Shelf Awareness for Monday, July 27, 2009


Other Press: Allegro by Ariel Dorfman

St. Martin's Press: Austen at Sea by Natalie Jenner

Berkley Books: SOLVE THE CRIME with your new & old favorite sleuths! Enter the Giveaway!

Mira Books: Their Monstrous Hearts by Yigit Turhan

Quotation of the Day

How a Book Finds its Reader: The 'Extra Story'

"Every book tells a story. Sometimes the best story it tells--enthralling, astonishing, unexpected--has nothing to do with the narrative concocted by the author. Surrounding every book is a meta-story, a radiance that shifts and changes with each set of hands that picks it up, flips impatiently through the opening pages and finally finds the page labeled 'Chapter 1.' The extra story is how that book made its way to you in the first place."--Julia Keller in the Chicago Tribune.

 


Harpervia: Counterattacks at Thirty by Won-Pyung Sohn, translated by Sean Lin Halbert


News

Notes: BookCourt's Habitat; Ford Leaving GLIBA's Board

The New York Times told a "story of the family that lives above BookCourt, an independent bookstore in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn," with a once-upon-a-time beginning, in 1979, at "a bookstore on Harvard Square," where the "staff included two young part-timers named Henry Zook and Mary Gannett, and in a 'maybe someday' kind of way, they thought about opening a bookstore of their own."

After several fascinating plot and real estate developments over three decades (including the births of two sons), "today, most of the family is still living above the store. The mother, who handles the shop's finances and is the children's book buyer, lives upstairs in No. 163 with Ben. Zack, the general manager, is ensconced on the top floor of No. 161. (A small doorway upstairs connects the two buildings.) And the father, the senior buyer, lives nearby on Douglass Street."

"We converge every day at the store," Zack said. "It's psychotic, but it works."

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Because Ernie Ford is selling his bookstore, Fine Print Books, Greencastle, Ind., he has resigned from the board of the Great Lakes Independent Booksellers Association. To fill his term, which ends in the fall of 2011, the board has appointed Terry Whittaker, owner with his wife, Susan, of Viewpoint Books, Columbus, Ind. The store was begun the her parents in 1973. Whittaker was on the GLIBA board for seven years, beginning in the late 1990s, and served as president for a year.

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Four friends who all worked at Ned's Bookstore, East Lansing, Mich., in the 1990s and worked there until recently last month opened their own bookstore, Collegeville Textbook Co., also in East Lansing, NACS's Campus Marketplace reported. Another Ned's veteran has joined them.

Like Ned's, the Student Bookstore, the Spartan Bookstore and a nearby Barnes & Noble, the new store mainly serves students at Michigan State University. Collegeville Textbook Co. will focus on textbooks and hopes to garner 5% of the market.

"I think there's a lot more personality in our store," co-owner Tom Muth told CM. "Our store just feels different and looks different. It feels alive and bright, and I think a lot of that is because we've been friends for so long. That bond shows through in our store."

CM added: "The store is marketing to students through the campus newspaper and by handing out fliers at orientation. It's also communicating with the Michigan State faculty for book adoptions."

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Obituary note: Author E. Lynn Harris, "whose novels about successful and glamorous black men with sexual identity conflicts (and the women and men who love them) made him one of the nation's most popular writers," died last week, the New York Times reported. He was 54.

"We at Doubleday are deeply shocked and saddened to learn of E. Lynn Harris's death at too young an age," Alison Rich, Doubleday's executive director of publicity, told the Journal-Constitution in Atlanta, where Harris lived. "His pioneering novels and powerful memoir about the black gay experience touched and inspired millions of lives, and he was a gifted storyteller whose books brought delight and encouragement to readers everywhere. Lynn was a warm and generous person, beloved by friends, fans, and booksellers alike, and we mourn his passing."

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In the wake of Amazon's decision to remove copies of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm from its customers' Kindles (Shelf Awareness, July 20, 2009), the New York Times reported that a subsequent apology by CEO Jeff Bezos was "not enough for many people."

"As long as Amazon maintains control of the device it will have this ability to remove books and that means they will be tempted to use it or they will be forced to it,” said Holmes Wilson, campaigns manager of the Free Software Foundation.

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The expansion of Google's digital library continues to raise concerns ranging from fear of monopoly to endangering reader privacy.

