Khamis, 6 Mac 2014

The Malaysian Insider :: Books


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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


US author George Saunders wins Story Prize for short fiction

Posted: 06 Mar 2014 12:43 AM PST

March 06, 2014

American author George Saunders won the Story Prize for his best-selling short story collection "Tenth of December," which has been lauded for its formal innovation and keen eye to people's darker aspects.

Saunders, 55, topped finalists Andrea Barrett's "Archangel" collection and Rebecca Lee's "Bobcat" for the $20,000 (RM65, 450) prize, the richest among annual literary fiction honours in the United States.

Saunders, who lives in New York and teaches creative writing at Syracuse University, was given the award at a ceremony at the New School in New York yesterday.

"George Saunders offers a vision and version of our world that takes into account the serious menace all around us without denying the absurd pleasures that punctuate life," the judges said in a statement. "This book is very funny and very sad."

The author's previous collection of short stories, 2006's "In Persuasion Nation," was also a finalist for the award.

Saunders has authored five additional books and was included on Time magazine's list of the 100 most influential people in the world last year.

Past winners of the Story Prize, which is underwritten by the Mississippi-based Chisholm Foundation, include Claire Vaye Watkins, Mary Gordon, Jim Shepard, Tobias Wolff and Steven Millhauser. – Reuters, March 6, 2014.

Newsweek’s print revival starts tomorrow

Posted: 05 Mar 2014 07:58 PM PST

March 06, 2014

Newsweek magazine is set to return to print starting tomorrow in the United States and Europe. – The Malaysian Insider file pic, March 6, 2014.Newsweek magazine is set to return to print starting tomorrow in the United States and Europe. – The Malaysian Insider file pic, March 6, 2014.Newsweek magazine, online only since the end of 2012, will return to print starting tomorrow in the United States and Europe.

Parent company IBT Media is taking a gamble in re-launching the once-iconic news weekly, which has nearly disappeared in the face of serious financial difficulties.

In crafting its print resurrection, the New York-based online media group, led by French businessman Etienne Uzac, has adopted a strategy that goes against current practices.

The new magazine will seek to position itself as a high-end product, in particular with higher quality paper and printing than its competitors.

"We'll deliver the quality of a monthly every week," said editor in chief Jim Impoco.

But the flip side of the high-end aspirations is a price well above other news magazines. Newsweek will be sold for $7.99 (RM26.14) a copy in the United States.

And an annual subscription – including both the paper edition and unlimited access to the website – will cost around $150 in the United States, some five times more than the cost for rival Time.

In Europe, where the print edition had not stopped, the price will vary by country.

IBT Media is planning to put out 70,000 copies of its first issue tomorrow, a spokesperson for the weekly told AFP. Down the line, the magazine said it aims to have 100,000 copies in circulation in the United States and another 100,000 in the rest of the world.

"This is an extension of what we are already producing with an e-magazine, Etienne Uzac said in December.

Impoco "has put in place and will continue to put in place a strong team. We will do investigative reporting. We will go into depth in some fields," added the businessman, who did not respond to interview requests yesterday.

Currently, Newsweek employs 29 journalists full time.

The return of Newsweek's print edition caps a turbulent few years for the title, which was first published in 1933. At the start of the 1990s, the magazine had a worldwide circulation of 3.3 million readers, but sales declined steadily over the next two decades, slipping to 1.5 million by 2010.

After changing hands several times, the title was bought last summer by IBT Media. – AFP, March 6, 2014.

Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

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