Category Archives: The Book World

Come Meet Joshua Glenn!

I’ve long admired Joshua Glenn who wrote for the Ideas section of the Globe. His new book looks fantastic. He’s reading at the Harvard Advocate on Thursday. Details are below:
WHAT: Release party to celebrate The Idler’s Glossary by Joshua Glenn.

WHO: Joshua Glenn is a Boston-based author, editor, and former Globe columnist and blogger. Introduction by the philosopher Mark Kingwell; design and illustrations by the cartoonist Seth.

WHEN: Thursday October 23. 5 pm to 8 pm. OPEN TO THE PUBLIC.

WHERE: The offices of The Harvard Advocate, 21 South Street, in Harvard Square.

WHY: This little book is a great stocking-stuffer!

What to Read Next?

A plethora of interesting new books showed up on my desk today. What should I read after Olympos (about three quarters of the way through now)?

  • The Forever War by Dexter Filkins: Everyone I’ve spoken with who has read Filkin’s book has nothing but high praise. I’ve avoided reading most books about the Iraq war but this one seems like a must read.
  • Everything but the Squeal: Eating the Whole Hog in Northern Spain by John Barlow: The author lives in Galicia and decides to drive around eating hog. Sounds like a winner to me. I’ve never read Barlow before but this is published by FSG so it has to be good, right?
  • The Fires of Vesuvius by Mary Beard: I love her. She’s what I wish I could have become if I had stuck with my degree. She writes exciting prose, not the typical dry scholarly stuff that I had grown used to in school. This book explores Pompeii–what it was like before the volcano.
  • Under Pressure: Cooking with Sous Vide by Thomas Keller: Yes, I’m the kind of cooking nerd who likes to read cookbooks. Will I ever tackle sous vide? Probably not, but at least I’ll know how.
  • The Journey by H.G. Adler: I need to read more literature in translation and what better way to start than with with this lost masterpiece of Holocaust literature?
  • Hyperion by Dan Simmons: Should I take a break from science fiction or continue on the Simmons path. I also have a galley of his upcoming book Drood, which explores the last years of Dickens.

I love my job.

Nerds Unite

I’m back in nerd-dom, reading Dan Simmon’s follow-up to Iliium, which I had read on vacation. Olympos picks up shortly after the end of Ilium. I swear if I tried to explain the plot, your eyes might start to bleed. I tried to explain it to Mr. Bookdwarf, but after 5 minutes he just told me to stop. It’s complicated, involving the Trojan War, sentient organic robots from Jupiter, a band of humans, and the Greek gods. Exactly. I’m loving it however. I’ve not read anything else by Simmons. Got anything to recommend?

Awards, Awards, Everywhere There are Awards

Award season has begun in the literary world. Last week, the Nobel Prize for Literature was announced: Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio. Right. Most Americans immediately hit google when they found out.

Then we had the Man Booker Prize on Tuesday: Aravind Ariga for The White Tiger. I was rooting for Amitav Ghosh’s amazing The Sea of Poppies (can’t wait for the second in the trilogy), but am okay with Ariga nabbing the win.

Yesterday the National Book Award Finalists were announced in Chicago:

Fiction

Aleksandar Hemon, The Lazarus Project (Riverhead)
Rachel Kushner, Telex from Cuba (Scribner)
Peter Matthiessen, Shadow Country (Modern Library)
Marilynne Robinson, Home (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Salvatore Scibona, The End (Graywolf Press)

Nonfiction

Drew Gilpin Faust, This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War (Alfred A. Knopf)
Annette Gordon-Reed, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family
(W.W. Norton & Company)
Jane Mayer, The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals (Doubleday)
Jim Sheeler, Final Salute: A Story of Unfinished Lives (Penguin)
Joan Wickersham, The Suicide Index: Putting My Father’s Death in Order (Harcourt)

Poetry

Frank Bidart, Watching the Spring Festival (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
Mark Doty, Fire to Fire: New and Collected Poems (HarperCollins)
Reginald Gibbons, Creatures of a Day (Louisiana State University Press)
Richard Howard, Without Saying (Turtle Point Press)
Patricia Smith, Blood Dazzler (Coffee House Press)

Young People’s Literature

Laurie Halse Anderson, Chains (Simon & Schuster)
Kathi Appelt, The Underneath (Atheneum)
Judy Blundell, What I Saw and How I Lied (Scholastic)
E. Lockhart, The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks (Hyperion)
Tim Tharp, The Spectacular Now (Alfred A. Knopf)

I find the nonfiction a good, steady list. The fiction however is quite interesting. You’ve got two older, seasoned writers, one who is in the middle of a burgeoning career, and two debut novelists. Incidentally, they’re the only two books on the list that I’ve read. I liked The End and Telex from Cuba and see good careers ahead. Also, here’s a great interview with Salvatore Scibona. I believe I got to be the first person to ask him to sign his book ever. That’s pretty cool.We’ll see what happens on November 19th, when they announce the winners.

Sci-Fi News!

In perusing i09, my favorite Sci-Fi blog, I came across two stories which I couldn’t wait to share!

First, in this interview, Ridley Scott says he’s filming a version of Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. “Because when you look at the two players or visionaries in the field, at that moment [it] would be Huxley and it would be Orwell and that was 60 or 75 years ago. They were predictions in a way, they weren’t aware at the time, but they were predictions.”

Second, they reported that AMC will be showing a television version of Kim Stanley Robinson’s Red Mars. “”This fits in with our bigger vision of wanting series that feel like cinematic one-hour movies,” said Christina Wayne, senior vp original series and miniseries at AMC. “We’re always looking for big genres but to do them in slightly different ways so they feel fresh and new,” she added.” They also announced another project in development, based on Carter Beats the Devil by Glen David Gold’s book about magician Charles Carter and his role in President Harding’s death.

Linkage

My office is about to have a party to welcome Jeff, the new owner of my store. So while I’m swilling champagne, busy yourselves with this:

Two Great Pieces of News!

  1. The New York Times profiled go-getter Jessica Stockton Bagnulo today. The Fort Greene Retail Association threw her a fundraising party recently, where neighbors as well as authors were in attendance. She’s also gained a partner–Rebecca Fitting, a 34-year-old sales representative for Random House. I can’t wait to see their store one day!
  2. Bookselling This Week has written about the scholarships we finagled out of Ingram for Emerging Leaders in bookselling to go to the Winter Institute. I visited Ingram in August and left very impressed with both their operation and the people that work for them. I’m truly excited that we can now offer six scholarships to young booksellers for such a great educational opportunity.

Back in Action, Limited

I got back from the Berkshires last Friday, but extended my vacation all through the weekend. It was all very relaxing, though I didn’t read as many books as I expected. Nonetheless, we had a great time out there, eating and drinking at many great restaurants, reading by a beautiful waterfall, hiking around the same woods as Thoreau once did. I have to also mentioned the fantastic Jenny Holzer exhibit at MASS MoCA, which was truly unusual and thought provoking.

Tomorrow I turn 33 years old. It’s a strange number. According to Wikipedia, “this number has the meaning that good will always triumph over evil”. Hah! Maybe this is my year. Maybe it means Obama will win the election in November!

Our regional trade show starts on Thursday and continues through Saturday. I’ll be there, not near a computer, so that means another week of silence. Monday life returns to a more normal pace finally. So expect more posting and commentary on books then.