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Lili Taylor, Keith McNally and Andrew Ross Sorkin are among Gotham Book Prize finalists

NEW YORK (AP) — A book of essays by actor Lili Taylor, a memoir by restaurateur Keith McNally and a bestseller from Andrew Ross Sorkin about the stock market crash that helped lead to the Great Depression are among the 11 finalists for a $50,000 literary prize.

The Gotham Book Prize, launched in 2020 by bookstore owner-philanthropist Bradley Tusk and political strategist Howard Wolfson, honors fiction or nonfiction about New York City.

Each of the 11 nominated books touch upon a different facet of New York, whether Taylor’s love for quiet moments and the outdoors in “Turning to Birds,” the dining life in McNally’s “I Regret Almost Everything” or the panic on Wall Street in Sorkin’s “1929.”

Finalists also include Mark Ronson’s memoir, “Night People: How to Be a DJ in ’90s New York City”; Adam Ross’ novel of the city in the 1980s, “Playworld”; and a novel centered on the 1920s Harlem Renaissance, Victoria Christopher Murray’s “Harlem Rhapsody.”

“It’s clearer than ever that our city is an object of fascination and the ideal setting for countless books, both fiction and nonfiction,” Tusk and Wolfson said in a statement Tuesday. “When great writers focus on New York City, that maintains our status as the place that the best and brightest from all of the world want to be.”

The winner will be announced in the spring. Previous Gotham prize recipients include Colson Whitehead’s novel, “Crook Manifesto,” and Andrea Elliott’s investigative “Invisible Child: Poverty, Survival & Hope in an American City.”

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This story corrects that there are 11 nominated books, not 10.

Dutch court allows rapper Ye concerts in the Netherlands

AMSTERDAM (AP) — A judge in Amsterdam on Wednesday rejected an appeal by a Jewish organization to block two performances by the rapper Ye, formerly Kanye West, ruling that the concerts are not a threat to public order. Ye has drawn widespread controversy in recent years for a series of antisemitic remarks, leaving Dutch authorities under mounting pressure to cancel the gigs on June 6 and 8. The Central Jewish Council filed the emergency lawsuit on Tuesday, arguing that Ye should be banned from the country for voicing admiration for Adolf Hilter and selling T-shirts featuring swastikas. According to the Amsterdam District Court, there were no grounds to bar Ye from performing. “There are no indications that West’s presence in the coming days will lead to concrete public order dangers,” the court said in a statement.
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