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Thursday, April 22, 2010

NPR: What We're Reading April 20-26

Each week NPR chooses 3-4 titles to read and review. This week Scribner's American Subversive is at the top of that list.

I have yet to read, but the more my friends get caught up in the Gawker-culture, the online writing business, and the general New York gossip - the more this seems relevant. However, it does seem odd to tackle terrorism and blogging as two central themes? Or not? I dunno I guess I'll have to read.



NPR describes the book:

In New York's downtown, Aidan, a press blogger for a Gawker-like empire, socializes with his frenemies in the city's media demi-world, gleaning gossip for his next day's posts. As the book opens, the journalists he drinks with, sleeps with and then writes about are all working overtime, trying to crack the case of a terrorist bombing that rocked midtown earlier in the week. Meanwhile, in Vermont, an earnest young woman scans the Internet, searching for the next corporate target whose destruction will, she believes, enable her radical-left terrorist cell to shock a complacent nation out of its stupor. When someone sends Aidan an anonymous tip about the bombing, complete with a photo of Paige, the alluring young radical, he sets out to break a real news story for a change. His hunt will bring these two very different people and value systems face to face.

Joe Matazzoni, senior supervising producer, Arts & Life says:

...New Yorkers and fans of New York stories like Sex and the City will enjoy the novel's spot-on skewering of the downtown media scene, a landscape of fashionable people and dumpy apartments.


How a political terrorism thriller gets comped to Sex and the City is beyond me.

The AP says "Goodwillie provides us with a triumphant work of fiction that's every bit as credible as what's happening in the country these days."

And goodreads.com seems to have a highly favorable review (of the paltry 7 people who seem to have read the book).

More pseudo celebs for the fall....


Olympian Johnny Weir to pen book


iVillage | Susan Boyle Memoir Secrets - iVillage

Friday, April 16, 2010

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Celebrity Books Galore

We've got a hefty (and eclectic) list of celebrity/psuedo-celebrity books coming out this fall - something for everyone I suppose...


Portia de Rossi
Portia de Rossi has an untitled memoir, which will discuss her struggle with eating disorders and coming out.

HODA: How I Survived War Zones, Bad Hair, Cancer, and Kathie Lee


Dionne Warwick
: The Amazing Dionne Warwick Story

Roseanne Barr: Roseannearchy

Alison Sweeney: The Mommy Diet

Buddy Valastro: Cake Boss


Bethenny Frankel: A Place of Yes



In Paperback:

STAR: How Warren Beatty Seduced America


And for you Music fans:

Rick Springfield: Late, Late at Night
From the man who brought you "Jessie's Girl" comes a story of depression, and of course, sex addiction.

Neil Young Journal (1945-1972)

The Collected Writings of Jim Morrison

Scott Weiland: Not Dead & Not for Sale
(of the Stone Temple Pilots)


In paperback:

Paul McCartney: A Life

And Misc:
Hunter S. Thompson - Fear and Loathing at Rolling Stone

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Suspence Queen: Mary Higgins Clark



I had the pleasure of meeting Mary Higgins Clark earlier this week - what a lady! She came in the room with such energy - and such a glow about her - at 82 no less!

She had such spunk and sass - throwing out jokes, laughing at how she first got rejected at Simon & Schuster, talking with such enthusiasm about her most current book (AND the next to come!).

She's a perennial favorite in the suspense writing world - she might have been the first recognizable adult author I knew by name because of my Mother would read her on our family vacations. She is the author of 29 suspense novels. Her first book with Simon and Schuster - Where Are the Children - is in its 75th printing! And her books have sold over 100 million copies. And from the looks of it, she's not stopping anytime soon!

Her latest book - The Shadow of Your Smile - comes out next Tuesday 04/13. And she'll be on the TODAY show on Wednesday 04/14.

I hope you enjoy the video above, in which she offers a quick bit of advice to aspiring writiers.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Indie Next List: Inspired Recommendations from Indie Booksellers


Indiebound.com is the community for independent bookstores and their patrons - helping people find and share independent bookstore across the United States. They aim to promote mainstreet economies by promoting consumers shop from their local bookstore.



