Showing posts with label book news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book news. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Now, hear this.


I've posted about this a couple of times on Twitter, but I feel like many of you may not have seen it and I WANT TO SHARE IT because it was so, so good.

Wild Ones on the 99% Invisible show is one of the best podcasts I've heard in a while because it uses music and voice to tell stories in a compelling way that, if it were a book, I would describe as "un-put-downable."  It's one of those that I listened to on my commute home and then stayed in my car for an extra 5 minutes just to hear the end of it because I could not imagine tuning out.  It's poignant and beautiful.

I cannot embed it here, so go to the 99% Invisible site and listen to it there.  Or better yet, subscribe to 99% Invisible.  It's worth it.

And if it doesn't put Wild Ones on your wish list, well then... I must not be doing this blog right!

Below is the book trailer for Wild Ones:  A Sometimes Dismaying, Weirdly Reassuring Story About Looking at People Looking at Animals in America.  It's a good one, so I urge you to watch it.  But the podcast is amazing.  I hope you give it a listen.

And you can bet you'll see a review of this book on this blog as soon as I get my hands on it.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

What gave you that idea?


One of the podcasts that I've started listening to more recently is the 99% Invisible podcast (from National Public Radio, of course).  99% Invisible is "a tiny radio show about design, architecture & the 99% invisible activity that shapes our world."  In the past, the show has featured the sounds that your cell phone makes, the best beer in the world, and the design of the US dollar bill.

The most recent episode is one that I think would interest book lovers, so I am sharing it below.  It is about the surprising path of inspiration and just how much of our new, fresh ideas we owe to people who paved the way before us.

If that doesn't work in your browser, then try this: 57- What Gave You That Idea by Roman Mars

Friday, June 22, 2012

The Book That Can't Wait

I read about this in Shelf Awareness and then clicked through to the link, which I embedded below.  What do you think about a book written with disappearing ink?  I am not sure how well the disappearing actually works, but it's an intriguing premise, nonetheless, and a very inventive way of getting people to read new authors!

My feeling is that it is cool as a PR ploy, but that the disappearing ink was more a novelty that made people want to read the book quickly rather than the fear that the ink would disappear.  After all, if a book sits on your shelf unopened, it isn't exposed to sunlight, and the letters wouldn't disappear, right?

But I love that the publishing house is using this as a way to launch their new authors.  Good on them!



 And another fun video, about how books can make you feel:

 

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Armchair BEA - Day 2: The Creme de la Creme


I found out this morning that participating in Armchair BEA requires daily posts!  This is not usual for me, so apologies to everyone for the two posts today.  I shall try to make this post suitably awesome to make up for the inconvenience, but that is a lot of pressure!

Today's topic is Best Books of 2012.  Oh, good heavens.  So many good books!  I don't know how to choose between them.  So I shall just choose three that I haven't seen reviewed much elsewhere on blogosphere:

Best Graphic Novel:  Girl Genius - Agatha Awakens

This is a very hard category because I have read some fantastic graphic novels this year so far.  I am cheating in a way because my review hasn't posted yet, but JUST YOU WAIT.  It's coming this week.  The book is about this really gorgeous girl who invents amazing things in her sleep because she is that good at scienceIt is also super colorful and the panels are full of witty jokes if you pay attention, and the cast of characters has people of all age ranges and cultures and sexes, which I greatly appreciate.  Girl Genius is also available to read fully online, and I recommend that you do so, stat.



Best Non-Fiction:  A Midwife's Tale - The Life of Martha Ballard, Based on Her Diary


All, non-fiction can be just as fascinating as fiction can be, and Laurie Thatcher Ulrich proves that in this book.  She takes a really bare bones diary kept by this woman in late 18th century Maine and brings the whole world to life, using it to draw conclusions about networks, trade systems, SCANDAL (like an old man marrying a woman younger than his youngest daughter and having even more children- oh, yeah), and the rates of premarital sex in the early American republic.  So many fun facts!


Best Book To Make You Laugh:  Bab - A SubDeb

I loved this book so much, and it is available for FREE online at Project Gutenberg.   If you enjoy happiness, you will like this book.  The narrator is a budding feminist before the first world war, but she's also slightly ditzy and hijinks ensue.  Nothing like early 20th century hijinks, if you ask me.





