Newtonville Books Community Blog

June 27, 2008

Free Food For Millionaires

Filed under: Staff Pick — Sylvia @ 2:58 pm

min jin lee

Free Food for Millionaires by Min Jin Lee packs all the right stuff for a great summer read: rich folks, extravagant weddings, infidelity, and fancy hats. Make no mistake though, this is no breezy beach read. It also involves more serious themes such as interracial dating, loneliness, sacrifice, and self-discovery. One of the most memorable scenes is when Korean American protagonist Casey Han shows up unannounced at her white boyfriend’s apartment. What ensues is a moment of pure comic poetry. I felt horrible, I cringed, but I laughed, all at the same time. Lee’s debut novel is smart, funny, and far reaching.

free food for millionaires

June 25, 2008

Boston Globe Horn Book Awards

Filed under: Literature News — FormerDanielle @ 10:57 am

The Boston Globe Horn Book Awards were announced on June 18th in the categories of fiction and poetry, nonfiction,  Picture Book,  and this year a special citation was given to Shaun Tan’s “wordless graphic novel,” The Arrival.  The other winners included Sherman Alexie’s The Absolutely True Story of a Part-Time Indian in the category of Fiction and Poetry, Peter Sis’ The Wall for nonfiction, and Jonathan Bean’s At Night for picture book.

 For more information on the awards and a list of past winners visit the Horn Book website by clicking below.

http://www.hbook.com/bghb/current.asp

June 23, 2008

Cody’s Books closes for good

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 11:06 am

Cody’s Books Closes After 52 Years in Berkeley
By Michael Howerton
Friday June 20, 2008

Cody’s Books, founded on Euclid Avenue in Berkeley in 1956, moved to Telegraph Avenue, expanded to Fourth Street in 1998 and San Francisco in 2005, closed on Telegraph in 2006, closed in San Francisco the following year, moved to Shattuck Avenue in March, and then, on June 19, 2008, went out of business.

For complete article, click here.

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June 22, 2008

New Dennis Lehane Novel and Movie Adaptation

Filed under: Literature News — Sylvia @ 9:04 pm

dennis lehane
Author Dennis Lehane’s novels have already been adapted as Mystic River and Gone Baby Gone, and Martin Scorsese is currently working on a movie version of Shutter Island with Leonardo DiCaprio. Now, Sam Raimi has joined the Lehane express, signing on to produce (with an eye to direct) Lehane’s next novel, The Given Day (due in stores this fall), about Boston in 1919 as a confluence of events, including an influenza outbreak brought back by WWI soldiers and an impending police strike. The trade points out that Raimi is continuing to develop a revival of the Jack Ryan franchise at Paramount, and that Sony sees this Given Day deal as a way of continuing their relationship with the director of their very lucrative Spider-Man franchise.
any given day

Greg Dean Schmitz | June 20, 2008

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/news/1736403/weekly_ketchup_gears_of_war_robert_downey_jrs_next_comic_role_and_more

Political Books Released This Summer May Affect Election

Filed under: Literature News — @ 3:21 pm

Want Political Truth? Buy a Book

PW’s Political Calendar: June–October

by Dermot McEvoy — Publishers Weekly, 6/16/2008

Over the past several years, a funny thing happened to the press and congressional oversight—they’ve been preempted by the publishing industry. Not so long ago, it was the New York Times publishing The Pentagon Papers. It was the Washington Post dramatically uncovering the saga that would become Watergate. It was Congress quizzing John Dean about Watergate or Oliver North about Iran-Contra.

Since 2001, the press and Congress have acquiesced to the White House on the most important topic of this decade—the war in Iraq. Access to war zones was restricted; journalists were issued subpoenas by federal prosecutors; more than one major journalist was thought to have done the White House’s bidding in justifying going to war. So it was not too surprising that the biggest kerfuffle to hit the Bush administration was orchestrated by Public Affairs and the publication of Scott McClellan’s What Happened, an insider’s look at how this government has operated for the past seven years. In fact, one of the theses of McClellan’s book is that the press had become “complicit enablers” of the administration in its push toward war. Some journalists, like ABC’s Charlie Gibson and NBC’s Brian Williams, have insisted they were doing their jobs, but Katie Couric of CBS disagreed and said the media’s collaboration in the run-up to war “was one of the most embarrassing chapters in American journalism.”

