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Five different editions of Victor Hugo’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame have become bestsellers following Notre Dame fire.

Different editions of author’s 19th-century classic in five of top 10 slots on Amazon France. Jon Henley from The Guardian takes a look at the bestseller list.

Victor Hugo’s 19th-century literary classic Notre-Dame de Paris has soared to the top of France’s online bestseller list after the fire that ravaged the 850-year-old Paris cathedral on Monday night.

By Wednesday morning, different editions of the 1831 novel occupied the first, third, fifth, seventh and eighth slots in Amazon France’s bestseller list, with a history of the gothic architectural masterpiece taking sixth place.

The book is better known in the Anglosphere as The Hunchback of Notre Dame, the title given to its 1833 English translation.

The runaway success confirms a French tendency to seek solace in literature at times of national anguish: A Moveable Feast, Ernest Hemingway’s memoir of his time in the bars and cafés of 1920s Paris, became France’s fastest-selling book after the terror attacks of November 2015.

“Who if not us?” 5 writers on the role of fiction in addressing climate change.

In 2019, climate change continues to wreak devastating havoc on the planet. Amy Brady from LitHub complied summaries of authors’ reactions to climate change.

“Fiddling while Rome burns, whistling from the coal mine, serenading the doomed while the ship sinks—I’d like to think that storytellers and poets have a more urgent role right now than this. As many other writers and critics have said, if you’re writing realistic fiction that’s set in the modern world right now, you’re already writing about climate change in some way. There’s nothing the least bit speculative about cli-fi anymore. We already know, because we can see it happening today. The economic and practical effects of climate change will be felt first and worst by the very populations that are the most at-risk and vulnerable. We have to tell those stories. Not just because it’s a moral imperative but because pretty soon, those stories are going to be representative of more of the audience for fiction. Writing fiction and poetry in the era of climate change is an opportunity and a privilege. The purpose of art is to generate radical empathy, to enlarge our understanding of ourselves and our world, through people and stories that dramatize what a climate report or news story can’t. And our world has never needed that generative power more than now. Who if not us?” –Siobhan Adcock, author of The Completionist

“I think the term ‘climate change fiction,’ as a descriptor of genre, will eventually fall out of use–much the same way we don’t tend to use the phrases ‘love fiction’ or ‘loss fiction’ to describe stories about foundational components of the human experience. The role of fiction in society is to wrestle with what it means to be human, and climate change is a deeply human thing. As such, I don’t think it imposes any new obligations on those who write about it, but rather indicts as delinquent those who don’t.” –Omar El Akkad, author of American War

“Our deepening climate crisis is going to require much more creativity and willpower from all of us, and we’re not going to get through this without the power of imagination. Which means that fiction and creative writing have a unique and super vital role to play in helping us to visualize what’s coming and how we’re going to cope with it. Seldom have fiction writers had such a rich opportunity.” –Charlie Jane Anders, author of The City in the Middle of the Night

“Humans are no good at the large-scale or the future tense. We tend to recoil from enormity in awe and stupefaction—a reaction that is terribly dangerous now, in the Anthropocene, when it is not nature but humanity that is the uncontrollable danger, the ungraspable vastness. Fiction is uniquely equipped to counter that paralysis by bringing readers a direct and human-sized experience of climate change: one family’s battle against rising water, one man’s flight from a forest fire. I have to believe that if we learn to see, up close, what we have done, we might begin to change.” –C. Morgan Babst, author of The Floating World

“One hard lesson I’ve learned from my fifteen years as a community organizer is that changing the minds of our enemies is less important than giving hope and power to our friends. I’m not writing for the people who are against us. I don’t mean to say that it’s impossible to convince people with great art—other writers might legitimately feel like the role of fiction in the climate change fight is to convince the skeptical—but that’s not my priority. I want my fiction—and my activism—to galvanize and energize people who already know that something is wrong, but might not feel like they have the power to do anything about it. I want people to see their own power, and the power they can build with others, and to see that fighting back—and winning—isn’t just possible; it’s already happening, every day, all around us.” –Sam J. Miller, author of Blackfish City

Read full post on LitHub

Lee Child developing a true crime series which aims to dramatize tales of “real-life Jack Reachers”

Jack Reacher author, Lee Child, to develop true-crime series reports Scott Roxborough from The Hollywood Reporter

British production outfit Dancing Ledge will produce the series, which aims to dramatize tales of “real-life Jack Reachers.”

Best-selling novelist Lee Child, author of the Jack Reacher books, has signed a deal with British production company Dancing Ledge Productions to develop a true-crime dramatic series called Lee Child: True Crime.

