PW subscribers. Subscribers: to set up your digital access click here. To subscribe,
PW âAll Accessâ site license members have access to
PWâs subscriber-only website content. Simply close and relaunch your preferred browser to log-in. To find out more about
PWâs site license subscription options please email: pw@pubservice.com. If you have questions or need assistance setting up your account please email pw@pubservice.com or call 1-800-278-2991 (U.S.) or 1-818-487-2069 (all other countries), Monday-Friday between 5am and 5pm Pacific time for assistance.
Thank you for visiting
Publishers Weekly. There are 3 possible reasons you were unable to login and get access our premium online pages.
Book Club Picks for March 2021 publishersweekly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from publishersweekly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Leesa Cross-Smith and Naima Coster: In Conversation Community Event Tuesday, March 9, 2021 - 7:00pm
Bookmarks is pleased to present Leesa Cross-Smith and Naima Coster in a virtual conversation about their new novels. This Close to Okay by Cross-Smith is an uplifting, powerful story of two strangers brought together by wild chance at the moment they need it most. Coster’s What’s Mine and Yours is a sprawling, moving narrative about the messiness of love and family, mothering, race, and community. Both books are selection picks for Bookmarks’ Signed First Editions Club. For more information about the club, visit https://www.bookmarksnc.org/SFEClub. Signed copies of both books are still available when you join the club. The event will be moderated by Jessica Blackstock, who leads the Winston-Salem chapter of the Well-Read Black Girl Book Club at Bookmarks. This is a pay-what-you-can event; purchase either of these books or make a donation to Bookmarks to register: http
In his journey from jail to Yale Law, felon-turned-poet writes to remember who I am Felon-turned-lawyer/poet Reginald Dwayne Betts kicks off a Talking Volumes series about race. March 6, 2021 6:51am Text size Copy shortlink:
Firebrand Black leader Malcolm X is arguably the most famous American to have had a personal transformation in prison. But for millions of others serving time in the world s largest correctional system, prison is not a place for correction. Instead, inmates become hardened, or broken.
By dint of his own imagination and fierce longing to be a healed and healing person, Reginald Dwayne Betts has followed in Malcolm X s footsteps. A much-honored poet and respected lawyer with a degree from Yale Law School, Betts has been trying to redefine his life away from the one teenage act that continues to reverberate through his thoughts and dreams.