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	<title>Observer &#187; Zadie Smith Takes Over New Books Column for Harper&#8217;s Magazine</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Zadie Smith Takes Over New Books Column for Harper&#8217;s Magazine</title>
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		<title>Zadie Smith Takes Over New Books Column for Harper&#8217;s Magazine</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2010/09/zadie-smith-takes-over-new-books-column-for-emharpers-magazineem/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Sep 2010 19:19:17 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2010/09/zadie-smith-takes-over-new-books-column-for-emharpers-magazineem/</link>
			<dc:creator>Zeke Turner</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2010/09/zadie-smith-takes-over-new-books-column-for-emharpers-magazineem/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/0920zadie.jpg?w=198&h=300" /><em>Harper's Magazine</em> editor <a href="/2010/media/ellen-rosenbush-officially-editor-harpers-now">Ellen Rosenbush</a> announced today that Zadie Smith will be taking over the magazines' New Books column. &ldquo;I think a good book review is a place to meet a book on its own terms, not as an ideological vehicle or an academic plaything," Ms. Smith said in a release.</p>
<p>Ms. Smith follows Thomas Frank, who was named the magazine's <a href="/2010/media/thomas-frank-assumes-harpers-easy-chair">new Easy Chair columnist</a> in August.</p>
<p>Here's the release:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Harper's Magazine Names Zadie Smith as New Books Columnist</strong></p>
<p> New York City, September 20, 2010&mdash; Harper&rsquo;s Magazine has announced<br /> that Zadie Smith will write the magazine's monthly New Books column.<br /> Her first column will appear in the March 2011 issue. Smith replaces<br /> Benjamin Moser, who began writing the column in May 2009, and Moser<br /> will continue to write for the magazine as a contributing editor.</p>
<p> &ldquo;From Jacques Barzun to Guy Davenport to John Leonard to Ben Moser,<br /> New Books has always been one of the most agile and widely enjoyed<br /> parts of the magazine,&rdquo; said Ellen Rosenbush, editor of Harper&rsquo;s.<br /> &ldquo;Although we&rsquo;ll miss Ben&rsquo;s take on recent releases, we are pleased to<br /> be working with him on longer essays. Zadie is a tremendous talent and<br /> we're delighted to welcome her to the magazine.&rdquo;</p>
<p> Gemma Sieff, editor of the Reviews section, said, &ldquo;Zadie Smith&rsquo;s<br /> fiction and criticism reflect in equal measure her inventiveness,<br /> formal dexterity, and formidable wit. Her perspectives on literature,<br /> always wise and often surprising, make her an ideal inheritor of the<br /> column and an inimitable addition to the magazine."</p>
<p> &ldquo;I think a good book review is a place to meet a book on its own<br /> terms,&rdquo; said Smith, &ldquo;not as an ideological vehicle or an academic<br /> plaything. Often people think of writing as primary and reading as the<br /> lesser art; in my life it's the other way around. When I write about<br /> books I&rsquo;m trying to honor reading as a creative act: as far as I&rsquo;m<br /> concerned the job is not simply to describe an end product but to<br /> delineate a process, an intimate experience with a book which the<br /> general reader understands just as well as the professional critic.&rdquo;</p>
<p> Moser said, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s been great fun writing the New Books column and I'm<br /> thrilled to be leaving it in the hands of such an outstanding writer<br /> and critic. I look forward to continuing to work with Harper&rsquo;s by<br /> returning to long-form criticism, particularly of the visual arts."</p>
<p> Smith is the author of three novels&mdash;White Teeth, The Autograph Man,<br /> and On Beauty&mdash;and the essay collection Changing My Mind. She is the<br /> editor of The Book of Other People, a collection of short stories. A<br /> Londoner, Smith spends a part of each year in New York City, where she<br /> is Professor of Creative Writing at New York University.</p>
<p> In other recent developments at the magazine, it was announced in<br /> August that Thomas Frank will be joining Harper&rsquo;s to write its monthly<br /> Easy Chair column, which will replace the Notebook, beginning with the<br /> December 2010 issue. The last Notebook column, which will appear in<br /> the November issue, will be written by national correspondent and<br /> editor emeritus Lewis H. Lapham, who introduced the Notebook in 1984.<br /> Lapham will continue writing for the magazine on a regular basis.</p>