Monday, June 4, 2012

Armchair BEA: Introductions

 
Well, everyone seems to be participating in Armchair BEA, and I am not as immune to peer pressure as I wish, so I figured I'd join in, too ;-)  I've never been to BEA before, but I do want to interact with more bloggers as I haven't really reached out to find new ones in a long time, and I bet a lot of you out there are TOTES awesome and people that I should know.  So here I am, making my introduction!

1. Please tell us a little bit about yourself:  Who are you?  How long have you been blogging?  Why did you get into blogging?

I feel this question is cheating by putting four questions into one!  Therefore, I am going to answer selectively.  My name is Aarti, and I have been book blogging for about 7 years now.  I haven't been blogging super-consistently over that time, but I have been very consistent over the past three years or so  As to why I got into blogging, see above- probably got into it because everyone else was doing it.  It's a sad answer, I know, but it's the truth.

Now, of course, I tell people that I got into blogging because I wanted a record of the books I read and to track my reading over time.  I would like to give my younger self credit for that forethought and sensitivity, but I can't really.  Now, though, I DO blog because I want a record of the books I read and to track my reading over time.  So... I have matured.

2.  What are you currently reading?

I am reading the behemoth A Suitable Boy, by Vikram Seth.  As an Indian, I generally give myself a Get Out of Jail Free card for reading books by Indian authors.  Mostly because a lot of Indian books are about Indian immigrants to other countries and how difficult it is to straddle two such different cultures.  Well, I know that from my own experience and don't need to read a book about it.

BUT reading books that actually take place in India is different because I do not have that experience at all and those books cover all sorts of different topics, not just arranged marriages (though those often come up), and so I figured I should make up for years of neglect by reading one book that is basically the equivalent of 6 regular books.  Also, one of my best friends says the book is amazing and I trust her judgment.  So far, it is pretty awesome.

3.  Tell us one non-book-related thing that everyone reading your blog may not know about you.

I hate butterflies.

4.  Which is your favorite post that you have written that you want everyone to read?
Hmm, I don't really know.  I think I have written a lot of posts that I wish more people would read and comment on ;-)  I was really sad when my review of Incognegro didn't really get any comments.  In general, my reviews of non-fiction books also don't get as many people clicking through to read.  I don't know why- people seem really scared of non-fiction in a way that doesn't really make sense to me.

But I guess the posts that I feel most deeply about are the following:

http://aartichapati.blogspot.com/2010/01/rant-against-victorian-women.html
http://aartichapati.blogspot.com/2010/01/for-discussion-racism-in-fantasy-its.html

Clearly, I was very introspective in January 2010.

5.  What is your favorite part of the book blogging community?  Is there anything that you would like to see change in the coming years?

I feel like most people's answer to the first part of this question will be "I love the community and the people."  As I don't think I'm really a central member of the community at all, and because I don't want to say the same thing that everyone else says, I'm going to say something different.  I love that book bloggers expose me to books that I'd never have stumbled across otherwise, and that the community has really challenged me to think more critically about the way I read.  When I started blogging, I read almost solely historical fiction and fantasy, and while those still comprise a good chunk of my reading material, I can also say that I've become more of a feminist and much more widely-read in the past few years than ever before in my life.  I mentioned all this in a post I wrote earlier this year.

As for what I would change in the community- I think we are unkind to each other.  Book bloggerdom has gotten so competitive, and it makes me sad.  There are so many flare-ups and hurtful comments made in the community.  People are accused and vilified for so many ridiculous things, and there is so much strong reaction to everything, to the extent that my Google Reader will be filled with "responses" to current drama in blogosphere and that blogger's specific reaction to the drama.  Seriously, I don't need you to tell me that you do not condone plagiarism in a blog post manifesto.  I just want to hear what you think about the books you read.  So I guess if I could see change in the community, I'd want people to worry less about what other people are doing and how many followers they have and how many ARCs they get and how many exclusive parties they're invited to and how welcoming they are to new bloggers.  Just focus on yourself and your blog and the books, and DROP THE DRAMA.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Read so hard libraries try to find me.

My brother shared with me this version of one of my current favorite songs, and I thought you all would enjoy it, too:


Er... how do you pronounce "Proust"?

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Announcing the Project Gutenberg Project!


I am so excited to tell you all about this amazing project that the amazing Tasha (you may know her as Heidenkind) put together and that I am very excited to be involved in.  It's the Project Gutenberg Project!

