remainders: role of the Good Book edition

Yesterday the Colorado Supreme Court threw out a death sentence in a rape-and-murder case after discovering that jurors copied verses from the Bible while deciding how to sentence the defendant. Agreeing with the defense attorney’s argument that the jurors went beyond the law in administering the sentence, the court observed: At least one juror in this case could have been . . .

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Kill the reading?

The weekend’s Times ran an excerpt from “Cancel Them: The Problem With Literary Readings,” which appears in the latest issue of n+1. Some salient bits: If you’ve made the mistake of going to literary readings, you know that the only thing that can make them endurable is to ha at each funny bit, and ah at each clever observation, and . . .

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Atlantic cuts fiction

The Atlantic, suddenly flush with cash, has joined the host of general-interest literary magazines (the Saturday Evening Post, Harper’s Bazaar, Mademoiselle, Redbook, and Cosmopolitan, to name a few, used to publish O. Henry award winners with some frequency) that have stopped publishing short fiction in recent years. Sort of. For now, “the magazine plans to offer a newsstand only fiction . . .

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Remainders: a double-X chromosome edition

A.S. Byatt admires the “American-style reportage” present in the work of Zadie Smith and Monica Ali, and argues that a renewed focus on storytelling since the 1970’s has left the British novel in good shape. Ali Smith and Toby Litt touched off a firestorm (ably summarized by Annie Reid) last week when critics branded their introduction to the New Writing . . .

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