Each month they release a list of titles nominated by independent bookstores from around the country, called the INDIE NEXT LIST.




Twice a year they also create lists for reading group recommendations, and seasonally they list poetry and childrens selections.

Scribner's SOMETHING RED - mentioned in a post from yesterday - is a Indie Next List Notable. They've also got a video of the author speaking about her book:

Monday, April 5, 2010

Bookstore I Love: WORD



So this weekend I had the pleasure of stopping by WORD bookstore in my neighborhood of Greenpoint, Brooklyn.

The store is a delight - well lit, cozy, with a superb (and wide) selection of books, even though the store itself is small. They have everything from bestsellers to the little known literary books; from an eclectic array of gift books to a unique collection of local interest books.

You'll find index cards with hand written recommendations on the shelves, which adds a personal touch and makes me inclined to pick up those highlighted titles (I bought THE BEST OF EVERYTHING because of just such a note).



Check out their calendar and you'll see that they're not just a bookstore, but also seem to function as a community center with Saturday morning running group, movies, crafting hour, storytime at the park, Greenpoint writers group meetings, basketball league, bananagrams in the basement, and much more. A bookstore as a secular place for people to gather and connect is something I've always thought is genius - and what makes this bookstore such a gem.

And of course they do the usual bookstore things - host launch parties, signings, readings and the usual plethora of author visits - ranging from bestselling authors, literary masters, YA writers, and for earth day eco friendly books. Their basement provides event space. They also have a store book club, which meets twice monthly.



As I said earlier, I bought their recommendation THE BEST OF EVERYTHING by Rona Jaffa; the notecard indicated that every woman in publishing should read this book - and I'm so glad I picked it up. It's the story of 5 women at a publishing house in the 1950s (pubbed in 1958). It's like Mad Men for women...or Mad Women, if you will. Its the story of ambition, desire, and the inner longing of 20 something women trying to make a go in the publishing world - often amidst sexual harassment, bitchy women coworkers, awful office parties, blind dates, even for one character raising a child as a single mother. The author says in a new introduction:

"Back then, people didn't talk about not being a virgin. They didn't talk about going out with married men. They didn't talk about abortion. They didn't talk about sexual harassment, which had no name in those days."

She interviewed 50 women to see if they had the same experiences and she realized that all these issues were apart of their lives, too. I'm thoroughly enjoying, and I wouldn't have picked up without the recommendation posted on that notecard.



While they have recommendations, carry the bestsellers, and even some esoteric titles, if they don't have a book you like in store they say:

"That's okay. We order books all the time and can usually have what you want in 1-2 days. In fact, you don't even have to leave your house to see if we have a book in stock. Just search for it using the search tool in the upper right hand corner. You'll be able to see if it's currently in stock and if so, how many are here. Then, whether it's in stock or not, you can buy it but select "pick up in store," so there's no shipping charge, and you still get to see our smiling faces. So easy!"

Located at:

126 Franklin Street

click address for google maps view of location. If you're in nyc, go visit!!! While you're in the area make a day of it - you're near great restaurants, parks, bars...they recommend:

Peter Pan Donuts (the best donuts in NYC). The Diamond (best beer selection). Lomzynianka (when in Little Poland). Coco 66 (drinks and food). The Pencil Factory (just a block away). Lulu's (free personal pizza with every beer). The Habitat (mac n' cheese happy hour). Amarin Cafe (good Thai food). Papacitos (good Mexican). Pretty much everywhere has a few good vegetarian options.

Rave review of Scribner's SOMETHING RED


In stores now!

Read the nytimes review here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/04/books/review/Cokal-t.html

"Gilmore glides smoothly from one perspective to another, giving equal and anxious weight to each, as she chronicles a few months in the lives of a family that wishes itself to be deeper both experientially and politically.

...Gilmore has pulled off a remarkable feat: not of fusing the personal and the political but of showing why they’re so difficult to reconcile."

Friday, April 2, 2010