Are you aware of the thousands of books available on the Project Gutenberg website?  A huge group of truly dedicated volunteers takes books that are in the public domain, types them up, and then puts them online for the glory of everyone having access to quality literature.  As someone who received a Kindle for her birthday last year, I've made full use of Gutenberg over the past several months and look forward to many more excellent reads provided by the website.

However, Gutenberg does not have the greatest search capabilities.  You are pretty much stuck searching by title or author, and when you have so much selection and want to find a true hidden gem, this can make the site hard to navigate and difficult to use.

That's where the Project Gutenberg Project comes in!  As the homepage says, "At PGP, we want to help readers find public domain books they might be interested in, discuss what did and didn't work for us, discover (or rediscover) classics, and celebrate our favorite books in the process."


We're just getting started, but we're totally open to other people joining our party.  Why not stop by, see what we are trying to do, and see if you can get inspired as well?

Hope to see you there!

Monday, March 1, 2010

Blogsplash: Thaw!

Thaw Cover




Today I am participating in a Blogsplash for an author!  It is a different sort of post, but it's fun to use the internet and blogosphere in an innovative way, which Fiona Robyn is definitely doing!  Below is an excerpt from her book, Thaw, which you can read online for free!
________________________________________________

Ruth's diary is the new novel by Fiona Robyn, called Thaw. She has decided to blog the novel in its entirety over the next few months, so you can read it for free.
Ruth's first entry is below, and you can continue reading tomorrow here.
*
These hands are ninety-three years old. They belong to Charlotte Marie Bradley Miller. She was so frail that her grand-daughter had to carry her onto the set to take this photo. It’s a close-up. Her emaciated arms emerge from the top corners of the photo and the background is black, maybe velvet, as if we’re being protected from seeing the strings. One wrist rests on the other, and her fingers hang loose, close together, a pair of folded wings. And you can see her insides.

The bones of her knuckles bulge out of the skin, which sags like plastic that has melted in the sun and is dripping off her, wrinkling and folding. Her veins look as though they’re stuck to the outside of her hands. They’re a colour that’s difficult to describe: blue, but also silver, green; her blood runs through them, close to the surface. The book says she died shortly after they took this picture. Did she even get to see it? Maybe it was the last beautiful thing she left in the world.

I’m trying to decide whether or not I want to carry on living. I’m giving myself three months of this journal to decide. You might think that sounds melodramatic, but I don’t think I’m alone in wondering whether it’s all worth it. I’ve seen the look in people’s eyes. Stiff suits travelling to work, morning after morning, on the cramped and humid tube. Tarted-up girls and gangs of boys reeking of aftershave, reeling on the pavements on a Friday night, trying to mop up the dreariness of their week with one desperate, fake-happy night. I’ve heard the weary grief in my dad’s voice.

So where do I start with all this? What do you want to know about me? I’m Ruth White, thirty-two years old, going on a hundred. I live alone with no boyfriend and no cat in a tiny flat in central London. In fact, I had a non-relationship with a man at work, Dan, for seven years. I’m sitting in my bedroom-cum-living room right now, looking up every so often at the thin rain slanting across a flat grey sky. I work in a city hospital lab as a microbiologist. My dad is an accountant and lives with his sensible second wife Julie, in a sensible second home. Mother finished dying when I was fourteen, three years after her first diagnosis. What else? What else is there?

Charlotte Marie Bradley Miller. I looked at her hands for twelve minutes. It was odd describing what I was seeing in words. Usually the picture just sits inside my head and I swish it around like tasting wine. I have huge books all over my flat; books you have to take in both hands to lift. I’ve had the photo habit for years. Mother bought me my first book, black and white landscapes by Ansel Adams. When she got really ill, I used to take it to bed with me and look at it for hours, concentrating on the huge trees, the still water, the never-ending skies. I suppose it helped me think about something other than what was happening. I learned to focus on one photo at a time rather than flicking from scene to scene in search of something to hold me. If I concentrate, then everything stands still. Although I use them to escape the world, I also think they bring me closer to it. I’ve still got that book. When I take it out, I handle the pages as though they might flake into dust.

Mother used to write a journal. When I was small, I sat by her bed in the early mornings on a hard chair and looked at her face as her pen spat out sentences in short bursts. I imagined what she might have been writing about; princesses dressed in star-patterned silk, talking horses, adventures with pirates. More likely she was writing about what she was going to cook for dinner and how irritating Dad’s snoring was.

