Author Archives: bookdwarf

I’m Just Not Into Any of This

From yesterday’s deals at Publisher’s Lunch:

enni Kosarin’s HE’S JUST NOT IN THE STARS: Wicked Astrology and Uncensored Advice for Getting the (Almost) Perfect Guy, an irreverent guide that reveals the inner workings of your boyfriend, your potential boyfriend, your husband, potential husband, and even your ex-boyfriends and ex-husbands, by combining both his Sun and Venus signs, to Mauro Di Preta at Harper Entertainment, by Molly Lyons and Joelle Delbourgo at Joelle Delbourgo Associates (NA).

C’mon. Enough already.

More Lame Excuses

Finally, a holiday weekend. And the rain has stopped. At least for this hour. I saw sunlight this morning for about 5 minutes and seriously just stared at it. With the long weekend, I may not be able to post much next week. Tuesday David Sedaris is appearing at my store and I get to do some crowd control (my new career as a bouncer. fun!). Our event schedule slows down (thank god) for the Summer, but we still have some great ones. Kelly Link and Steve Almond will be appearing on June 22nd, for instance. And then on Thursday I head to NYC for Book Expo America until the following Monday. I was going to try and procure a laptop (from the laptop fairies perhaps?) in order to blog while there, but was not able to find one. I will see what I can do and take copious notes on all the goings on in NYC. I get to go to some fun cocktail parties and dinners, though, and meet great authors. What a fun job I have. So, you will be hearing from me somewhat sparsely over the next week and a half.

The Better Late than Never Globe Review Review

The fiction/non-fiction ratio was way off last Sunday—only 2 fiction reviews and books that have been reviewed in many other publications. I know that some people like to read multiple reviews of the same book to see the varying opinions, but at the same time, how many reviews do we really need of Haunted, Chuck Palahniuk’s new book? I don’t know. But I do know that whereas the Globe does pretty well with their non-fiction coverage, occasionally even reviewing books that are overlooked in other papers, their fiction coverage just plain sucks. There’s no daring. There are exceptions of course. They did after all do a nice piece on Richard McCann’s Mother of Sorrows. But week after week, I turn to these pages and find the same reviews I find in other papers on the 4 pages. If you had 4 pages, what would you spend it on? Let’s take a look at the Globe‘s choices, shall we?
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Don’t Make me Harass You….

Don’t forget that tomorrow Reagan Arthur, Kate Atkinson’s editor at Little, Brown, will be appearing at the Litblog Co-op tomorrow, Thursday, May 26th. She’ll answer questions and discuss all sorts of interesting book things. Be there or be square.

Smorgasboard

While I am working on the Globe Review review, here are some links for your leisure.

Tireless Dan Wicket has 2 new links. In the first, he interviews David Karashima, who translated Hitomi Kanehari’s Hebi ni Piasu into the English version, titled Snakes and Earrings. There’s an interview with Kanehari forthcoming. In the second, he interviews 9 editors of literary journals.

Have I ever mentioned Powell’s Review-A-Day? They post a new review each day from several magazines, including The Atlantic Monthly, The Christian Science Monitor, and TLS. Some of these are only available if you buy the magazine, so it’s a nice deal.

Uncle Red has one of his trademark lengthy interviews with novelist Kevin Guilfoile, whose first novel Cast of Shadows was recently published.

And everyone should go over to the LBC’s website. There’s an interesting discussion (ahem, fight) over what is literary, what is mainstream, etc. Also, the author of Case Histories Kate Atkinson, her editor , and her agent will be making appearances soon.

Lame Excuses

I’ve been remiss in getting the Globe review together for the past 2 weeks. My apologies for that. It’s not that I don’t like doing it or that I am planning on stopping. Just got too busy with work. And I am off this afternoon to Woodstock NY for some overdue family time. Yes, my mother, father, sister, brother-in-law, and Mr. Bookdwarf all in a small house with 1 bathroom surrounded by hippies. Hopefully I will have some stories when I return, as well as this coming Sunday’s review review.
And thanks everyone for the historical books recommendations. Any other suggestions? I loved Crimson Petal and the White, if that helps.

Reviews of 3 books I’ve Read in the Past Week

I’ve been plowing through books lately, too fast to add them all to the ‘Books I am Reading’ column. Maybe it’s the springtime weather. Here’s what I’ve been reading.
I finished My Cold War by Tom Piazza last week, and found it wonderful. It’s the story of John Delano, a history professor at a small New England school. He teaches what others call “history mcnuggets”, gimmicky glimpses of the surface of history. That’s what his whole life has been, though, surface only. A part of him shut down and never woke up. At one point of the book, he sets off to see his estranged brother, with whom he hasn’t spoken in 8 years. Delano spends the drive to see him narrating it as he goes along, as if he were observing, rather than experiencing. Piazza has a wonderful eye for the nuances of people. He can penetrate to the heart of a person with a few simple words. This was a great book and I can’t wait to read what Piazza writes next.

