I first heard about Virginia’s Festival of the Book from Mr. Bookdwarf’s wonderful parents, who live and work in Charlottesville, Va. I have visited the city several times now and really love it. They have some of the best used book stores I’ve come across. I did not know how huge the festival was until I checked out their website here. Man, what a list of authors! Ron at Beatrice has posted several dispatches from an author attending the FOTB. The entries are spread out over a few days, but worth reading. I’ll see if I can scare up some other such links. Or let me know if you come across any.
Author Archives: bookdwarf
Some Bullshit
Alex Beam has an article on Harry Frankfurt’s On Bullshit in today’s Globe. I don’t know about you, but I find it annoying that they just don’t print the word.
Foer foolery
I wish this was available online, but unfortunately there is no link to this interview with Jonathan Safran Foer. I came across it in Ingram’s Advance magazine, which consists mostly of ads and lists of new books coming the next month, but they usually include an article or two. They have a 3 page interview by Amy Cox Williams with JSF that reveals some really interesting stuff. Here’s some of the more salient bits.
ACW: When I interviewed you for your first book, you mentioned that your next book was set in a museum. Is that the second book you were just referring to—or is it Extremely Loud?
JSF: It’s all been the same book believe it or not; it just changed. There’s an analogy that I sometimes use, and I think it’s a good one…I was a philosophy major [ed.–oh god] and in philosophy there’s this famous problem of a boat that leaves a port and over the course of its travel every single plank in the boat is replaced, so that when it gets to the new port, let’s say it’s leaving from London and going to New York, when it gets to New York not a single piece of wood taht was in the original boat is in the boat that got to New York, so would you say that it’s the same boat or not? I mean you kind of have to say it is the same boat because what else could the passengers have come across on? On the other hand, what’s a boat if not everythking taht makes it up? SO it was the same thing with the novel. Every single word was replaced, and what’s going to be published in April has nothing in common, explicitly, with what I was working on two and a half, three years ago, but I know that I never threw one out and started another; it was happening through this process of replacing things. [ed.—a simple no would have sufficed here]
ACW: Just as in your first book there was a bit of yourself in that character. Do Oskar’s traits, his anxieties or interesting quirks, come from yourself?
JSF: Yeah. We’re actually amazingly similar [ed.–there’s shocking information]. When I was a kid I was very precocious and very weird, I guess. I used to have all these outfits I insisted on wearing, like bow ties and glitter vests [ed.—WTF?!], and I would wear rings on all my fingers. As I’ve gotten older, I guess the things that make me an individual are expressed much less explicitly. Like I think if you were to sit down with me now your first thought would not be, “This is a really interesting person.” I’ve had people who’ve read my book and then met me say, “Wow, you’re not really funny like your book is funny.” I think writing has been a way to express those things I am no longer comfortable or even capable of expressing in life. In a way, there’s also an analogy to the character, the renter who doesn’t speak but writes everything on paper, a lot gets pushed through that way.
God, I wish I could make this stuff up. There’s tons more, but I am having an off typing day. I will try to post more bits of the interview later today.
Another quickie review
I accidentally read a book this week. I had started the new Kazuo Ishiguro when I glanced at the galley for Garlic and Sapphires by Ruth Reichl. I couldn’t resist the allure! I am a food lover. Mr. Bookdwarf and I save up to go eat at fancy restaurants. I cook most nights of the week and make my own pizza dough. So to read the tales of Reichl’s tenure as the restaurant critic for the NYT was unresistable to me. And does she have stories to tell. I love her accounts of transforming herself into different characters to visit each restaurant. It’s also rare for a critic to let you see the real person, flaws and all, beneath them the critical veneer, but Reichl lets it all hang out. My only beef with the book, aside from the fact that the Penguin US site sucks and has no link to the book, is the cover.

Couldn’t they have done better? Her other two books look so much better! Anyway, I thoroughly enjoyed this book until the very end, where she sort of rushes to finish. If you love food, check out this book.
Now this is Rather interesting
Thanks Michael Sch-wab (heh, just kidding, don’t hit me) at Bookslut for showing me this article from the NYRB. James Goodale investigates the Independent review panels’ analysis of the Rather fiasco. It’s not at all what I thought had happened.
Edit away!
From a USA Today article on how books end up on bestseller lists:
“In many ways, editing yourself is the most important part of being a novelist. … For every page in a published novel, I wrote 10 that ended up in the trash.”
— Dan Brown from www.danbrown.com
Brown stats: 29 million copies of Da Vinci Code in print worldwide; more than 1 million of The Da Vinci Code: Special Illustrated Edition in USA
Too bad the entire book didn’t make it there.
The Elephant in the Room
Marc Cooper writes a passionate critique of not only George Lakoff’s bestseller Don’t Think of an Elephant, but also of the troubled Democratic party for this month’s Atlantic. Luckily, Powell’s has the entire review online since the magazine is subscriber only.
My dirty mind or they should reconsider the title of this book
This title leapt out at me among the deals in Publishers Marketplace: BUSH JUSTICE. Is it just me or does it not sound dirty? Here’s what the whole thing says: “NYT reporter Eric Lichtblau’s BUSH JUSTICE: The Remaking of the American Legal Landscape, about the unprecedented changes in the Justice Department since George Bush became president and their far reaching implications for the American legal system, to Hillel Black at Sourcebooks, in a very nice deal, by Ron Goldfarb at Goldfarb & Associates.”
Just a suggestion.
Bob & Dave
Veteran interviewer Robert Birnbaum speaks with film critic David Thomson over at the Morning News.
“And as you know movie people are not overly critical of their own passion. It’s a hot bath they want to jump into and stay there. This is a book that in many ways raises questions and worries. About the overall achievement and culture of film. It asks the question, ‘Is it really an art? Are we doing it justice when we treat it as an art? Or isn’t it something more complicated and a bit less than art?'”
“Wrong” About Japan
Kakutani scolds Peter Carey today about his book Wrong About Japan. She pretty much says that there is nothing redeeming about this book. Ouch. Seppuku anyone?
