Archive for January, 2015

RA Alert: Children’s Books
Make A Move

Monday, January 26th, 2015

Screen Shot 2015-01-25 at 2.17.40 PM  Screen Shot 2015-01-25 at 2.19.47 PM

Librarians who regularly look at Amazon’s daily accounting of “Movers & Shakers” know how unusual to see several children’s titles suddenly dominate the list. Sunday was one of those exceptions. The 100 titles on the rise was full of books for the toddler crowd.

Why the sudden attention? A bookseller with a point to make sent parents on a buying spree. Last week Time Magazine posted a list of the 100 Best Children’s Books of All Time. Their top picks? Where the Wild Things Are, The Snowy Day, Goodnight Moon, and Blueberries For Sal.

These tried-and-true (and old) titles are not the ones that ruled Amazon, however. Instead, it’s newer titles, including Maps by Aleksandra Mizielińska and Daniel Mizieliński (Candlewick Press, 2013) and Rosie Revere Engineer by Andrea Beaty, illus. by David Roberts (Abrams, 2013; OverDrive Sample) – titles Time completely overlooked.

Jordan B. Nielsen, a children’s book buyer for The powerHouse Arena bookstore in Brooklyn and a blogger on The Huffington Post took exception to Time ‘s selections. “A curmudgeon’s voice took hold in my head as I clicked through the list: The Wild Rumpus is still in vogue? Must we bid the Moon Goodnight once more? Surely piling on one more commendation will fell The Giving Tree!”

She offered her own list of “20 New Classics Every Child Should Own.”

Her description of Rosie Revere, Engineer shows why the Mover & Shaker list is a buzz:

“With all due respect to the Pink brigade, here’s hoping Rosie Revere, Engineer elbows one or two princesses right off the bookshelf. One hardly knows what to be more excited about here: that this story features a young girl enthralled with math and invention, or the book’s overall message that failure is a key stepping stone to success, so long as you don’t give up. Colorful and sweet, this tale of creativity and perseverance will delight parents and daughters alike.”

Who wouldn’t rush to buy that one?

Maps gets this recommendation: “At the bookstore where I work we order it by the case and still cannot keep it in stock. A book kids and adults can pour over together, finding new details every time.”

Nielsen’s list offers a strong counterpoint to Time‘s  golden oldies (for more new titles to recommend, check EarlyWord Kids Correspondent Lisa Von Drasek’s various lists of “best books to give kids you don’t know very well.”)

A Two-Author Week on Jon Stewart

Monday, January 26th, 2015

After a several weeks of an author drought, The Daily Show ramps up its book coverage with two authors appearing this week: Jill Leovy, on Tuesday, and Sarah Chayes on Thursday.

Screen Shot 2015-01-25 at 12.11.33 PMAs we reported last week, Leovy’s Ghettoside (RH/Spiegel & Grau; OverDrive Sample), a gripping journalistic investigation into the murder of a young black man in Los Angeles, is getting strong coverage in The New York Times and on NPR. The author’s appearance with Stewart should bring her to the attention of an even wider readership. Holdings and holds vary across the country with some libraries yet to buy, some with light holds, and others with holds as high as 11:1. Fair warning: Ghettoside seems destined to be an important book on an important conversation that will continue for years to come. As The New York Times put it in their Sunday cover, “Leovy’s relentless reporting has produced a book packed with valuable, hard-won insights — and it serves as a crucial, 366-page reminder that ‘black lives matter,’ showing how the ‘system’s failure to catch killers effectively made black lives cheap.’”

Screen Shot 2015-01-25 at 12.10.47 PMSarah Chayes’s Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security, (W. W. Norton) has gotten far less media attention although NPR’s All Things Considered did a story on Jan. 16th and The Washington Post gave the book a generally favorable review on the same day. Holds are light in libraries we checked, but Stewart can be relied upon to create at least a short-term bump in demand. Certainly Chayes’s book, which identifies corruption as the link between a number of political hotspots spiraling out of control, provides Stewart with a wind-up pitch he can hit out of the park.

A Tale of Two #1 Best Sellers

Saturday, January 24th, 2015

Fulfilling rumors from yesterday, The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins, (Penguin/Riverhead; Thorndike; BOT Audio ClipOverDrive Sample), is an instant #1 NYT best seller, debuting at that spot during its first week on sale. In a slight adjustment to the rumor, it arrives at #1 on the Combined Fiction list, but not on the Hardcover Fiction list. On that list, the number one spot is still held by Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See, (S&S/Scribner; Thorndike; S&S Audio), on the list after 37 weeks, representing another unusual trajectory, the slow and steady rise.