I’ve always wanted to write my own journal, and this is my chance. Maybe my last chance. The idea is that every night for three months, I’ll take one of these heavy sheets of pure white paper, rough under my fingertips, and fill it up on both sides. If my suicide note is nearly a hundred pages long, then no-one can accuse me of not thinking it through. No-one can say; ‘It makes no sense; she was a polite, cheerful girl, had everything to live for’, before adding that I did keep myself to myself. It’ll all be here. I’m using a silver fountain pen with purple ink. A bit flamboyant for me, I know. I need these idiosyncratic rituals; they hold things in place. Like the way I make tea, squeezing the tea-bag three times, the exact amount of milk, seven stirs. My writing is small and neat; I’m striping the paper. I’m near the bottom of the page now. Only ninety-one more days to go before I’m allowed to make my decision. That’s it for today. It’s begun.

Continue reading tomorrow here...

Friday, February 12, 2010

Book Event: Stephen Benatar on the East Coast

I know I talk a great deal about Stephen Benatar and his book (yes, Wish Her Safe at Home).  But, well, here's one more thing.

He's coming to the US!  Sadly, Chicago is not one of the cities that he will be visiting on his short tour, but if you live in New York or Boston, then you can go see him and tell him on my behalf how amazing a writer he is.  From a quick search for his books on Amazon.co.uk, it looks like he often goes up to people in stores, book in hand, and tells them to buy his work.  Talk about marketing yourself!  That sounds like it could be very awkward, but from what it looks like on Amazon, those that bought his books liked them.  So I suppose he knows how to pick his readers.

If you happen to be in New York or Boston at the end of February and want a literary event to make you feel intellectual and high-brow, here are the details on where and when you can catch Benatar:

Monday, February 22, 2010
7:00pm - 9:00pm
McNally Jackson Bookstore
52 Prince Street
New York, NY
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Tuesday, February 23, 2010
7:50pm - 9:00pm
Community Bookstore
143 Seventh Avenue
Brooklyn, NY
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Wednesday, February 24, 2010
7:00pm - 9:00pm
Harvard Bookstore
1256 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

The Spotlight Series is Here!!

Spotlight Series Button
Some time ago, Amy, Chris and I began chatting about how we can use our blogs to do good in the world of books (we're idealistic, I know).  We came up with the idea to start a Spotlight Series,.

On a rotating schedule, we will put the spotlight on a small press publisher that we feel sets a standard. We'll let you know the publisher several weeks (that's what I'm doing right now!) before the spotlight goes on so that you can browse the catalog and choose a book to read and review on your blog.

Then, over a two-week period, all participating bloggers will post their reviews of books by that publisher and word will spread from there!  Note that you do not have to be a blogger to participate in the Spotlight Series.  Anyone who wants to take part can, and if you want to write up a review of a bok and don't have a blog to post it on, we can put it on the Spotlight Series blog for you.

Cranioklepty
The Spotlight Series blog will serve as the HQ- it will have links to your reviews, information on the publisher, author and publisher interviews, contests, prizes and conversation.

Our first spotlight publisher is (drum roll, please)


Many bloggers are familiar with this publisher as it has lovely cover art on all its titles and publishes very popular books such as Cranioklepty, Last Prince of the Mexican Empire, and 31 Hours.  Last year was fantastic for Unbridled as so many of its books won recognition in print media and on blogosphere.

Last Prince of the Mexican Empire
We are very excited to bring the spotlight to Unbridled Books and we hope that you will participate, too!  As this is a voluntary series, not done for profit, neither Unbridled nor the Spotlight Series will be able to provide you with copies of books to read.  Please look into libraries, bookstores, online outlets and friends to participate in the Spotlight Series!  We strongly believe that Unbridled Books publishes excellent works, and they are well worth the hunt to find.

31 HoursThe Spotlight on Unbridled Books will take place between March 14th and March 27th.  If you would like to participate and help bring attention to a fantastic publisher (and possibly discover one of your top reads of the year!), please sign up here.  Choose your book and we'll let you know in a few weeks when to post your review.  This is a great way to meet a lot of other bloggers and open up a relationship with an excellent publisher.  We hope to see you there!

You can also follow Spotlight Series on Twitter @spotlightsp.

And if you've already reviewed a book published by Unbridled, just link to it in the comments and we'll tweet about it :-)

Thanks again, everyone!

