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David Shannon Books
David Shannon is the internationally acclaimed author and illustrator of thirty-five books for children, including No, David!, a Caldecott Honor Book and his second New York Times Best Illustrated Book of the Year, and four more David picture books. Shannon's bestsellers include A Bad Case of Stripes, Duck on a Bike, and Too Many Toys. He lives in Southern California with his family.
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He is also a columnist for The New York Times and a commentator on PBS NewsHour . He is the author of The Second Mountain and The Road to Character . He has been awarded more than 30 honorary degrees from American colleges and universities and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He teaches at Yale.
Chicken Littles Are Ruining America
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A Humanist Manifesto
The world feels like an awful place right now. Here’s how to make it better.
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The New Old Age
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What happens when a society takes individualism to its logical conclusion?
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Yes, America is a wounded giant—but it always has been, and the case for optimism is surprisingly strong.
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How to flaunt your modesty online, in three easy steps
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The rich philosophical tradition I fell in love with has been reduced to Fox News and voter suppression.
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What I saw at the National Conservatism Conference
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The creative class was supposed to foster progressive values and economic growth. Instead we got resentment, alienation, and endless political dysfunction.
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Brutality and dehumanization are deeply embedded in many departments.
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I couldn’t say these things during a traditional ceremony, but these aren’t traditional times.
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The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake
The family structure we’ve held up as the cultural ideal for the past half century has been a catastrophe for many. It’s time to figure out better ways to live together.
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Fifty-five small presses are vying to be named regional and country Small Press of the year at The British Book Awards for 2024, the largest ever number of finalists.
The contenders span nine different regions and countries, with 12 in London, seven in both Scotland and South-East England, six in North England, five in Wales, South-West England and the Midlands and four in the Island of Ireland and East England.
The bumper crop of 55 publishers – all with a turnover of less than £5m – will compete to win their region first before contending for the overall prize. This prize will be announced at the ceremony for The British Book Awards (also known as the Nibbies) at Grosvenor House London on 13th May 2024. The overall winner will also be in contention for Independent Publisher of the Year.
Among previous winners and finalists, including 2021 overall winner Sweet Cherry and 2023 regional winner Bluemoose Books, a handful of small presses make their finalists debut – Hurtwood Books (London), 3dtotal Publishing (Midlands), Noodle Juice (South-East England) and Bedford Square Publishers (London).
Those committed to strengthening inclusivity in the industry have remained popular such as Scorpius Books (East England), the first trade publisher of dyslexic-friendly fiction for adults in the UK, and Out-Spoken Press (London), a business challenging the lack of diversity in publishing.
Many of last year’s biggest break-out books came from the small press finalists, including Penelope Unbound by Mary Morrissy at Banshee Press (Island of Ireland), Out in the Cold by Danie Ferreira from Hurtwood Books (London), The Final Year by Matt Goodfellow, illustrated by Joe Todd-Stanton (Otter-Barry Books in the Midlands), Lessons From Our Ancestors by archaeologist Raksha Dave from Magic Cat (London) and rising star author and illustrator Jamie Smart, published by David Fickling Books (South-East England).
“I’m always happy to see the breadth of Small Press publishing across the UK and Ireland,” said Philip Jones, editor of The Bookseller and chair of the judges for The British Book Awards. “These presses have ridden out the pandemic peaks and troughs, and have emerged into the new age stronger than ever with some first-class publishing backed by an acute understanding of who they are and how to find their customers.
“The vast majority of publishers on this shortlist reported list and sales growth, alongside many successful funding applications, with investment put into both authors and their businesses. Publishing remains in safe hands – many of them.”
Tanya Dunbar, m.d. of the prize sponsor CPI Group, said: “CPI is proud to sponsor the Small Press award again this year. The small publishers are an essential and creative part of the publishing ecosystem, and we are delighted to be part of their continuing success story.”
The regional and country winners of the Small Press of the Year award will be announced on 11th March.
The finalists are:
East England
- Scorpius Books – West Bergholt
- UEA Publishing Project – Norwich
- Dedalus – Sawtry, Cambridgeshire
- SRL Publishing – Bishop’s Stortford
Island of Ireland
- Banshee Press – Cork
- The Lilliput Press – Dublin
- Little Island Books – Dublin
- Irish Pages – Belfast
- Jacaranda Books Art Music – Bloomsbury
- The Indigo Press – Mayfair
- Bedford Square Publishers – Bloomsbury
- Magic Cat Publishing – Haggerston
- Hurtwood Books – Soho
- Elliott & Thompson – Bloomsbury
- The Do Book Co – Shoreditch
- Renard Press – Clapton
- Muswell – Highgate
- Gallic Books – Belgravia
- Scallywag Press – Pimlico
- Out-Spoken Press – Willesden
- Otter-Barry Books – Hereford
- Sweet Cherry Press – Leicester
- Bad Betty Press – Nottingham
- 3dtotal Publishing – Worcester
- The Emma Press – Birmingham
North England
- Smokestack Books – Ripon
- Saraband – Manchester
- Carcanet Press – Manchester
- Dead Ink Books – Liverpool
- Bluemoose Books – Hebden Bridge
- Fly on the Wall Press – Manchester
- The Wee Book Company – Glasgow
- Little Door Books – Highlands
- Charco Press – Edinburgh
- 404 Ink – Edinburgh
- Scotland Street Press – Edinburgh
- 3TimesRebel Press –- Dundee
- Rymour Books – Perth
South-East England
- Duckworth Books – Richmond
- Author In Me – High Wycombe
- September Publishing – Tewkesbury
- Guppy Books – Didcot
- David Fickling Books – Oxford
- Mama Makes Books – Tunbridge Wells
- Noodle Juice – Banbury
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- Peirene Press – Bath
- PG Online Ltd – Dorchester
- Really Decent Books – Bath
- Ad Hoc Fiction – Bath
- From You To Me – Bath
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David Brooks
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David Brooks became an Opinion columnist for The New York Times in September 2003. He is a commentator on “PBS NewsHour,” NPR’s “All Things Considered” and NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
He is the author of “Bobos in Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There” and “On Paradise Drive: How We Live Now (And Always Have) in the Future Tense.” In March 2011 he came out with his third book, “The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement,” which was a No. 1 New York Times best seller. He is the author, most recently, of “How to Know a Person: The Art of Seeing Others Deeply and Being Deeply Seen.”