Is The Girl on the Train actually a debut, as is widely claimed? Not according to Gregory Cowles in the NYT‘s “Inside the List” column, it can only be counted as a debut thriller, since, as Hawkins herself says in an NPR interview, she previously published romantic fiction under a pseudonym (The Wall Street Journal identifies her alias as Amy Silver; WorldCat lists all three of Silver’s titles as only published in the U.K. and only held in U.K. libraries).

Still, a book by an author with no identifiable track record arriving at #1 during it’s first week on sale is a major feat (it wasn’t until “debut” author Robert Galbraith was revealed as actually being the famous writer of a certain series of childrens book that The Cuckoo’s Calling hit best seller lists, several months after publication).

As we noted earlier, to our knowledge, there’s been only one debut in recent history to arrive at #1 in its first week on sale, Elizabeth Kostova’s first book, The Historian, (Hachette/Little, Brown). It debuted on the hardcover list in 2005, back before there was an ebook list, so technically, that record still holds.

If you look at other lists, the story is different. On the PW/BookScan list,  The Girl on the Train is #2, after Saint Odd by Dean Koontz (RH/Bantam) and All the Light We Cannot See is at #3.

9781439172568_2bcdf  9781400205837  9781591847397_dbd77

The other debut novel on the new hardcover fiction list is The First Bad Man by Miranda July, (S&S/Scribner; S&S Audio), arriving at #6, after a barrage of media attention, not all of it positive. The best seller list annotation makes it sound like Fifty Shades of Grey, “A houseguest forces a passive woman into a bizarre but liberating sexual relationship.” Reviewing it, the NYT’s Michiko Kakutani said, “The novel starts off tentatively, veers into derivative and willfully sensational theater-of-the-absurd drama — part Pinter, part Genet — and then mutates, miraculously, into an immensely moving portrait of motherhood and what it means to take care of a child.” A few libraries are showing heavy holds.

On the Combined Nonfiction list, Ghost BoyThe Miraculous Escape of a Misdiagnosed Boy Trapped Inside His Own Body by Martin Pistorius (Simon & Schuster, 2011; OverDrive Sample) debuts at #5, long after its original publication, due to attention from the new NPR show, Invisibilia, (see our earlier story). Several libraries have ordered additional copies (it is now available in trade paperback) because of  heavy holds.

Debuting on the Combined Advice, How-To & Miscellaneous list at #8, is a title that some libraries have not yet ordered, Picture Your Prosperity, by Ellen Rogin and Lisa Kueng, (Penguin/Portfolio; Penguin Audio, 1/13/15). It’s been covered in the business press (the NYT Business section, and in Forbes).

Books Set to Explode,
Week of Jan 26

Friday, January 23rd, 2015

Arriving next week are two explosive books. Ghettoside, by L.A. Times journalist Jill Leovy, investigates how our criminal justice system fails African Americans and is already making headlines. The other, James Patterson’s latest, is literally exploding as part of a promotional stunt.

All the titles covered here, and several more notable titles arriving next week, are listed, with ordering information and alternate formats, on our downloadable spreadsheet, EarlyWord New Title Radar, Week of Jan. 26.

Holds Leader

9780316211130_dcb2dPrivate Vegas, James Patterson, Maxine Paetro, (Hachette/Little, Brown; Hachette Large Print; Hachette Audio)

In most libraries, the holds leader for this week is still lagging behind the holds leader from last week. In most libraries, the debut phenomenon, The Girl on the Train tops Private Vegas.

Perhaps feeling the heat, Patterson has crafted a new promotion. Private Vegas will literally explode, for the fan willing to pay $300,000 for the privilege (also included, a trip to Vegas and dinner with Patterson). The less well heeled can sign up for a chance to win a self-destructing eBook. Others can get a similar thrill by checking out library eBooks.

Media Attention

9780385529983_bd29dGhettoside: A True Story of Murder in America, Jill Leovy, (RH/Spiegel & Grau; RH Audio; OverDrive Sample)

Michael Connelly’s cover blurb, “Gritty, heart-wrenching … Everyone needs to read this book, ” is one you might expect to find on a novel, but this book is nonfiction, an investigation into the murder of a young black man in Los Angeles by an L.A. Times reporter. Flavorwire picks it as one of “10 Nonfiction Books That Will Define the Conversation in 2015″ and it seems to be doing just that, with advance coverage that includes:

New York Timesreview by Dwight Garner – Jan. 22

L.A. Times — Review, “Ghettoside focuses on one L.A. murder to make case for more policing” – Jan. 22

New York Times Book Review Cover review – Jan. 25

Features are also planned on NPR:

NPR Weekend Edition – 1/24

NPR Fresh Air – 1/26 or 1/27

Picks of the Week

9780062072948_439b2The Secrets of Sir Richard Kenworthy, Julia Quinn, (HarperCollins/Avon; HarperLuxe; OverDrive Sample)