The Boston Globe reported that when Dan Clancy, Google Books engineering director, appeared on a panel at the Boston Public Library recently, "his opening remarks focused on the search engine's efforts to enable access for 'every kid in Arkansas' to Harvard-size digital libraries. But soon afterward, he was hearing from librarians on the panel that they felt 'queasy' about Google Books."

"I appreciate the trepidation, because this project is very big, and very complex," he said. "It is also part of a very large cultural and societal shift."

"Google is creating a mega bookstore the likes of which we have never seen," added Maura Marx, executive director of Open Knowledge Commons. "People are very uncomfortable with the idea that one corporation has so much power over such a large collection of knowledge."

Boing Boing's Cory Doctorow observed that his specific misgivings about the Google Book Search settlement "don't trump my delight at the idea of guaranteeing public access to all these books, and the restoration of orphan books to public hands."

He contends, however, that "the issue of privacy is much more grave. I want Google to create a binding, written agreement to hold readers' information private, so that the future of reading doesn't include the possibility of warrantless spying on your book-reading activity. For complex legal reasons, it's unlikely that anyone will ever be in a position to give Google a settlement permitting this again, so this is it. The status quo Google sets will be the one that we end up living with for the foreseeable future."

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Bookshop Santa Cruz's longtime owner and now county supervisor Neal Coonerty was profiled in the Mercury News, not for his bookselling or political acumen, but for his weight loss accomplishments. During the past year, Coonerty has lost 135 pounds and on Sunday planned "to take on the Wharf to Wharf Race."

"I want to let you know that I'm going to be running and walking," he said. "I know if I can't run that far at least I can get to the end."

"My guess is he'll feel much better after the race than I do," said his son, Ryan.

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"Poets, from ancient times, have written about war," observed Britain's poet laureate Carol Ann Duffy, who "invited a range of my fellow poets to bear witness, each in their own way, to these matters of war." The poems appeared in the Guardian.

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Book trailer of the day: Cathy's Ring by Sean Stewart and Jordan Weisman, illustrated by Cathy Brigg (who wrote and performs the accompanying song).

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Beach biz reads: As the dog days of August approach, the Wall Street Journal suggested that while "it's nice to curl up with a page-turning, mind-free thriller, this summer of our great recessionary discontent might be a good time to bone up on things finance and investing."

 


GLOW: Bloomsbury YA: They Bloom at Night by Trang Thanh Tran


Media and Movies

Media Heat: Getting It Through My Thick Skull

This morning on Good Morning America: Mary Jo Buttafuoco, author of Getting It Through My Thick Skull: Why I Stayed, What I Learned, and What Millions of People Involved with Sociopaths Need to Know (HCI, $24.95, 9780757313721/0757313728). She appears as well on the View today and Sirius Radio's Howard Stern Show tomorrow.

Also on GMA: David Kessler, author of The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite (Rodale, $25.95, 9781605297859/1605297852). He appears tonight on Nightline.

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This morning on the Early Show: Patrick Neely, author of Down Home with the Neelys: A Southern Family Cookbook (Knopf, $27.95, 9780307269942/0307269949).

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Today on the Michael Medved Show: Ian Plimer, author of Heaven and Earth: Global Warming, the Missing Science (Taylor Trade Publishing, $21.95, 9781589794726/1589794729).

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Today on the Diane Rehm Show: Elizabeth Hawes, author of Camus, a Romance (Grove Press, $25, 9780802118899/0802118895).

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Tonight on the Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson: Chelsea Handler, author of Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea (Simon Spotlight, $24.95, 9781416954125/1416954120).

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Tomorrow morning on the Today Show: Kurt Andersen, author of Reset: How This Crisis Can Restore Our Values and Renew America (Random House, $15, 9781400068982/1400068983).

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Tomorrow morning on the Early Show: Arianna Huffington, author of Pigs at the Trough: How Corporate Greed and Political Corruption Are Undermining America (Three Rivers Press, $13.95, 9781400051267/1400051266). She will also appear tonight on the Colbert Report.

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Tomorrow on NPR's Morning Edition: Gabriel Cohen, author of Neptune Avenue: A Jack Leightner Crime Novel (Minotaur, $24.95, 9780312380618/0312380615).

