- Brittany Allen reports that you can call Farrar, Straus and Giroux for a daily poem this April. (LitHub)
- Katie McLean Horner offers a list of things Americans can do to save the Institute of Museums and Library Services, a federal agency that offers vital funding for libraries and museums across the country. (Book Riot)
- Jim Milliot and Ed Nawotka discuss how the publishing industry is bracing itself for Trump’s verkakte tariffs. (Publishers Weekly)
- Tim Jonze eulogizes NaNoWriMo. (The Guardian)
- H.M.A. Leow explores the ways that Joseph Conrad highlighted the cruelties of racism and colonialism. (Daily JSTOR)
- Emma Cieslik reveals how zines, librarians, and collectors have preserved trans history. (Atlas Obscura)
- Lolita C. Baldor delivers the latest on the nearly 400 titles that book banners want removed from the US Naval Academy. (AP News)
- Anatoly Lieberman muses on “meaning.” (OUP Blog)
- I empathize entirely with Amy Shearn, who worries that she might have killed a book group. (LitHub)
- Livia Gershon speculates about an LGBTQ+ canon. (Daily JSTOR)
- Daniel Mendelsohn writes in praise of Catullus, who can still make us all blush and squirm two millennia after his death. (New Yorker)
- Eric Berger rounds up news about censorship legislation from across the United States. (The Guardian)
- …and some censorship news Book Riot is giving some extra attention to.