Monday, January 25, 2010

Order of Odd-Fish Party

Order of Odd-Fish Cover
Some months ago, I read and reviewed the book The Order of Odd-Fish by James Kennedy, a young adult fantasy novel about a girl who finds out she has to save her new home town from the wrath of the All-Devouring Mother goddess.  It's a fun book and has quite the cult following online!

This cult following is, I daresay, mostly due to the personality of James Kennedy himself.  Once you watch him act out a scene from his book, it is very hard not to want to read the book yourself.  And when he also has impressive fights with Neil Gaiman, it's no wonder that people are picking up this book and taking notice.

They are also showing their support and true fangirl/boy status.  How?  By brewing Belgian style beer.

Belgian Prankster Ale

By baking disturbing-looking cakes:


Order of Odd-Fish Cake

















By immortalizing cockroaches in stained glass:

Order of Odd-Fish Stained Glass


But mostly by sharing their creative powers with Kennedy in their Odd-Fish art.  It's the coolest of the cool when a story can inspire people to create art themselves.  And Kennedy has done a brilliant job of giving credit to people who love his book and support his work by creating fan art.  He's going further than most authors do, too, to promote his book and thank his fans.  He's having a whole party to celebrate!  As Kennedy says,

It'll be not only an art show, but also a costumed dance party and theatrical extravaganza. I'm working with a Chicago theater group called Collaboraction to do this. They're going to decorate their cavernous space to portray scenes from the book (the fantastical tropical metropolis of Eldritch City, the digestive system of the All-Devouring Mother goddess, the Dome of Doom, etc.).

Opening night will be a dance party where people dress up as gods and do battle-dancing in the Dome of Doom. In the weeks afterward, we'll bring in field trips from schools. They'll browse the fan art galleries, be wowed by the elaborately decorated environment we've created, take in some performances from the book, and participate in an energetic writing workshop.

A costumed dance party and theatrical extravaganza?!  Gosh, I love Chicago's literary community.  So creative and willing to break down the barriers between the arts.

If you're in Chicago and you want to attend, here's the information.

And if you're not in Chicago, but have read and enjoyed The Order of Odd-Fish and have artistic impulses, feel free to send your art to James Kennedy and rest happy knowing that in April, Chicagoans will dance a merry jig in bizarre costumes around it and pay homage to the book and your art in a theatrical extravaganza.  Pretty sweet deal, isn't it?  Just be sure to submit by March 15th to ensure you get your place of honor in the show!

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

A Street of Books

NPR Podctast
I saw this NPR link on Shelf Awareness and needed to click through.  It's a fascinating story about an annual event in Buenos Aires, Argentina.  One of the busiest streets shuts down for six hours, couches are brought out, and people sit around chatting and reading books.  It's a really great story, and I hope you have time to listen to it!  It's about four minutes long.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Granta: The Chicago Edition

Granta:  Chicago
Granta, a literary magazine, came out with an issue featuring Chicago in all its glory in October (see gorgeous art deco cover art to the left).  I do not get this magazine; actually, I've never read an issue.  But I like it based on principle alone.  What a lofty goal, to devote a magazine to new writing across genres!  I love it.  And honestly, I love anything that showcases Chicago.  We Chicagoans have a lot of local pride (possibly misplaced, but it's hard not to adore a city with such a gorgeous skyline, good food and friendly people).  So when I heard that Granta was devoting an entire issue to the city (only the second time in its history it's done something like this), the magazine got on my radar and rose immeasurably in my esteem.  I now read its online content fairly often.

And once you get inside the (online content of) the magazine, it's also very good.  The magazine features short stories about people living in the city, the city's personality, and how things work here.  But as its stories are being told by fantastic authors, even the gritty seems so poetic.  For example, Richard Powers wrote a short piece on Chicago officials' ability to ignore problems until they get very big, public and embarrassing, but he adds a light touch of humor to his piece:

...the sixty miles of twisting passageways are still down there, awaiting their accidental rediscovery by some unwitting private company half a century from now. Until then My Kind of Town stands ready again for any fresh elemental disaster, forever bareheaded, shovelling,wrecking, planning, building, breaking, rebuilding… Okay: maybe a little light on the planning.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Amazing Book Video

This was linked on the Chicago Tribune Printers' Row book blog yesterday, and I shared itwith Maree last night.  Then realized that I should show it to everyone because it is so wonderful.  Those Kiwis really know how to write (and read and make movies literally out of) wonderful books.

Needless to say, Going West has now been added to my TBR list!

Enjoy!  And apologies for the width of this video.  It doesn't work with my custom settings on Blogspot!