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Tomorrow on the Diane Rehm Show: Margaret Macmillan, author of Dangerous Games: The Uses and Abuses of History (Modern Library, $22, 9780679643586/0679643583).

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Tomorrow on E!'s Chelsea Lately: Melissa Gilbert, author of Prairie Tale: A Memoir (Simon Spotlight, $26, 9781416599142/1416599142).

 


Television: FlashForward

Dominic Monaghan (best known as Charlie on the ABC series Lost) has joined the cast of FlashForward, starring Joseph Fiennes and based upon Robert J. Sawyer's novel (Tor, $7.99, 978081258034/0812580346). The show, which premieres September 24, "chronicles the aftermath of a global event in which everyone blacks out for 2 minutes, 17 seconds and has mysterious visions of six months into the future," according to the Hollywood Reporter.

 


Movies: The White Tiger; Cosmopolis

Hanif Kureishi will adapt Aravind Adiga's The White Tiger (Free Press, $14, 9781416562603/1416562605), winner of the 2008 Man Booker Prize, Variety reported.

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David Cronenberg (A History of Violence, Eastern Promises) "will bring Don DeLillo's novel Cosmopolis (Scribner, $14, 978-0743244251/0743244257) to the big screen," according to the Hollywood Reporter. Although the movie has not been cast yet, filming is expected to begin next year in New York and Toronto.

 



Books & Authors

IndieBound: Other Indie Favorites

From last week's Indie bestseller lists, available at IndieBound.org, here are the recommended titles, which are also Indie Next picks:

Hardcover

The Blue Notebook: A Novel by James A. Levine (Spiegel & Grau, $23, 9780385528719/038552871X). "How could James Levine, a doctor and medical researcher at the Mayo Clinic, capture the hidden life of a 15-year-old Indian prostitute? This fictional journal of Batuk, a precocious girl sold into sexual slavery, reveals a life few could imagine and depicts the power of youthful imagination to escape an intolerable reality."--Darwin Ellis, Books on the Common, Ridgefield, Conn.

The Flying Carpet of Small Miracles: A Woman's Fight to Save Two Orphans
by Hala Jaber (Riverhead, $25.95, 9781594488672/1594488673). "Through her clear and expressive writing, Hala Jaber shares not only the sights, sounds, and horror of the war in Iraq but also her conflicting emotions--sorrow and joy, triumph and defeat, exhilaration and exhaustion--as her search through war-torn Baghdad for war orphans turns into a desperate search for the child she could never conceive. A real-life thriller that will keep you on the edge of your chair."--Gary Colliver, Windows on the World--Books & Art, Mariposa, Calif.

Paperback

Love Begins in Winter: Five Stories by Simon Van Booy (Harper Perennial, $13.99, 9780061661471/0061661473). "Simon Van Booy's second collection offers intricate stories brimming with supple and mysterious energy. One never knows with Van Booy's distinctive style what will happen next, what will break your heart and heal it at the same time, what symbolic gesture will be rife with coincidence. His writing is pitch-perfect, and he has such great respect for his characters. Van Booy deserves many more fans."--Marie du Vaure, Vroman's Bookstore, Pasadena, Calif.

For Ages 4 to 8

Animals Up Close by Igor Siwanowicz (DK Publishing, $19.99, 9780756645137/0756645131). "Animals Up Close is a very cool book, full of absolutely startling photographs of the world's cutest, creepiest, and most fascinating animals. It also offers interesting tidbits and statistics on creatures you've heard of, as well as those you haven't. A great way to acquaint yourself with the unseen world around you."--Amanda Hurley, Inkwood Books, Tampa, Fla.

[Many thanks to IndieBound and the ABA!]


