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Search resuls for: "Gabrielle Zevin"


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Opinion | A Chill Has Fallen Over Jews in Publishing
  + stars: | 2024-05-27 | by ( James Kirchick | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
This month, an account on X with the handle @moyurireads and 360 followers published a link to a color-coded spreadsheet classifying nearly 200 writers according to their views on the “genocide” in Gaza. Much of it revolves around the charge of genocide and seeks to punish Zionists and anyone else who refuses to explicitly denounce the Jewish state for allegedly committing said crime. Over the past several months, a litmus test has emerged across wide swaths of the literary world effectively excluding Jews from full participation unless they denounce Israel. This phenomenon has been unfolding in progressive spaces (academia, politics, cultural organizations) for quite some time. That it has now hit the rarefied, highbrow realm of publishing — where Jewish Americans have made enormous contributions and the vitality of which depends on intellectual pluralism and free expression — is particularly alarming.
Persons: , Emily St, John Mandel, Kristin Hannah, Gabrielle Zevin, Israel —, Israel Organizations: Tiger, Elders of Zion, , Israel, Hadassah, “ Zionists Locations: Gaza, , Israel
Feminism Can’t Stop Fighting the 1950s
  + stars: | 2023-08-25 | by ( Lucinda Rosenfeld | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Illustration: AgnÈs RicartFrom Taylor Swift’s epic, 20-city concert Eras tour to Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie” movie, ladies in possession of talent and stature (plastic and otherwise) have lately swept the hearts of mostly female mass audiences. The phenomenon extends to the literary world, where two upmarket, explicitly feminist novels, Bonnie Garmus’s “Lessons in Chemistry” and Gabrielle Zevin’s “Tomorrow, Tomorrow, and Tomorrow” have become bestsellers and garnered legions of enthused readers.
Persons: Taylor, Greta Gerwig’s “ Barbie, Bonnie Garmus’s, Gabrielle Zevin’s “
The world's fourth-richest man normally releases his summer reading recommendations near the beginning of June. But this year, Gates decided that "there's more to life than reading." These are Bill Gates' "great books, songs and shows for the summer." "It was far from stateless and primitive when Europeans arrived," Gates writes. His curated Spotify playlist includes "many of my favorite songs" from artists ranging from Enrique Iglesias to Vampire Weekend.
Persons: Bill Gates, Gates, I've, Gabrielle Zevin, , Paul Allen, Howard French, Howard W, Netflix Gates, Birgitte Nyborg, who's, Enrique Iglesias, Bono, Kelly Evans Organizations: Microsoft, Netflix Locations: Denmark, Africa, French, Danish
"Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow" by Gabrielle ZevinBill Gates recommended the book "Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow" for his 2023 summer reading list. Gates said he loved the book even though he doesn't consider himself a gamer. "Like Sam and Sadie, we worked together every day for years. Paul's vision and contributions to the company were absolutely critical to its success, and then he chose to move on. We had a great relationship, but not without some of the complexities that success brings."
Persons: Gabrielle Zevin Bill Gates, Sadie, Gates, doesn't, Paul Allen, Sam, Paul Organizations: Microsoft Locations: Cambridge , Massachusetts
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