
In the past month, several of the nation's biggest book sections — in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Atlanta — have instituted major cutbacks or changes to their coverage. This shift in focus is part of a larger trend in newspapers — whose circulations are down, whose audiences are getting older — of moving more content online and shutting down coverage of whole areas entirely.
The Current spoke with Howard Zinn, bestselling author of A People's History of the United States, a Boston University professor, and one of America's most notable, anti-war historians, about American newspapers' winnowing down of book reviews.
Speaking by phone from his home in Boston, Zinn reflected on these changes, and how they affect American cultural life and our democracy. Here's what he had to say.
Argh. And so has an organization of book critics
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