Storytellers: Neil Gaiman, Newbery Winner; Ashley Bryan, Wilder Winner

Neil Gaiman is a storyteller.
The kind of storyteller
Who causes you to lean in
And listen to the story of a hand in the darkness
Holding a knife
And a child called Nobody Owens
Raised by ghosts in a graveyard--
The story that won the 2009 Newbery Medal.
On a Sunday night in July in the Windy City,
Neil Gaiman tells the story of a boy in a Sussex town in England,
"Raised by librarians among the stacks."
During his school holidays,
His parents would drop him at the library on their way to work,
Where he sometimes ate a sandwich in the library car park
But mostly feasted on J.P. Martin, Margaret Storey, Nicholas Stuart Gray,
"Victorian authors, Edwardian authors."
He loved A Wrinkle in Time, he said,
"Even though they messed up the first sentence in the Puffin edition:
'It was a dark and stormy night
In a small town somewhere in America.' "
Young Neil had a graveyard in his Sussex town,
Where a witch was buried.
Well, not a witch, he later discovered,
But rather three Protestant martyrs
Burned by order of a Catholic queen.
But the legend stayed with him.
Gaiman began his graveyard story 20 years ago
When his son Michael rode his tricycle
Among the headstones of that same graveyard.
But the author felt he wasn't ready yet to tell that tale.
He resumed it in December 2005.
He finished the story in February 2008.
Michael is now taller than his father;
He is 25; the same age Gaiman was when he started
The Graveyard Book.
As he wrote the last two lines, he realized,
"I had set out to write a book about a childhood . . .
I was now writing about being a parent.
The fundamental most comical tragedy of parenthood:
If you do your job properly . . .
They won't need you anymore.
If you did it properly,
They go away . . . .
I knew I'd written a book that was better
Than the one I had set out to write."
 
Ashley Bryan is a storyteller.
The kind of storyteller
Who causes you to shout out
In call-and-response--
To find the music in language.
"You are my people!" he begins, on that same July night in Chicago.
He leads us in a reading of Langston Hughes' "My People."
Ashley Bryan tells the story of a boy raised in the Bronx,
Among  four- and five-story buildings, where
"Everyone looked after everyone as family."
"You are my family," says Ashley Bryan.
"Family need not be based solely on blood."
As its most recent winner,
He spoke of being humbled and deeply moved as a member of
The Laura Ingalls Wilder Award family.
As a small child, he and his two siblings,
The first three of six children,
Used orange crates to cart books home from the library.
In kindergarten, he made his own first book,
An alphabet book.
He was writer, illustrator, binder and . . .
Distributor!
"It was the rave reviews
For these limited editions, one-of-a-kind, that kept me going."
Years later in the 1960s, when Bryan was in his 40s,
Jean Karl, founding editor of children's books at Atheneum ,
Visited him in his studio.
She "was excited by my varied approach to texts," Bryan recalled.
She offered him a contract and encouraged him to
Tell the African tales in his own words.
Bryan's challenge was "to find a way
To keep the voice of the oral traditions alive
As it is carried over into the book."
His lead was poetry.
In elementary school in the Bronx, he'd been taught,
"The soul of poetry, like song, is experienced in hearing it."
He leads us then in a call-and-response to
Eloise Greenfield's "Things."
Though a candy gets eaten
And a sand castle washes away,
The lines of a poem stay:
"Still got it
Still got it"
He says the refrain in a na-na-na-na-na
Children-on-the-playground voice.
We do, too.
When one leading art institute told a 16-year-old Bryan
That "it would be a waste to give a scholarship to a colored person,"
He applied to Cooper Union,
Where the artist prepares an exam in three parts:
Drawing, architecture, and sculpture,
Displays it on a tray,
Then leaves, letting the work speak for the unseen artist.
Ashley Bryan was accepted.
He leads us now in
"Dreams" by Langston Hughes.
"Hold fast to dreams
For if dreams die
Life is a broken-winged bird
That cannot fly . . . "
Since he left Cooper Union, Ashley Bryan has experimented.
He used tempura paints in his first book of African tales,
In the tradition of African sculpture, masks and the Bushman rock paintings;
Swift line brush paintings inspired by Hokusai
For The Dancing Granny.
Woodblock prints for his spirituals
And, in Beautiful Blackbird, collage.
"Although now my books are printed in the thousands," he says,
"It is the feeling of the handmade book
That is at the heart of my bookmaking.
I'd like you, holding one of my books, to feel that I am offering you
A one-of-a-kind gift that you'll treasure and share."
 
Neil Gaiman and Ashley Bryan are storytellers.
They tell stories that cause you to lean in,
Stories that cause you to shout out,
Stories for child and parent.
These join us together, the storytellers say,
And make us family,
Raised by our neighbors in four-story buildings,
Raised by librarians among the stacks."--Jennifer M. Brown

 


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