- Bostonist interviews Jonah Lehrer, who happens to be appearing at my store tomorrow evening at 7 pm. I’ve read the first few essays of his book Proust was a Neuroscientist and found them thought provoking. Much is made of how young he is (25!) but I’m more impressed with what a Renaissance man he is. Hasn’t the world become all about specialization? Where would we be without people like Da Vinci and Thomas Jefferson, people who explored everything?
- More Shalom Auslander, this time an interview in the San Francisco Chronicle.
I don’t think, though, that our morality comes from the Ten Commandments, and I always wonder when I hear a priest or rabbi claim that it does, that these frankly obvious rules are what guides him. I always think, “Really? Without Deuteronomy you wouldn’t know killing was wrong? You mean you’d be killing people if not for those tablets? S-, someone call the cops.”
- Ed reviews this new guide to litblogs being published this month The Bookaholics’ Guide to Book Blogs: The New Literary Force. Wait, I’ve got the force?
- Also, people either seem to love or hate Mailer in teh comment’s of Ed’s post on Mailer’s death. I don’t have a problem with Ed expressing his opinion on Mailer. Why so many people are pissed, I don’t know. I’ve never read Mailer, his book have never appealed to me.
Category Archives: The Book World
Movies Based on Books
I’m reading this article in the New York Times about Noah Baumbach’s forthcoming film Margot at the Wedding when I see this bit:
Two of his next projects, as it happens, are based on existing texts. He is co-writer of Mr. Anderson’s next film, an animated version of Roald Dahl’s “Fantastic Mr. Fox,†and he has been hired to write an adaptation of “The Emperor’s Children,†Claire Messud’s novel set among the floundering younger generation of New York literati, for Ron Howard to direct.
Excuse me? It’s not the Roald Dahl bit I question–they’re going to continue to make lame movies from his wonderful books for eons. It’s the Claire Messud bit. Directed by Ron Howard? Ugh. I thought the book good, but not as good as the critics claimed. I think that had to do with it coming out in a literary fiction vacuum. But Ron Howard? I’m expecting a mediocre rendition at best.
How crappy does Beowulf look? Maybe it will look better on the big screen?
And not to sound like a snot, but why are they adapting Julie & Julia for a movie? And why is Meryl Streep playing Julia Child? Yes, she is one of the finest actresses working today, but Julia Child? I think Julie Powell’s story worked as a blog, but not as well as a book. I found myself tired by the end. How is Nora Ephron going to work this into some cute love story anyway?
I shouldn’t complain. Several good books are being adapted into what look like great movies: No Country for Old Men (anyone see this yet?), Love in the Time of Cholera, and Atonement (on the fence about this one). Even the previews for The Golden Compass look pretty good. Anything y’all are excited about?
Country Living
Who’s going to see the Coen Brother’s No Country for Old Men? The New York Times review just want make me want to see it even more. I still haven’t read the book either. After being kicked in the head by The Road, I’m wary. Don’t get me wrong, I thought it one of the best books I read last year, so powerful. I just felt like I had to recover after reading it.
Welcome New Blog!
I’d be remiss if I didn’t welcome Schwartz Bookshops excellent new blog, the cleverly titled Inside the Flap. Plus we’re friends, so you know, scratching backs and whatnot.
Fast Monday Links
- I’m proud to present a site that focuses on reading locally–Meeting House: A Journal of New England Fiction. This week they present an interview with Ron Currie, Jr., the author of God is Dead, the story about God returning to Earth in the form of a Dinka woman. It’s been on my TBR pile for a while now. I might have to move it to the top.
- For those who love memoirs, read Judith Jones’s The Tenth Muse: My Life in Food. It’s truly wonderful. Knopf has posted an interview with Jones for your enjoyment. As you can see from the schedule, she’ll be reading at my store on November 13th. I’m quite excited to meet her.
- I wish Dumbledore had Troy McClure’s sexual proclivities (you may remember him from some of the funniest episodes of the Simpsons). It would be so much more interesting. I find myself not really caring.
Friday Miscellany
- Lucky Ed interviews Oliver Sacks in the latest Time Out New York.
He smiles and selects a track on his stereo to offer an example, finding a cover of “Shooby Dooin’ †performed by Woody Geist, a patient who has suffered from Alzheimer’s for decades but who sings with the polish of a suave ballroom crooner. “You can have profoundly demented people, like Woody here, who are still able to sing beautifully,†Sacks says. “But if you asked him if he knew this particular song, he might not recognize the title or the question or be able to answer.â€
- Ed also has just posted his most recent spate of interviews. It’s an impressive list including James Lipton, Naomi Wolf, and Steven Pinker.
- The LA Times loves Benjamin Percy’s Refresh, Refresh as much as I do. It’s the best book you haven’t heard of, one of my favorite books this year.