<p> Founded in 1850, Harper&rsquo;s Magazine (<a href="http://www.harpers.org/" target="_blank">www.harpers.org</a>) is the oldest<br /> continuously published monthly in America. The magazine explores the<br /> issues that drive the national conversation through such celebrated<br /> features as Readings, Annotation, Findings, and the iconic Index.<br /> Harper&rsquo;s has received eighteen National Magazine Awards. The magazine<br /> is owned and published by the Harper&rsquo;s Magazine Foundation.</p>
</blockquote>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/0920zadie.jpg?w=198&h=300" /><em>Harper's Magazine</em> editor <a href="/2010/media/ellen-rosenbush-officially-editor-harpers-now">Ellen Rosenbush</a> announced today that Zadie Smith will be taking over the magazines' New Books column. &ldquo;I think a good book review is a place to meet a book on its own terms, not as an ideological vehicle or an academic plaything," Ms. Smith said in a release.</p>
<p>Ms. Smith follows Thomas Frank, who was named the magazine's <a href="/2010/media/thomas-frank-assumes-harpers-easy-chair">new Easy Chair columnist</a> in August.</p>
<p>Here's the release:</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Harper's Magazine Names Zadie Smith as New Books Columnist</strong></p>
<p> New York City, September 20, 2010&mdash; Harper&rsquo;s Magazine has announced<br /> that Zadie Smith will write the magazine's monthly New Books column.<br /> Her first column will appear in the March 2011 issue. Smith replaces<br /> Benjamin Moser, who began writing the column in May 2009, and Moser<br /> will continue to write for the magazine as a contributing editor.</p>
<p> &ldquo;From Jacques Barzun to Guy Davenport to John Leonard to Ben Moser,<br /> New Books has always been one of the most agile and widely enjoyed<br /> parts of the magazine,&rdquo; said Ellen Rosenbush, editor of Harper&rsquo;s.<br /> &ldquo;Although we&rsquo;ll miss Ben&rsquo;s take on recent releases, we are pleased to<br /> be working with him on longer essays. Zadie is a tremendous talent and<br /> we're delighted to welcome her to the magazine.&rdquo;</p>
<p> Gemma Sieff, editor of the Reviews section, said, &ldquo;Zadie Smith&rsquo;s<br /> fiction and criticism reflect in equal measure her inventiveness,<br /> formal dexterity, and formidable wit. Her perspectives on literature,<br /> always wise and often surprising, make her an ideal inheritor of the<br /> column and an inimitable addition to the magazine."</p>
<p> &ldquo;I think a good book review is a place to meet a book on its own<br /> terms,&rdquo; said Smith, &ldquo;not as an ideological vehicle or an academic<br /> plaything. Often people think of writing as primary and reading as the<br /> lesser art; in my life it's the other way around. When I write about<br /> books I&rsquo;m trying to honor reading as a creative act: as far as I&rsquo;m<br /> concerned the job is not simply to describe an end product but to<br /> delineate a process, an intimate experience with a book which the<br /> general reader understands just as well as the professional critic.&rdquo;</p>
<p> Moser said, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s been great fun writing the New Books column and I'm<br /> thrilled to be leaving it in the hands of such an outstanding writer<br /> and critic. I look forward to continuing to work with Harper&rsquo;s by<br /> returning to long-form criticism, particularly of the visual arts."</p>
<p> Smith is the author of three novels&mdash;White Teeth, The Autograph Man,<br /> and On Beauty&mdash;and the essay collection Changing My Mind. She is the<br /> editor of The Book of Other People, a collection of short stories. A<br /> Londoner, Smith spends a part of each year in New York City, where she<br /> is Professor of Creative Writing at New York University.</p>
<p> In other recent developments at the magazine, it was announced in<br /> August that Thomas Frank will be joining Harper&rsquo;s to write its monthly<br /> Easy Chair column, which will replace the Notebook, beginning with the<br /> December 2010 issue. The last Notebook column, which will appear in<br /> the November issue, will be written by national correspondent and<br /> editor emeritus Lewis H. Lapham, who introduced the Notebook in 1984.<br /> Lapham will continue writing for the magazine on a regular basis.</p>
<p> Founded in 1850, Harper&rsquo;s Magazine (<a href="http://www.harpers.org/" target="_blank">www.harpers.org</a>) is the oldest<br /> continuously published monthly in America. The magazine explores the<br /> issues that drive the national conversation through such celebrated<br /> features as Readings, Annotation, Findings, and the iconic Index.<br /> Harper&rsquo;s has received eighteen National Magazine Awards. The magazine<br /> is owned and published by the Harper&rsquo;s Magazine Foundation.</p>
</blockquote>
]]></content:encoded>
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