The burgeoning global market for graphic novels has been the talk of this year’s Bologna Children’s Book Fair, a topic explored in a
panel featuring Scholastic CEO Peter Warwick. The nonprofit behind the annual National Novel Writing Month writing challenge
is ceasing operations amid financial woes and recent controversy. Ingram’s new database for book-to-screen adaptations, MediaScout,
has officially launched with some searchable 2.5 million titles. We rounded up all the biggest books out this month for both
adults and
young readers. One World has picked up
three books from basketball star Stephen Curry, with the first set to publish in September. The Trump administration is
demanding deep cuts to staff and programs at the National Endowment for the Humanities, as well as the potential cancelation of all grants made under Biden that have not yet been fully paid out, reports the
New York Times. The president is also set to roll out
sweeping new “reciprocal” tariffs on imported goods into the U.S. later today, per the AP. Fox News pundit Gregg Jarrett is
suing Simon & Schuster for allegedly conspiring to steal his Trump-related book idea and give it to another author, reports the
Independent.
Inc. profiles
831 Stories, a “romance fiction company” that cares as much about merch as it does about novels, and
Dirt considers
Barnes & Noble’s “indie rebrand.” The
New Yorker worries that those outside of the tech industry
might not be taking AI seriously enough. And
InStyle spotlights the growing number of singles turning to
book bars and literary meetups in search of romance.