As we look back over the past several years, it isn’t just McClellan’s book that has been changing the journalistic landscape. There were books by Richard C. Clarke, Thomas Ricks, George Packer, Lawrence Wright, George Tenet, Douglas Feith, Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, Ron Suskind, and Bob Woodward that exposed, albeit well after the fact, the sleight-of-hand that the administration used to rally the public in its march to war.

“Publishing has certainly been especially effective and active in the post 9/11 period,” says McClellan’s publisher, Peter Osnos of Public Affairs. “The space that books provide for telling stories in detail and with reflection is certainly one of the reasons. The news cycle is now so truncated and so often dominated by noise and wheeze rather than depth that reporters, like Ricks, Packer, Wright and others, turn to books, and we should all be grateful. Journalism is a great line of defense in our society, and if book publishing plays a role that is both salutary and sound in business terms, here’s to that.”

“Following the 9/11 attacks,” adds Dan Simon, publisher of Seven Stories, “the government and the media were doing a terrible job holding themselves and each other accountable. It took a bit longer to do it this way, but in the end [the public outcry caused by these books] had the same kind of seismic effect as Watergate did, and the publishing industry is to a large degree responsible.”

“I think that certain editors and certain publishers are using their platforms to perform a watchdog or advocacy function while also keeping an eye on the bottom line,” says Leigh Haber, v-p/editorial director at Rodale/Modern Times and publisher of Machiavelli’s Shadow: The Rise and Fall of Karl Rove by Paul Alexander (June) . “It is remarkable that books are continuing to have an enormous impact on exposing injustices and bad practices of all kinds, and in fact, even breaking that news, with help from Politico, et al.”

Simon, who publishes several left-of-center authors including the Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn, finds book publishing to be akin to the will of the people. “Book buying is not unlike people voting,” he says, “except without the lobbyists. It’s basically direct democracy as you get to register your vote online or at your local bookstore.”

Below you’ll find some of the political books being published between now and Election Day. In there, somewhere—it might be the next Bob Woodward tome or the biography of Karl Rove—there will be explosive allegations that will rock this presidential election. That, you can count on.

Collateral Damage: America’s War Against Iraqi Civilians by Chris Hedges and Laila Al-Arian (Nation Books)                   “A devastating exposé of a military occupation gone awry.”—Ruth Baldwin, editor

Just How Stupid Are We?: Facing the Truth About the American Voter by Rick Shenkman (Basic)                                “Rick Shenkman has never been afraid to take on America’s most cherished myths—and here he takes on perhaps the biggest myth of them all.”—Lara Heimert, editor

In Justice: An Insider’s Account of the War on Law and Truth in the Executive Branch by David Iglesias (Wiley)          The U.S. Attorney for New Mexico dumped by the Bush administration has his say. “Until you read this book, you won’t truly understand how easily Rove and his gang could throw aside effective government or the future of the Republican Party—not to mention the life’s work of a good and honorable man—for the slightest gain in political power.”—Eric Nelson, senior editor

 The Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule by Thomas Frank (Metropolitan) (Aug.)
“From the author of What’s the Matter with Kansas, a jaw-dropping investigation of the deliberate and far-reaching devastation conservatives have visited on our government as they’ve sold it off to the highest bidder.”—Sara Bershtel, associate publisher

Blue Dixie: Awakening the South’s Democratic Majority by Bob Moser (Holt/Times)
“Bucking the doomsday trend of the past, Moser shows why the GOP’s nearly 30-year stranglehold on the Southern vote is fraying.”—Robin Dennis, senior editor

Religion, Race, and the American Presidency, edited by Gaston Espinosa (Rowman & Littlefield)
A prescient title for this election season.

