Welcome to Today in Books, our daily round-up of literary headlines at the intersection of politics, culture, media, and more. Who is Evelyn Clarke?I apologize if you thought this was about Elena Ferrante. No, I’m talking about Evelyn Clarke, author of The Ending Writes Itself, a crime thriller that satirizes the publishing industry. The secret wasn’t lasting (the debut novel isn’t even out until next spring), but now we know the duo behind the book is VE Schwab ( Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil) and Cat Clarke ( Entangled). The reveal originated in an Instagram post from their publisher’s imprint, though some correctly guessed at Schwab’s connection to the book before it was confirmed. Longtime friends Schwab and Clarke sound happy enough that they can now freely talk about the once secret project and shared about their decision to pen a book together with Stylist. You can read that interview here.
A Sticky AI-Authored SituationAnother day, another story about the ethics of AI use. This one actually comes from The New York Times‘ Ethicist column, where people write in with their ethical dilemmas seeking answers from columnist Kwame Anthony Appiah. A local historical society volunteer wrote in about the group learning too late that a high school essayist they’d awarded a prize had used AI to write their submission . In this case, Appiah wrote back that AI has changed our relationship to writing, especially when we’re talking about younger generations, and it might be time to rethink the way we assess skill and make sure boundaries about AI use are explicitly stated. My National Book Awards Longlist PredictionsLast week, the National Book Awards rolled out the longlists for the five awards categories. I haven’t read all of the books up for the prestigious award this year, but that doesn’t mean I can’t make mostly unfounded predictions about the winners! So here are my quick, off-the-cuff guesses for the winner in each category:
Those are my predictions and you can find the full longlists here. 20 Years of TwilightI will never wrap my head around the fact that Twilight published two decades ago. If you continue to stan sparkly vampires and the love triangle of all love triangles, celebrate the YA sensation’s anniversary with some autumnal and bookish Twilight -inspired goodies.
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What are you reading? Let us know in the comments!