PW just alerted me to the fact that the seventh and supposedly final Harry Potter finally has a name—Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows—though still no publication date. Perhaps she could have gone with Harry Potter and the Billions He Made Me?
PW just alerted me to the fact that the seventh and supposedly final Harry Potter finally has a name—Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows—though still no publication date. Perhaps she could have gone with Harry Potter and the Billions He Made Me?
Only a few days left before X-mas and it’s getting crazier each day in my store. I’m looking foward to the quiet of next week, but that will not be until after I go to Hartford to see the family. I’m reading when I can. I’ve finished Sigrid Nunez’s The Last of Her Kind—it’s amazing, go and read it. I’m in the middle of Demon Theory by Stephen Graham Jones, nominated for the next LBC round by Scott of Slushpile.
Also, take a look at the list of Underrated Writers that Jeff has put together. It’s a great list full of writers that I’m definitely going to add to my TBR pile.
Gavin Grant and Kelly Link’s UNDER THE RADAR: The Best of Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet, an anthology of the best fiction, nonfiction. and poetry that has appeared in the ‘zine, with an introduction by Dan Chaon and contributions from Karen Joy Fowler, Karen Russell, Jeffrey Ford, James Sallis, and Nalo Hopkinson, to Jim Minz at Del Rey, by Renee Zuckerbrot at Renee Zuckerbrot Literary Agency (NA).
I’m a fan of Kelly Link and Gavin Grant. It’s a great looking collection and I’ll be sure to get a copy when it’s available.
Here is the Times’s list and also Time’s list.
The San Francisco Chronicle posted their list of the best books of the year this weekend. Their top pick is Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. “His tale of survival and the miracle of goodness only adds to McCarthy’s stature as a living master. It’s gripping, frightening and, ultimately, beautiful. It might very well be the best book of the year, period.” That Oscar Villalon has some good taste.
Posting will be sporadic this week due to the madness that is the holiday shopping season. I’m leaving you with some links that I would like to read myself, if I didn’t have too much to do.
It looks a little different and you might see some more changes as I get used to the place, but here it is, Bookdwarf’s new home. See you later comment spam!
If anyone has tried to email me in the past day or so and it bounced back, my inbox was full. I’ve fixed the issue, so email away. Also, I’m switching the blog over to WordPress and there may (almost certainly) be some technical problems. Any advice to make it easier? I’ll also take suggestions for any new features or changes you’d like to see.
Any honest observer of the book business in Britain will spend much of any year sunk in head-shaking gloom about its condescension to readers, its timid addiction to every passing fad, and its urge to throw good money after feather-light ephemera. Come Christmas, and the chain-store displays wear these marks of shame as badges of pride. Yet plenty of exciting and enduring books do break through the barrier of hype.
. It’s true what they’re saying though. Publishers, at least the larger houses, tend to grab onto the latest trend as if they were at lost at sea on a dinky raft. Look at the unfortunate trend of ‘He’s Just Not That Into You’ books. I’ve seen at least 4 more either in response or mocking or just trying to catch the coattails of the bestseller. Celebrity memoirs and celebrities writing books for kids are other trends that pop into mind. You know what? I don’t really care what Toni Spelling ‘recollects’. But with the current throw-a-million-books-at-the-wall-and-see-what-sticks approach to publishing, I doubt things will change.
Everyone is busy putting together their lists. The Globe has both a fiction and non-fiction list. Why the non-fiction list is twice as long is beyond me, though I like Gail Caldwell’s list. The Washington Post has a Top Ten list, half fiction, half non-fiction. However the Denver Post has a list of 50 Reads to Wrap, top fiction, and a list of top books on Iraq.