Shelf Awareness for Monday, December 5, 2005


Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers: Mermaids Are the Worst! by Alex Willan

Mira Books: Six Days in Bombay by Alka Joshi

Norton: Escape into Emily Dickinson's world this holiday season!

Quotation of the Day

ST Is for the Smartest Thing

"The smartest thing I ever did was invent someone to support me."--Sue Grafton referring to detective Kinsey Millhone, star most recently of S Is for Silence, in a conversation with the Lexington Herald-Leader, Lexington, Ky.


BINC: DONATE NOW and Penguin Random House will match donations up to a total of $15,000.


News

Christmas 'Carnage' in the U.K.

Discounting of bestsellers in the U.K. has gone deeper this Christmas season, the Daily Telegraph reported. While in previous years, chains like Waterstone's and W.H. Smith have met the heavy discounts of supermarkets for a few days at a time, this year they are discounting most hardcover bestsellers 50%, many through Christmas.

Nigel Jones of Ottakar's told the paper: "I am staggered at the extent of the discounting. It is more than just price-slashing, it is carnage." And a major publisher commented: "No other sector is slashing prices on its premium product so recklessly. This is making people think of books as just a cheap addition to their main Christmas presents."


GLOW: Park Row: The Guilt Pill by Saumya Dave


Notes: Stores Closing and Saved; Half Moon

Chick lit: entertainment? art? trash? a synthesis of feminist and post-feminist thought? Many points of view were represented by members of a panel on chick lit held at Women & Children First, Chicago, Ill., and covered by the Columbia Chronicle.

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Yesterday's New York Times Book Review holiday books issue encompassed the following eclectic range of categories: houses and gardens, photography, exploration, travel, comics history, cooking, Japanese art, music and Paris. The issue also has the 100 Notable Books of the Year.

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Coincidence? Both the Wall Street Journal and New York Times today had major stories on children's books. The Journal examines the "Christmas break" caught by Mackinac Island Press, Traverse City, Mich., whose Has Anyone Seen Christmas? was bought by Barnes & Noble for its "Christmas table." The company liked the tale, approved of the track record of author-publisher Anne Margaret Lewis and her husband-associate publisher, Brian Lewis, and needed a title like it to help "fill a need." The book now has 90,000 copies in print.

The Times features the Norton Anthology of Children's Literature, intended for scholars, and the Connections column celebrates the multiple meanings children's texts can have when read aloud and with children.

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Ed Kluska plans to close his 33-year-old Kluska's New World Bookshop, Clifton, Ohio, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer. He will continue to operate an astrology consulting business.

Kluska blamed the closing on competition from online retailers, chain stores and grocery stores such as Kroger, which now sell New Age books. "One Kroger has more space devoted to books than our entire store," Kluska told the paper.

He also said the store's changing neighborhood had hurt business. As hardware stores, shoe and variety stores have been replaced by restaurants and gift shops, there has been less traffic during the day and more in the evening and on weekends.

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The Lincoln Journal Star tells the heartwarming story of A Novel Idea Bookstores, a rare and used bookstore in Lincoln, Neb., whose basement was flooded by a burst pipe. Customers, friends and neighboring businesspeople helped clear out books before the waters reached them, and the store lost only 3,000 books--mostly on physics, anthropology, quilting and history. Owner Cinnamon Dokken praised the helpers, saying, "Something that was looking like a tragedy turned into something that had a real feeling of blessing." Yesterday the store turned a planned open house into a celebration.

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The op-ed page of yesterday's New York Times featured a hilarious contribution by Karen Karbo, author of Minerva Clark Gets a Clue, about how HarperCollins might make Goodnight Moon even more PC--above and beyond the decision to omit the cigarette held for years by illustrator Clement Hurd (as mentioned several times in Shelf Awareness last month). Among Karbo's recommendations:

"A fire blazing in the fireplace while Bunny sleeps? Suggested change: Get rid of it. At the very least, digitally add a fire extinguisher to the wall. And hello? Where are the smoke detectors?

"Who exactly is [the rabbit knitting in the rocking chair]? Bunny says, 'A quiet old lady whispering hush?' But what do we know of her really? Suggested change: Digitally alter quiet old lady's apron with a message emblazoned across the front that says she was hired from a reputable agency, is a citizen and has passed a criminal background check."