Mr. Brooks also teaches at Yale University and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
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What we do know is that the 85-year-old had been dead inside for a long time
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Holocaust denier David Irving is reportedly dead.
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KINSELLA: Holocaust denier David Irving dead? Back to video
Some were surprised to hear that he might be dead. Because, really, David Irving had been dead inside for a long time.
He claimed to be a historian, but he wasn’t one. He had no training as a historian. Early in his career he wrote books about historical events, and enjoyed some success at that.
But, about 30 years ago, Irving started to pilot alone through some dark waters. And in particular, he started to deny the Holocaust.
He said there was no proof.
Despite the fact that the Holocaust was — and is — the most well-documented mass murder in human history, Irving became a denier. He wanted proof.
He said that those who survived the Holocaust were “liars.” He said there was no “Reich policy to kill the Jews.” He said “there is only one salvation for Germany, and that is Hitler.”
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One evening in March 1989, while I was a reporter at the Ottawa Citizen, I learned that Irving — who called himself “a moderate fascist” — was scheduled to give a speech at Canada’s most storied hotel, the ChAMteau Laurier. I contacted I the hotel’s management, to ask if they were aware that Irving was a Holocaust denier and a promoter of Nazism — and would they cancel his event, as they occasionally cancelled other controversial events.
The hotel’s management said they wouldn’t. In fact, they gave every impression that they didn’t care.
So, on that night, “moderate fascist” David Irving came to Ottawa. There he stood, beaming, beneath the glittering chandeliers at the posh old local hotel. Talking about the need for “proof” of the death of six million Jews.
He was dressed in a tailored suit and protected by about a dozen neo-Nazi skinheads. Irving stood before his audience and said there was no proof, and declared himself a “hardcore disbeliever” in the gas chambers used to exterminate Jews at Auschwitz.
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On that night in March 1989, more than 300 people were in the Chateau Laurier’s ballroom. They weren’t worried about being spotted there. In fact, Irving’s event was sold out. Dozens were turned away.
Hia audience was mainly comprised of older white men and women from the Ottawa area. Many stood and applauded his hateful words about the gas chambers, and virtually every bigoted word he uttered along the way. They wanted proof, too.
The neo-Nazi skinheads slouched at the ballroom’s doors, and handed out copies of a self-published magazine. It called for “death to race mixers,” contained tributes to Adolf Hitler, and called for “race revolution.”
It was an astonishing scene: hundreds of people paying to listen to a notorious Holocaust denier — and knowing in advance that the media would be there to document their presence. They don’t care. They came anyway.
And they weren’t nobodies.
There was an Ottawa school trustee, a former ranking diplomat, a Department of Justice lawyer, dozens of public servants, and plenty of school teachers. All of them were there, notwithstanding the risk of media exposure, to hear their St. George, the one whose best-selling books would slay the twin-headed dragon of International Jewry and Communism.
They gave him ovation after ovation. Irving beamed.
Seven months following that wildly successful visit to Ottawa, David Irving flew to Austria and spoke to some banned neo-Nazi groups. In Vienna and Leoben, Irving stated that “the gas chambers in Auschwitz never existed.”
Later on, when not sharing stages with former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke or one-time American Nazi Party leader William Pierce, Irving would call survivors of the Auschwitz death camp “assholes,” and claim that “more women were killed in the back seat of Edward Kennedy’s car in Chappaquiddick than in the gas chambers at Auschwitz.”
Then, he made a big mistake. When renowned Holocaust scholar Deborah Lipstadt accurateky characterized some of Irving’s views in her writing, he sued for libel. This writer — full disclosure — was a witness for Lipstadt. But in the end, she didn’t need me. She destroyed David Irving in court, and his reputation and career never recovered.
And now, he’s said to be dead. Now, the “moderate fascist” David Irving is supposedly gone, and Hell is a little bit more crowded as a result.
So, really, there’s only one thing left to be said about the reported death of this Holocaust denier.
We want proof.
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