Then I picked up a book that has been sitting on my shelf at work for some time, Hosack’s Folly: A Novel of Old New York by Gillen D’Arcy Wood. I always enjoy a good historical novel, so I was ready to immerse myself in some Old New York. Set in the 1820s in Manhattan, Wood follows a cast of characters that include: Dr. David Hosack, the doctor who attended Alexander Hamilton during the fatal duel with Aaron Burr, runs Columbia Medical School and Bellevue Hospital; Arthur Dash, young assistant to Hosack; his fiancée Vera Laidlaw and her father, an extremely wealthy man; Virginia Casey, a young woman wishing she could breakout of her staid life; and her father, Eamonn Casey, an Irish man whose risen from poverty to run the Herald newspaper. About to launch himself into politics, he has teamed up with an architect with a scheme to build an aqueduct. Fresh water will improve the lives of everyone, and then get him more votes. The plot unfolds as a ship laden with yellow fever makes it into the docks and politics rather than common sense influences the reaction. With this cast of characters and history, the book had much potential, but Wood wastes them with a more generic plot. Albert Dash, the young handsome doctor and botanist, and Virginia, the young woman secretly in love with Dash, have several scenes out of a bad tv movie.

“I have heard of absinthe as a drink, taken for pleasure,” she said, daring to interrupt him.
Albert frowned at her. “For pleasure? I think no. The wormwood is a bitter flower.”
Yes, you have brought me a bitter flower, she thought.

There’s too much cliché throughout the book. Plus it ends rather predictably, even though Wood makes the effort for a surprise ending.

After my disappointment with Hosack’s Folly, Mark Spragg’s An Unfinished Life seemed the perfect antidote. An uncomplicated tale, 70 year old Einar Gilkyson lives on a ranch with his aging best friend Mitch, an invalid mauled by a bear. He reluctantly takes in his daughter-in-law and the granddaughter he never knew he had when they show up unannounced one day. Jean and her daughter Griff fleeing Jean’s abusive boyfriend arrive in Wyoming when they have no place else to turn. Jean had fallen asleep at the wheel, rolling it, killing Einar’s son Griff, an event she has never forgiven herself for. Whereas I enjoyed the pace and simple prose, the book ultimately feels just a bit too thin, though its still a beautiful book. The character’s flaws to be overcome, and even Einar’s gruffness with the heart of gold underneath feel too neat in places. But Griff is the best part of this book. Spragg outdoes himself, writing affecting scenes as Griff tries to win over her grandfather. The plain, clear writing evoke the landscape of Wyoming, leaving the reader with the impression of land as its own character in this novel.

End of the Day Weirdness

Here I am sitting in my office at the end of a very long Monday, flipping through the growing piles of Fall catalogs. I come across this in the Miramax Books catalog: Junior: A Novel by Macaulay Culkin. Seriously. Here’s what is says:

In a dizzying kaleidescope of words and images, actor and writer Macaulay Culkin takes readers on a twisted tour to the darkest corners of his fertile imagination. Part memoir, part rant, part comedic tour de force, Junior is full of hard-won wisdom of Culkin’s quest to come to terms with the awesome pressures of childhood mega-stardom and family dysfunction. He understands that “having fun and being happy are two totally different things,” yet at the same times he warns, “the end of the world is coming—and I’m going to have unfinished business.” Searingly honest and brainteasingly inventive, Junior is breathtaking proof that Culkin has found his own utterly original voice.

Well then. I don’t know what to say.

Read This!

The LitBlog Co-op announced the pick for ‘ReadThis!’ yesterday. It was a book I raved about when I read it, Case Histories by Kate Atkinson. Some people are claiming that since Atkinson won a Whitbread several years ago and has a larger audience in the UK, we haven’t fulfilled our mission. This controversy even made it into today’s Publisher’s Lunch. I did not vote in this selection, but I still stand behind what I percieve the purpose of the LitBlog Co-op to be, mainly to draw more attention to books. A healthy discussion on books is great, but I do bristle at the mention of being a sell-out. I loved Case Histories. That I know. Should another book have been our first selection? We’ll never know. We’re an evolving group with many voices. Each voice gets heard, there too. So expect to read about the other nominees and those that dissent with our pick. We invite everyone’s opinion of course. After all, you don’t like the book, you don’t have to read it. This was still a democracy last time I checked. Just quit with the sell-out crap.

LBC countdown

Stay tuned for the unveiling of the very first LBC ‘Read This!’ selection. It should be happening very soon. Any minute now. Keep checking. I swear you won’t be disappointed.