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North of the border, the Globe and Mail explores why "international demand for English-language literary fiction has gone seriously south." Among the problems both in Canada and elsewhere: high prices, competition for a shrinking amount of leisure time, underediting and overpublishing, a post-September 11 desire for nonfiction and "explanations"; and publishers leery about the sales records of previous books by authors.

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With the Shepherd Express, the Milwaukee weekly, Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops has begun an annual short story contest. The first place winner receives a $200 Schwartz gift certificate and publication in Shepherd Express. Second and third place prizes are $100 and $50, respectively, and publication on the Shepherd Express Web site.

All winners will be invited to read at the store.


Superstore Milestones: Openings and Closings

The end of the beginning of an era:

On December 31, Barnes & Noble is closing what was the first of its modern superstores, a 14,000-sq.-ft. store in the Rosedale Marketplace in Roseville, Minn. Nowadays most B&Ns are double that size.

"When this store came out, it was state-of-the-art, but that was 15 years ago," manager Scott Myers told the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. As superstores evolved and grew in size, adding many non-book products and services, this one was left behind. "We don't have a café," Myers noted. "We don't have a music section or DVDs. We're just a little bookstore."

Less than two miles away, B&N's 44,000-sq.-ft. store at the HarMar Mall is expected to serve displaced customers of the little superstore that once caused people to wonder just what Len Riggio was thinking.

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Here's an item that serves as a reminder of how far, literally, superstores have come--or gone. Last week, Borders Group's Malaysian partner, Berjaya Corporation Berhad, opened a second franchised Borders in Malaysia, a 25,000-sq.-ft. store in the Curve, Mutiara Damansara, a new lifestyle shopping complex in a residential-commercial-hotel development in the city of Petaling Jaya.

The company's first Borders in Malaysia opened last year in Kuala Lumpur; at 60,000 square feet, it's Borders's largest store in the world.

The new store offers some 200,000 book, music, periodicals and movie titles. Borders sources book titles, which are available in English, Bahasa Malaysia and Chinese.


Holiday Hum: Odyssey's Voyage

Sales during 2005 have been "up and down" at the Odyssey Bookshop, S. Hadley, Mass., but October and November were good months, and co-owner Joan Grenier is hoping that the momentum will continue and December will go well, too.

Between recent unseasonably warm weather and "everyone focused on the end of the semester," it's still a little early in the season for the store, which is in the Five Colleges area. But the Odyssey has been preparing for the holidays. As at other stores, "there is not a great fiction title everyone needs to have," but the staff "all has fiction favorites and we're trying to work on selling those," Grenier said.

Besides the usual titles that are selling well--from Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin to A Million Little Pieces by James Frey to The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion--the Odyssey is promoting and seeing strong sales of the following:

In the Province of Saints by Thomas O'Malley, which the store chose for its First Edition Club (which features a book of literary merit with potential collectibility that is signed and goes to about 100 people around the country). "I absolutely love" this title, Grenier said.

The Encyclopedia of New England, a $65 Yale title that has just come out. "We won't sell tons, but it will do O.K."

An Unreasonable Woman: A True Story of Shrimpers, Politicos, Polluters and the Fight for Seadrift, Texas by Diane Wilson. "This amazing story is by a fourth-generation shrimper and the mother of five in a little county of 15,000 people who found out it was the most polluted place in the country."

The Prophet of Dry Hill: Lessons from a Life in Nature by David Gessner about nature writer John Hay who lived for 60 years at his house, Dry Hill, on Cape Cod.

Several titles have done well following fall author appearances, including one of our favorites, Clay: The History and Evolution of Humankind's Relationship with Earth's Most Primal Element by Suzanne Staubach as well as 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus by Charles Mann, "a local"; Katz on Dogs by Jon Katz, which "keeps selling"; St. Albans Fire by Archer Mayor, a Vermont mystery writer; Sex Wars by Marge Piercy, who drew 75 people at an appearance last week.

The store is also handselling three children's titles:

Snowmen at Christmas by Caralyn Buehner, which Odyssey's Cindy Pile described as "a picture book told in rhyme that's wonderfully illustrated and has little things to look for in the paintings on each page."

Shamoo: A Whale of a Cow by Ros Hill, also a picture book, about a cow who learns to swim and teaches other cows. "It's very drolly illustrated and has a wonderful sense of humor," Pile said.