The series, announced at television market MIPTV on Monday, will feature dramatized versions of real-life stories focused on men and women who, like Child’s fictional character Jack Reacher, “have been driven to stand up and put their lives on the line, fighting for justice in the face of great danger.”

Dancing Ledge, which developed Netflix series Delhi Crime and co-produced HBO’s The New Pope starring Jude Law and John Malkovich, said they and Lee are currently discussing the project with potential showrunners.

“We all read thrillers and watch movies where an average person goes to extraordinary lengths, to defend family or tribe, or to seek justice,” Child said in a statement. “It turns out that reality goes even further — we have some amazing stories to tell, some of them barely believable, but they’re all true.”

Read full post on The Hollywood Reporter

A reason not to neglect your paper books TBR pile: a Canadian couple found a winning lottery ticket tucked into a book a year after they bought it.

BBC News reports a Canadian couple claimed a winning lottery ticket days before the deadline due to a stroke of luck.

Nicole Pedneault and Roger Larocque bought the Loto-Quebec ticket on Valentine’s Day last year and forgot about it.

Then Ms Pedneault came across the ticket last weekend as she was going through a book she had brought back from holiday.

Their claim on the prize would have expired on Friday.

The Quebec couple claimed the C$1m ($748,000; £572,000) grand prize in Montreal on Wednesday.

The ticket draw took place on 5 April 2018 and winners have a year to claim the prize.

Ms Pedneault had been searching through souvenirs the couple had bought during a trip to Japan to help her grandson with a school project.

That was when she noticed the lotto ticket tucked away in the pages of a book they had purchased.

Read full post on BBC News

If you’re like us, you have hundreds of books on your Kindle. Finding the ones you haven’t read yet will be easier with the all new Kindle!

Kindle e-Readers will receive Sort by Read and Unread soon. Michael Kozlowski from GoodeReader has the scoop.


Amazon will be pushing out a firmware update sometime in April that will give all Kindle e-Readers the ability to sort by read and unread ebooks in the library. The Amazon Kindle Paperwhite 4 has already received the 5.11.1 update, but every single Kindle model after the Paperwhite 2 will receive this new feature sometime in the next few weeks. There is not many sorting options for ebooks in the library menu, so this is good news for people who have a copious amount of ebooks on their device.

The new sorting system was first announced when Amazon unveiled the new entry level Kindle with an E Ink Carta display and a frontlight. The company stated ““Now, when you finish a book, it will automatically be marked as read in your library and synced across your reading devices including Kindle, Fire tablet, and the free Kindle apps for iOS and Android. With just a few taps, you can filter to see which books you’ve read and which you haven’t, so organizing your library has never been easier.

Pre-Order The All-new Kindle – Now with a Built-in Front Light

Read full post on GoodeReader

Michelle Obama’s book is set to become the best-selling memoir in history

Michelle Obama’s memoir “Becoming” could become the biggest-selling autobiography ever, its German publisher said, expressing optimism that husband Barack’s forthcoming account of his two terms as president will also be a hit, according to Reuters.


The former first lady’s recollections, for which she received a reported advance of more than $60 million from Bertelsmann’s Penguin Random House division, has sold 10 million copies since it came out in November.

“That makes it our most notable creative success of last year,” Bertelsmann CEO Thomas Rabe told a news conference, reporting a 2.8 percent gain in annual revenue at the 183-year-old publisher.

Order your copy of  Becoming by Former First Lady, Michelle Obama today!

Read full post on NBC News

Amazon is the drunk online retailer of choice

People are buying ebooks and tech devices from Amazon while drunk and Michael Kozlowski from GoodeReader takes a look at the stats.


We have all been slightly or totally inebriated and purchased something online. Sometimes there is a bit of regret once the credit card bill comes in, but sometimes a shiny new Kindle will ease the pain. A recent survey found that drunk shopping is an estimated $45B per year industry and the most popular website people visit, is Amazon.

The Hustle recently found that the average respondent reports dropping $444 per year and 88% of the spent it on Amazon. Women were slightly more likely to shop drunk: 80% said they had done it, compared to 78% of men. But men spent more money than women on their drunken purchases: an average of $448 a year compared to $441.

Amazon is expected to account for 47.0% of the e-commerce market in the U.S. by the end of 2019, up from 44.8% in 2018, according to eMarketer. The Jeff Bezos-backed e-commerce giant has lured in consumers with its Prime subscription membership which costs $12.99 a month or $119 a year and offers free two-day shipping; free two-hour delivery service in some areas; access to Prime Video and Prime Music; and discounts at Whole Foods. It had 101 million members as of January.

Nearly half (48%) of Amazon Prime members shop online at least once a week or more and nearly three-quarters (74%) shop online at least every few weeks, according to a separate report from Feedvisor.

Read full post on GoodeReader