<H1> The Vale of Cashmere </H1> |
<H1> All at Once: Excerpt of the Novel </H1> |
<H1> Corona </H1> |
<H1> Politics 101 </H1> |
<H1> NOT YET is Launched! </H1> |
<H1> Humorous Suicide Hotline Novel for Christmas </H1> |
<H1> Frankfurt Book Fair 2019 Highlights </H1> |
<H1> Literary Culture Decentralized at LA’s Little Literary Fair </H1> |
<H1> INVICTUS Launch </H1> |
<H1> The Cats of Rhodes </H1> |
<H1> Finding discipline and inspiration among writers </H1> |
<H1> The Memory That Keeps Me Going </H1> |
<H1> Powells’ Staff Pick title 13 </H1> |
<H1> Jack Clinton talks about CLOVIS on National Public Radio </H1> |
<H1> Screencraft Winner Next Gen at Cannes </H1> |
<H1> How Sci-Fi Can Help Fight Climate Change </H1> |
<H1> A Mountain of Beans </H1> |
<H1> Barnes & Noble Announces More Than 100 Italian-American Authors Marching Up Fifth Avenue in the Columbus Day Parade </H1> |
<H1> Are small publishers doing all the hard work for the big ones? </H1> |
<H1> Stu Krieger Wins the Lifetime Achievement Award in Screenwriting </H1> |
<H1> Author Abda Khan Honored for Her Work </H1> |
<H1> Harvard Square Editions Author S.Li Receives National Book Foundation Award </H1> |
<H1> Thoughts on People and Peppers: A Romance </H1> |
<H1> Love’s Denouement </H1> |
<H1> Traits </H1> |
<H1> Song for Ahed </H1> |
<H1> Meet the National Book Foundation’s 5 Under 35 </H1> |
<H1> What are the best eco books for children and teens? </H1> |
<H1> Welcome to our eco-themed week – an overview </H1> |
<H1> Your stories: Our Precious World by Lottie Longshanks – poem </H1> |
<H1> How dystopia hammers home the reality of climate change </H1> |
<H1> Publisher Guidelines </H1> |
<H1> A Moral Atmosphere: Hypocrisy redefined for the age of warming </H1> |
<H1> Cambridge divest from fossil fuel </H1> |
<H2> Publishing </H2> |
<H2> Recent Articles: </H2> |
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<H2> Sign up for our newsletter! </H2> |
<H2> Follow Us! </H2> |
<H2> Tweets From Abda Khan </H2> |
<H2> Tweets From Bill McKibben </H2> |
<H2> Erika Raskin </H2> |
<H2> Around Harvard </H2> |
<H2> Brain Pickings </H2> |
<H2> by Ben Mattlin (HC ’84) </H2> |
<H2> by Teresa Hsiao (HC ’07) </H2> |
<H2> Sheila Connolly (GSA ’79) – Mystery Lovers’ Kitchen </H2> |
<H2> Tweets </H2> |
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<H3> Erik with Pueblo’s famous author Terrence Damon Spencer on launch day </H3> |
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<H3> Food for thought </H3> |
<H3> Alas, poor Yorick </H3> |
<H3> How many people want to read Not Yet? </H3> |
<H3> All copies sold out at B&N </H3> |
<H3> title 13 is a Powell’s Staff Pick! </H3> |
<H3> Read what Powells’ staff had to say about Michael A. Ferro’s debut novel </H3> |
<H3> Jack Clinton talks about his debut LGBT eco-novel Clovis in an interview on Montana Public Radio to air on KUFM this Thursday evening, May 31st, 2018–Listen now! </H3> |
<H4> Planet Hits Lucky 7 at Amazon... </H4> |
<H4> The Sustainable Growth Oxymoron... </H4> |
<H4> The Terror Courts... </H4> |
<H4> Harvard Square Editions Author S.Li Receives National Book Foundation Award... </H4> |
<H4> Oil & Honey, by ‘Unlikely’ Activist Bill McGibben... </H4> |
<H4> A passionate quest for romance and justice... </H4> |
<H4> Caroline Leavitt interviews Harriet Levin Millan... </H4> |
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<H4> Not Yetby Erik Segall </H4> |
<H4> A brand-new book fair premiered in Los Angeles Sat 20 Jul 2019, 11 am – Sun 21 Jul 2019, 6 p.m. LitLit, the Little Literary Fair was free and open to the public, and featured more than 20 exhibitors — independent publishers, booksellers and cultural creators from Los Angeles and the rest of the West Coast. </H4> |
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<H4> May 13, 2018, Cannes, France –
Screencraft winner Next Gen was acquired for a reported $30 million at the Cannes Film Festival yesterday. </H4> |
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<H4> The Iranian and Kurdish Women’s Rights Organisation named lawyer and author Abda with a ‘True Honour Award’ Honouree for her work on women’s rights. Harvard Square Editions published Abda’s debut novel Stained, which has won acclaim for its depiction of a young woman struggling for her right to an education and to consent in all its forms. </H4> |
<H4> “I finished this volume with a lot more knowledge about this two-island nation, its people and customs, than when I began, without feeling I’d worked hard to gain it. </H4> |
<H4> Copyright 2020 Harvard Square Editions - All Rights Reserved </H4> |
<H5> by Sean Elder </H5> |
<H5> Truth was, she used to be able to organize her thoughts, until Floyd retired. Now he was always hanging around talking to her, asking what she was doing. Every time he went out, which wasn’t often enough for her taste, he would ask her if she needed anything and then look angry if she did. Sometimes he’d look angry if she didn’t. Now she looked for errands for him, just to get a moment’s peace. When she sent him off for milk this morning she could have lived without it. But she couldn’t have stood listening to him complain about the bus ride to Atlantic City before it happened, not non-stop for the next two hours. </H5> |
<H5> Suicide hotline worker Erik Segall’s debut novel Not Yet has made it into Amazon’s top 5000 sellers of World Literature and in the top 1500 of Amazon’s Self-Help & Psychology Humor. “I didn’t even know that was a category! (#31 is “Fight Club” and #32 is “How To Live with a Huge Penis”),” quips Segall. </H5> |
<H5> Publisher Harvard Square Editions is looking for literary fiction of environmental or social significance. </H5> |
<H6> Release date: December 11, 2019 Genre: Fiction; Humor Price: $22.95 ISBN: 978-1-941861-67-7 </H6> |
<H6> By Bill McKibben (HC ’82) </H6> |
<H6> THE LIST OF REASONS for not acting on climate change is long and ever-shifting. First it was “there’s no problem”; then it was “the problem’s so large there’s no hope.” There’s “China burns stuff too,” and “it would hurt the economy,” and, of course, “it would hurt the economy.” The excuses are getting tired, though. Post Sandy (which hurt the economy to the tune of $100 billion) and the drought ($150 billion), 74 percent of Americans have decided they’re very concerned about climate change and want something to happen… (more) </H6> |
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