- Local boy makes good. Scott McLemee interviews Joshua Glenn, co-author of Taking Things Seriously. Glenn writes for the Boston Globe‘s Ideas section, one of the sections that still makes it worth subscribing to.
- The National Book Foundation has interviews with all of the NBA Award Finalists up on their website. They obviously sent out the same email to all of the fiction finalists, but their answers are pretty interesting.
- Mark Sarvas interviews via email Jane Gardam, author of the gem Old Filth as well as numerous other books.
- Critical Mass has posted John Freeman’s longish interview with John Updike. I like his dig at Roth when asked why he writes reviews: “I am too much of a professional to want to be locked in entirely with one novel after another. Roth does it that way, Styron did it. I like the mix.” I have a confession to make: I’ve never read any of Updike’s novels.
- Cat Fight. This regards a review of Tom Perrotta’s most recent novel The Abstinence Teacher, which I happened to have read a weekend or two ago. This was my first foray into Perrotta’s work. He’s local (lives in Belmont, which is two towns over) and a popular author with my co-workers. I found this book to be gripping in parts but oddly flat at the end.
- The Millions posts the Top Ten Most Anticipated Books.
TGIF
It’s been a long week. Working on the Holiiday Hundred (books that my store features for the holidays, usually what we consider the best books of the year) and staying up late to watch the Red Sox. I find that I’m too anxious to watch the games directly so I’ll read while in front of the television. Of course, this ends up with some really half ass reading.
I’ve hit a reading dead zone anyway. I’ve got piles and shelves of books, but none are screaming out to me “read me!” right now. Perhaps I need to read some non-fiction. I’ve got Steven Johnson’s Ghost Map about the cholera outbreak in 1854 and Mary Beard’s Roman Triumph. Aside from having a gorgeous cover, Beard’s book will fulfill my nerdy need to keep up with classics. Is anyone out there reading anything good?
Brief Reviews
Finished another couple of books over the weekend. I seem to be in this mode of picking books that I know I can read quickly. There’s something satisfying about that for me right now. Perhaps because work is getting so crazy. I’m never done it seems. We’re starting to plan for the holidays—I have to start picking the one hundred books which we feature starting around Thanksgiving this week! So I keep grabbing these books that don’t take too long to read, hoping for a satisfying read nonetheless. Can one find deepness in a quick read novel?
- The Curse of the Spellmans by Lisa Lutz– The second in this new series finds the Spellmans as dysfunctional as ever. There’s some nice character development as well as some hilarious escapades. This is just a fun series.
- The Kept Man by Jami Attenberg– Jarvis Miller’s famous painter husband has been in a coma for six years. Jarvis seems to be in one herself, not quite growing or changing. While parts of the plot seem a bit forced, the descriptions of Jarvis’s longing for her husband seem so genuine.
- The Eye of Jade by Dian Wei Liang– Set in present day Beijing, this first in a new detective series features Mei Wang, a modern, independent woman. She owns her own apartment and car and runs her own business, complete with a male secretary. Asked to find a Han dynasty jade of great value, she searches high and low through the city, delving into China’s history as well as her own family’s dark past. The mystery itself seemed only as a screen to write about the horrors of the cultural revolution. I liked the scenes of the back alleys, hutongs and noodle bars best.
- The Farther Shore by Matthew Eck– A small unit of American soldiers is separated from their command in a nameless city. Left to fend for themselves, the narrator Joshua Stantz recounts their wanderings, depicting the hopelessness of a city torn apart by war. The author’s own experiences give the story authenticity, making the slim novel feel like an epic.
Man Booker Prize
Ann Enright has won the 2007 Man Booker Prize for her novel The Gathering.
The Latest Reads
Once again, I’ve been plowing through some books. Here’s what I’ve been reading:
- The Outlander by Gil Adamson– I’d describe this book as a crescendo. It starts out slow, even though you begin with the main character on the run from her two vengeful brothers-in-law in 1903 northern Canada. Mary is nineteen and already a widow–widowed by her own hand. Its dreamy and pretty brilliant.
- An Incomplete Revenge by Jacqueline Winspear– The next installment in the Maisie Dobbs series, finds psychologist Dobbs investigating a series of crimes in the small rural community in Kent. I find this series soothing, as it’s always well-written, well-plotted, and full of an interesting cast of characters. Winspear didn’t disappoint with this latest.
- The Silver Swan by Benjamin Black (aka Jon Banville)– Perhaps a stronger book than Christine Falls (itself a strong debut in mystery), Black writes for an audience that doesn’t need all the answers handed to them. We find a reluctant Quirke, a pathologist in 1950s Dublin, trying to make sense of the suspected murder of a young shop owner, investigating against his own instincts. Black doesn’t rely on clichés and switchback plots to keep the book going. I hope he continues to write such gripping books.