Unintended Consequences by Peter Galbraith (Simon & Schuster)
“This is a breathtaking and dismaying description of the storm the next president will inherit from this misguided Bush war, which has exposed our weakness and strengthened our enemies”—Alice Mayhew, editorial director

The Third Term: Why John McCain Is Really Just More George W. Bush by Paul Begala (S&S) “The CNN commentator and strategist demonstrates how a McCain presidency would be the ultimate nightmare déjà vu—four more years of Bush.”—David Rosenthal, executive v-p/publisher

Yes We Can by Garen Thomas (Feiwel & Friends, June)

“Even though published on a crash schedule, this biography [of Barack Obama] is both deeply felt and beautifully presented. The content and design will compel, inspire and inform readers of all ages—but is specifically written for the 9–up audience.”—Jean Feiwel, publisher

 For a full list of titles, go to: http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6570185.html

June 19, 2008

Amazon Shows Its Clout

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 4:05 pm

One of the most entriguing debut novels of the season has received incredible support from Amazon.com, helping it along its way to bestsellerdom.

sawtelle1.jpg

Web Seller’s Hype Boosts New Author
By JEFFREY A. TRACHTENBERG
June 19, 2008; Page B10

First-time fiction authors are lucky if their publisher orders an initial print run of 15,000 copies. But in a sign of Amazon.com Inc.’s growing clout with readers, a debut novel championed by the e-commerce site has gone into its seventh printing — a total of 90,000 copies — a week after its publication.

‘The Story of Edgar Sawtelle,’ a coming-of-age story set in Wisconsin, received enthusiastic support from Amazon.com.
Published June 10 by Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, “The Story of Edgar Sawtelle” is a classic coming-of-age tale of a mute boy and his dog set in rural Wisconsin. But at a time when readers are increasingly buying only brand-name authors, the 566-page literary novel by Wisconsin native David Wroblewski wouldn’t normally be expected to enjoy heavy demand. (HarperCollins Publishers is a unit of News Corp., which also owns Dow Jones & Co., publisher of The Wall Street Journal.)

Instead, the book is poised to be one of the breakout titles of the summer. “It’s doing fabulously well and we’ve already reordered,” says Sessalee Hensley, fiction buyer for Barnes & Noble Inc., the nation’s largest bookstore retailer. “I haven’t had to reorder many books this spring and summer but this is an immediate hit.”

Driving that unexpectedly heavy demand has been strong reviews and promotional support from Amazon.com. The Web retailer chose the book as one of the best books of June and aggressively hyped it, including by posting a long and enthusiastic blurb from best-selling author Stephen King.

Complete Wall Street Journal article here.

June 18, 2008

Demand for Russert’s books cleans out bookstores

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 3:01 pm

russ1.jpg
Tim Russert’s unexpected death on Friday, June 13th, sent fans rushing to bookstores to get their hands on copies of “Big Russ & Me” and “Wisdom of our Fathers.” Stores sold out quickly, and publishers are rushing to reprint more copies of both high-demand titles.

For full story, click here.

June 17, 2008

Keith Gessen’s Debut, All the Sad Young Literary Men

Filed under: Staff Pick — FormerDrew @ 3:23 pm

Gessen, the co-founder of lit mag n+1,has delivered a funny, smart
biting satire of generational malaise as his debut.  Mark, Sam and
Keith are all (relatively)young, smart, and anxiety stricken about
the world, politics, and history, but mostly about girls.  Gessen
captures the mood of the 1990s and our current decade in the
misadventures of his characters, one of whom shares the author’s name
and bio.

June 15, 2008

Great New Collection by David Sedaris

Filed under: Literature News — Sylvia @ 11:49 am

david sedaris

Whether he’s lancing boils, getting crabs from thrift store pants or sitting in a hospital waiting room dressed only in his underwear, one thing is clear: David Sedaris is not shy about sharing those embarrassing, cringe-worthy incidents that members of the general population tend to save for diaries or therapists.

David

In his sixth collection of essays, When You Are Engulfed in Flames, Sedaris continues to bare his body and soul, detailing the aforementioned boils and crabs as well as an uncomfortable incident in which he accidentally spits a lozenge into the lap of his seatmate on an airplane.

book

You can find out more and also read an excerpt of the new book here:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=91310499#91324235

June 13, 2008

2008 IMPAC Dublin Literary Award Announced

Filed under: Literature News — FormerDrew @ 9:25 am

 

Rawi Hage’s De Niro’s Game has won the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, announced yesterday in Dublin.  Hage’s novel, about two friends growing up in war-torn Lebanon, is the first debut book to win since Andrew Miller’s Ingenious Pain in 1999, and the first debut novel to win since Edward P. Jones’ The Known World  in 2005.  Look for De Niro’s Game in paperback this August.

Read the official announcement: http://www.impacdublinaward.ie/News.htm

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