The Seven Professors of the Far North by John Fardell for children 8-12, "an adventure tale that has some fantasy" about six professors abducted by an evil professor and taken to an island in the Arctic Ocean. Three children go to rescue them. "It reminds me of a James Bond movie," Pile commented. "They go on their own and use their innate cleverness."

Among other changes this year, the Odyssey has expanded its sidelines section and is stocking more gifts. For example, the store has been selling some "colorful and pretty" bottle stoppers, mousepads, coasters that it displays with a wine tasting book, spin tops and a range of kits for making books by hand using origami paper. So far, according to sidelines buyer Sarah Colgazier, "different things are selling satisfactorily," but in contrast to some years, there is "no hot sideline"--at least yet.


Media and Movies

Media Heat: Nemcova on the Tsunami

This morning Good Morning America talks to him, Michael F. Roizen, author of You, The Owner's Manual: An Insider's Guide to the Body That Will Make You Healthier and Younger (HarperResource, $24.95, 0060765313).

Also on GMA this morning: Petra Nemcova, the model who nearly died in the tsunami last year and lost her boyfriend, an experience she writes about in Love Always, Petra: A Story of Courage and the Discovery of Life's Hidden Gifts (Warner, $23.95, 0446579130).

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Today on WAMU's Diane Rehm Show: Timothy Egan, author of The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl (Houghton Mifflin, $28, 061834697X).

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Today on WNYC's Leonard Lopate Show:

  • Dan Aykroyd and Judith Belushi Pisano, author of Belushi (Rugged Land, $29.95, 1590710487), remember the larger-than-life comedian.
  • Ian Frazier, who writes about the Big Apple in Gone to New York: Adventures in the City (FSG, $22, 0374281637).
  • Paola Antonelli, whose own little masterpiece is Humble Masterpieces: Everyday Marvels of Design (Regan, $22, 0060838310)

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Today on the View, Maureen Dowd continues to make the rounds for her new book, Are Men Necessary?: When Sexes Collide (Putnam, $25.95, 0399153322).

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Tonight on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart: Jimmy Carter, author of Our Endangered Values (S&S, $25, 0743284577).


Movie Tie-ins: Brokeback Mountain, Geisha, Narnia

This coming Friday, three major movies with roots in novels or short stories appear.

Brokeback Mountain, directed by Ang Lee and starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger as two gay cowboys in the 1960s West, is based on the short story by Annie Proulx (Scribner, $9.95, 0743271327). Larry McMurty wrote the screenplay.

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Memoirs of a Geisha, directed by Rob Marshall (Chicago), starring Ziyi Zhang (the westernized version of Zhang Ziyi), Ken Watanabe, Gong Li and Michelle Yeoh, is based on Arthur Golden's bestselling novel (Vintage, $14.95, 0679781587). The movie tells the story of a young girl sold into slavery by her father who becomes one of Japan's most illustrious geishas.

Newmarket serves an appropriately lavish and beguiling companion volume, Memoirs of Geisha: A Portrait of the Film ($40, 1557046832), which includes introductions by the director and author. Incidentally in his introduction, Golden describes the process of writing Memoirs of a Geisha as being like "driving in fog on a crowded road while reading a map and troubleshooting a serious problem with your car."

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Last but not least is the marketing campaign, er movie, called The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Directed by Andrew Adamson, this is the first in a series based on the epic Narnia fantasy by C.S. Lewis that features four children who discover the entrance to a magical world through an ordinary wardrobe.

Two of the many Narnia titles have been on bestseller lists for weeks already:

  • The adult trade paperback tie-in edition: The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis (HarperCollins, $19.99, 0060765453)
  • The children's tie-in edition: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis (HarperCollins, $7.99, 0060765461)

Among related titles:
  • The Chronicles of the Narnia boxed set (HarperTrophy, $45, 0064471195).
  • The Narnian, a biography of C.S. Lewis by Alan Jacobs (HarperSanFrancisco, $25.95, 0060766905).
  • Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis (HarperSanFrancisco, $11.95, 0060652888).

Much ink has been spilled about how true to the text the movie is and whether it de-emphasizes the Christian message or not. The movie's potential audience variously has been compared with those for the Harry Potter movies and The Passion of the Christ. If it grabs a few Lord of the Rings fans, it could be titanic.

Already book sales have been spectacular. Toni Markiet, executive editor of children's books at Harper told the Globe and Mail that 95 million copies of the Chronicles of Narnia have sold worldwide since publication and sales this year should rise fivefold over usual sales patterns.



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