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

A great find!



The Open Books store opens this Saturday in Chicago!  If you don't know already, I am a marketing intern at this fabulous literacy organization.  It's great, but it's definitely different than the corporate world :-)   For example, we have to move all our own furniture, which would be a big no-no at either of my old jobs.  But, on a positive note, I am no longer doing accounting and am working towards my career goal of getting into marketing for non-profits.  So, a very good experience!

Anyway, as the store is opening so soon, all of us are spending a great deal of time downstairs shelving books.  There are some authors whom I always scan bookshelves in libraries and bookstores for.  It usually disappoints me not to see anything by those authors, but if I do- then I feel really, really happy and the bookstore or library goes up significantly in my estimation.  One of those authors is Lindsay Davis, though I don't know why as I think I own all Davis' books.  Another is Teresa Edgerton, who writes very hard-to-find fantasy novels.  Another is Guy Gavriel Kay, who also writes fantasy novels, my favorite being The Lions of Al-Rassan

But the one I most look for is Georgette Heyer, the queen of Regency England.  Yes, she writes romance novels, but not the trashy kind.  She's so witty.  I adore her.  Any bookstore that sells her books has the Aarti seal of approval.

The Open Books store, therefore, has my stamp of approval.  Not only does it carry Heyer, but it has her books in hardcover!  Sadly, the most often-found Heyer hardcovers are Lady of Quality, Regency Buck and Charity Girl.  These are not on my list of favorite Heyers at all.  Regency Buck, in particular, I strongly dislike.  Both the hero and the heroine appall me.  Appall!  I can see why those are the books most often found on used bookstore shelves as, if I had to purge my book collection and somehow needed to decrease my 50+ volume Heyer collection, I'd get rid of those.

Anyway, Open Books has Charity Girl and Lady of Quality.  BUT ALSO, it has (or had, before I purchased it for myself) a copy of PenhallowPenhallow is one of Heyer's mystery novels, and not one of the popular ones.  It's hard to find in paperback, and even harder to find in hardcover.  I've been looking around for it in used bookstores for years.  And I found it at Open Books!

Here is a picture of a newer issue of the book, published by Arrow. 

The copy I found is an old edition, by Doubleday :-)  I can't even find a picture online to show you, but it has a big, dark blue cover with an English stately home on it.  It was clearly published during World War II because the back cover has this big announcement about how buying the book helps literacy and thus helps the world.  And the book's back cover also encourages you to BUY WAR BONDS in big, block capital letters.  So fabulous!  I love a book with a sense of history.  I can't even describe how thrilled I was to find this book for myself.  And I didn't feel bad about purchasing it as all proceeds from the sale go towards fighting illiteracy in my beloved Chicago.  If that's not a win-win situation, I don't know what is.

If you're in the Chicago area, come check out Open Books' Grand Opening this weekend!

Which authors do you automatically look for on shelves?  Any?  And do you have a story of a rare find that made you very happy, either in a bookstore or library?

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

National Book Award Finalists Announced

Today, the finalists for the National Book Award were announced, and one of them excites me a great deal because I've already read and loved it!

The finalists for fiction are: American Salvage, by Bonnie Jo Campbell; Let the Great World Spin, by Column McCann; Far North, by Marcel Theroux; Lark & Termite, by Jane Ann Phillips; and In Other Rooms, Other Wonders, by Daniyal Mueenuddin.

I read and adored In Other Rooms, Other Wonders last year. It's a short story collection set in 1970s Pakistan and it's lovely. I highly recommend it, and I hope it wins. Though I haven't read any of the others, so I can't really compare.

For a full article about the other categories and nominees, click here.

Friday, October 9, 2009

NPR Story


I had this story up as a link on my gchat profile yesterday, and got a lot of comments about the warm and fuzzy feeling it provided. As it relates to books, I thought I'd share it with you all as well. It's a lovely story about the love of reading and kleptomania.

Boy Lifts Book; Librarian Changes Boy's Life

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Man Booker Prize Winner Announced!


The 2009 winner of the Man Booker Prize is Wolf Hall, by Hilary Mantel! As it so happens, that is the book that I am smack-dab (what a fun turn of phrase that is) in the middle of right now! I will try very, very hard to get a review up by this weekend, but I am not sure if that is feasible. It's a fantastic book (quite worthy of the prize, though I have not read any of the other shortlisted contenders yet), but very dense reading, so it goes slow. Wolf Hall was the favorite to take home the GBP 50,000 prize, so it's no surprise that it won. However, it's pretty great that Mantel will now get the international credit that comes with winning such a much-lauded prize.

