Thanks to Moorish Girl for pointing me to this interview with the author of the beautiful novel Purple Hibiscus. This is the rare book that actually made me cry. She says that some of her favorite authors are “Paule Marshall, Amit Chaudhuri, John Banville, Nawal El-Saadawi, Graham Greene, Flora Nwapa, Bernard Malamud, Ivan Turgenev and the incredibly talented John Gregory Brown”. I am looking forward to reading more of her work.
Category Archives: The Book World
More than just the name of a vacuum cleaner
The tireless Dan Wickett got an interview with author Tom Bissell, whose new book God Lives in St. Petersburg looks really really interesting (I am trying to finagle a copy from my one source). I thought Chasing the Sea a fascinating account of his time in Uzbekistan. I’ve also read some of his pieces for Harper’s. Bissell is very talented.
Old but Good News
This could be old news to many, but I’ve been away for a week, so bear with me. Publisher’s Lunch reports this deal:
Andrea Seigel’s TO FEEL STUFF, a follow-up to her first novel LIKE THE RED PANDA, the story of a chronically ill young woman living in the infirmary at Brown University who is going through a kind of psychic puberty — while involved in an unusual love triangle with an a cappella star who was attacked in the knees with a crowbar, and a ghost who roams the infirmary, to Ann Patty at Harcourt, by Douglas Stewart at Sterling Lord Literistic (NA).
I read Like the Red Panda and thought it an impressive first novel. I also read her blog (which she redesigned in my abscence apparently). So congratulations to her!
Virgins aplenty
Sorry I am so uninteresting lately. Like I mentioned in previous posts, work is extremely hectic due to a co-worker out with a very serious illness. Plus I am going on vacation starting on Friday. Mr. Bookdwarf and I are off to Belize for a week and I cannot fucking wait. The snow here has not disappeared. The three and a half feet we got in January is still everywhere.
But on a brighter note, I really liked this article on Book Clubs by Li Robbins. Since everyone knows I work in a bookstore, they just assume that I want to either join or start a book club. Not so. I agree with her that it’s the solitary aspects of reading that I like. The same goes for movies. I have no need to pick it apart to death. I also admit I like Robbin’s cranky tone. We need more cranky writers!
Hag-arific
It’s not available online yet, but look for a review by the famed Old Hag in the NYTBR this Sunday. She reviews Home Land by Sam Lipsyte and seems to like it. I keep hearing more and more about this book. Maybe I should ask for a copy?
Update: Here’s the link to the review.
Ah youth!
The latest edition of Publisher’s Weekly reports that Diana McWhorter, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Carry Me Home in 2002, is writing a book set in her home state of Alabama. Why is this so exciting that it deserves a blog post? Because she is writing about my hometown and Werner Von Braun. Von Braun was the German scientist responsible for the V-2 rockets and our space program. He moved to Huntsville in 1950 and helped develop our ballistic missle program and our space program. Living on Redstone Arsenal, he also became Director of the Marshall Space Flight Center in 1960, where they developed the Saturn rockets. Today Marshall develops much of our space propulsion systems and also works on the International Space Station. In Huntsville, he was a big deal obviously. Huntsville is also home to the U.S. Space and Rocket Center, where yours truly spent some time as a cashier in the Museum shop at the tender age of 16 (a job I loathed as any teenager forced to wear a lame-ass uniform of khaki shorts and a polo shirt might be. At least in the summer I didn’t have to wear the flight suit). So as you can see, I am very excited about this book. I am glad that a native Alabamian is writing is as well, especially a Pulitzer Prize winning one.
WTF?
Do we need another set of book awards? Even if they are ‘high profile’? Reed Business Information thinks so. They are calling it the Quills and they even got NBC to agree to air the whole thing. According to Publishers Lunch, they want it to be like the Golden Globes or something. For fucksake!
There are 18 categories as well including something called Rookie of the Year, which I imagine is first time author?
Here is most of what Publishers Lunch has to say:
Nominations in most categories will come from 6,000 booksellers and librarians who subscribe to Reed-owned Publishers Weekly (drawing from a pool of books reviewed by Publishers Weekly). A committee will select nominees for the Book Club, Best Book to Film, and Design awards. Consumers will then vote, online and at retail, between August 15 and September 15.
The broadcast is characterized as a “celebrity-energized presentation in the fashion of the Golden Globes awards.” The program is being run by former Variety publisher Gerry Byrne, who underscores that “good television is based upon celebrity,” and notes their plan to tap the intersection between books and the culture at large to recruit top celebrities as presenters (and potentially nominees/attendees). A production team is likely to be named within the next month or so.
Byrne also notes the awards are meant to “complement the other literary awards-it will not usurp any of them.” In addition to being carried by the NBC-owned stations, which include 14 of the top markets, Byrne says the program will be offered to other NBC affiliate, and could “potentially could be offered to other stations outside the network.”
The awards themselves are a Reed-owned, for-profit venture, with revenue coming from sponsorships and table and event sales (and presumably some advertising in Reed’s magazines). But at least some proceeds from the event will fund the Quills Literacy Foundation, also run by Byrne, supporting new and existing literacy efforts. For the first year, Reed will “guarantee a certain amount of dollars” to the foundation.
An advisory executive council includes top publishing executives (Peter Olson, Jane Friedman, Larry Kirshbaum, Greg Josefowicz, Bob Miller, Jim Chandler, Avin Mark Domnitz, and Robert Gottlieb) alongside other “literacy-minded professionals from finance, media, entertainment, and education.”
A number of initiatives are planned, both in stores and on the NBC stations, to promote the nominated books and reading in general. Byrne notes, “The idea this year is to get it right. Once you get it right, you can do pretty much anything you want with it.”
So any opinions out there?
Small Island not so small?
Small Island by Andrea Levy just won the Whitbread prize tonight (they get £25,000! That’s $47,000!). This book has already won the Orange Prize as well. Of course the novel is not yet available here in the U.S. (due in April), but maybe a few prizes will encourage Picador to hurry up the production schedule.
The book biz
Posts might slow down for the next fews weeks—am swamped at work. But read this article by book rep John Eklund. He’s a book reader after my own heart. I too hate being marketed to when it comes to books. When a book hits the bestseller lists, it becomes less interesting to me as well (and I realize how dumb this is). But he has a passion for books and as long as there are still people like that out there, it can’t become completely awful can it?
Go read this post over at BookAngst. It ties into this a bit too. It’s all about how some ‘good’ books don’t sell well in the marketplace due to not enough marketing or whatever. People have gotten passionate in the comments. I feel like this is all connected. I’ve been giving the concept of ‘consumerism’ a great deal of thought lately (Beatrice pointed out this interesting article about it). Maybe there’s a longer post in here somewhere, along the lines of books, there are so many, such little time to read, market trends, etc. Unfortunately it will have to wait for a spare moment which I don’t seem to have these days.
Another Birnbaum interview
Robert Birnbaum has an interview with Louis de Bernières over at the Morning News. Louis de Bernières is author of Birds Without Wings, Corelli’s Mandolin, and The War of Don Emmanuel’s Nether Parts (my personal favorite).