More on the actual book when I finish and review it, I promise. But, just to whet your palate- this is Thomas Cromwell as you've never seen him. Also, there's a sequel in the works!

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Uncomfortable Literary Plot Summaries

While going through my Google Reader this morning, I went through a chain of links. As this activity often does, one thing led to another, and I found myself at a new-to-me site that was amazing and that also took part in this really amusing literary game in which you summarize book plots in one or two completely misleading (and hilarious) sentences. Here are two sites that I found:

Monkey Muck
Postmodern Barney

My favorites are:

The Bible: An unseen 'deity' forces some people to worship it while casually killing those who don't.

Horton Hears a Who: Tiny world nearly crushed by mentally unstable elephant.

The Harry Potter series: Meddling young magician and his pals prevent others from achieving their dreams and realizing their potential.

Lord of the Rings trilogy: Small, smelly, hairy creatures go to great lengths to destroy stolen jewelry.

Batman: Wealthy man assaults the mentally ill.

Beauty and the Beast: Peasant girl develops Stockholm Syndrome.

Gladiator: Convict murders head of state.

Pride and Prejudice: Woman with gold-digging mother nags wealthy man into marriage.

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Does anyone have their own witty, inappropriate Cliff's Notes?

On a side note, isn't it interesting, the "pockets" of people that form on the Internet? How you come across so many people that seem to know everyone else you know, and then sometimes, you come across totally new people, who have never interacted with anyone else you know? Bizarre, but very cool.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Fines for Blogging?

The Federal Trade Commission's chairman set out a new set of guidelines to take effect on December 1st, 2009 relating to bloggers who review products. Yes, this includes book bloggers. The main points I got out of a very odd and painful-to-read interview the chair, Richard Cleland, had with literary blogger Edward Champion were as follows:
  • Bloggers who receive books for free to review must clearly state this in their review;
  • If you review a product and then link to a site that sells the product (i.e., the Amazon, IndieBound, AbeBooks websites that myriads of bloggers link to), then you are "endorsing" the product;
  • If you keep a book that you are sent to review, then you are being compensated and are expected to write a positive review.
Point #3 is the one that upsets me. This is mainly because I already comply with Point #1 and I guess I can sort of understand Point #2 (though I don't get any sort of money from any links I put up, and thus can't see how I am endorsing anything). But #3 annoys me. Yes, I receive books for free to review. Yes, I (usually) review them. And then, so sue me, I generally keep them. This does not mean that I feel compelled to write a positive review. I would hope that I write honest reviews, regardless of where I get the book.

More importantly, it is only bloggers who are being "compensated" when they are sent a book to review. People who review for newspapers or journals, or people who actually are paid to write reviews, are apparently not being compensated when they receive free books. Why? According to Richard Cleland, it's because:
“In the case where the newspaper receives the book and it allows the reviewer to review it, it’s still the property of the newspaper. Most of the newspapers have very strict rules about that and on what happens to those products.”
I don't know any newspaper reviewers, sadly, but my guess is that they get to keep the books, too. I have a feeling quite a few paid reviewers keep their books. And those who don't often sell them to used bookstores, or donate them and get tax write-offs. I don't think there are "very strict rules" in place there.

Really, I don't have an issue with the rules for full disclosure themselves. What annoys me is the double standard- that somehow, as bloggers write reviews for free, that we are somehow being "paid" in books to write favorable reviews, unlike reviewers on newspapers who are always, always completely unbiased. It annoys me because reviewing a book can't be an unbiased activity at all, in my view. No one reads the same book; my reaction to a book like Twilight is very different (depressingly so, really) than my sister's. That doesn't make either of our opinions moot, it just makes them different.

I like blogs because I can find people whose reading tastes closely resemble mine, and get book suggestions from them. I can trust those suggestions because I know I react in a similar way as that blogger to a certain type of book. I cannot say the same for a newspaper reviewer, whose reviews I scan only when the title or subject of the book being reviewed interests me. And so I vastly prefer people who read and review without getting payment, because these people read books they want to read, and not books that they have to read. (And really, by having to read and review a book to earn your living, doesn't that mean you are being compensated by books?)

And that's all I have to say on this subject for now. Apologies for my rambling rant- it's late!