A February LibraryReads Pick:

“At a dreaded music recital, a cellist catches Sir Richard Kenworthy’s eye, and he determines to marry her. Iris Smythe-Smith is a smart cookie and rightly suspicious of Sir Richard’s motives when he comes courting, but finds herself falling for his charm. Things seem to be working out well until Iris finds out what a big secret Richard is keeping.” — Sharon Redfern, Rockville Public Library, Vernon, CT

9781627791991_67ddbThe Sasquatch Hunter’s Almanac, Sharma Shields, (Macmillan/Holt paperback original; OverDrive Sample)

On O magazine’s list of “10 books to pick up now” (link not available) and Entertainment Weekly‘s “Must List” (it also gets an A in the review section):

“A young boy grows up obsessed with the creatures known as Bigfoots — understandable, considering his mother ran away with one — and goes on to raise a very unusual family in this wildly fantastical debut novel.”

9780451471475_c55f3I Was Here, Gayle Forman, (Penguin/Viking Juvenile; OverDrive Sample; Listening Library)

A People pick (note, it is a YA title, which People doesn’t mention, attesting to its crossover appeal)

“‘It’s not your fault.’ So ends Meg’s suicide note to Cody. Still, Cody can’t help but feel guilty — how could she not have known that her best friend was suicidal? But when Cody goes to Meg’s college to pack up her things, she realizes there’s a lot she didn’t know. A heartbreaking novel about coping with loss from the bestselling author of If I Stay.’

9780544315495_b2fafThe Jaguar’s Children, John Vaillant, (HMH; RH Audio; OverDrive Sample)

Reviewed by Alan Cheese on All Things Considered, 1/20/15

IndieNext pick:

“Vaillant has established his reputation as an accomplished writer of nonfiction, and he now brings his considerable talent to this debut novel. There are no easy moments in this story told by Hector, a young man engaged in an illegal border crossing inside a sealed tanker truck. Vaillant uses Hector’s narration to bring the frequent brutality of the illegal immigration experience to light in visceral detail, engaging both the reader’s sympathy and revulsion, which linger long after the last page is turned.” — Fran Keilty, The Hickory Stick Bookshop, Washington Depot, CT

9781602862524_57e05Wolf Winter, Cecilia Ekbäck, (Perseus/Weinstein; Recorded Books)

IndieNext pick:

“Maija, her husband, Paavo, and their daughters, Frederika and Dorotea, leave Finland to settle in Lapland in the beautiful area near Blackasen Mountain. One day, Frederika discovers the body of one of the villagers. Was he killed by wolves or was he murdered? What powers does the mountain have? The harsh ‘wolf winter’ brings the settlers together to survive, but what tragedies, secrets, customs, and vengeance are they hiding? When Maija and her family arrived at the mountain, readers were told, ‘This was the kind of land that didn’t know how to let go.’ Ekb?ck’s intriguing tale of Swedish Lapland in 1717 gives insight into the land and people of the far north and is also hard to let go.” — Barbara Theroux, Fact & Fiction, Missoula, MT 

THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN is #1

Thursday, January 22nd, 2015

Girl on the TrainWe’re hearing rumors that the debut rapidly racking up holds in libraries, The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins, (Penguin/Riverhead; Thorndike; BOT Audio ClipOverDrive Sample), will hit the tomorrow’s NYT best seller list at #1.

UPDATE: EarlyWord just received confirmation from the publisher that it is indeed an instant best seller, debuting on the Feb. 1st list, to be released online tomorrow.

This makes it only the second debut in recent history to arrive at #1 in its first week on sale (the record was set in 2005 by Elizabeth Kostova’s The Historian).

The book it is often compared to, Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn’s third novel, also made its debut on the list at #1 in June, 2012.

Author Paul Hawkins is one of the speakers at the upcoming ALA Midwinter Meeting, on the LibraryReads/AAP panel (sorry, that event is now completely booked). She will also sign in Penguin Booth #4823 on Jan. 31, from 3:00 to 4:00 pm.

THIS DARK ROAD TO MERCY Nominated for An Edgar

Thursday, January 22nd, 2015

9780062088253_d693eAmong the six nominees for an Edgar in the Best Novel category, one stands out as a pleasant surprise. Although it contains elements of suspense, Wiley Cash’s This Dark Road to Mercy (HarperCollins/ Morrow; HarperLuxe).  is not primarily a mystery.

It was a LibraryReads pick last year, with the following recommendation,

“Cash’s second novel is as good as his first [A Land More Kind than Home]. In this story, we meet Easter and her sister Ruby, who have been shuffled around the foster care system in Gastonia, North Carolina. Then their ne’er-do-well father whisks them away in the middle of the night. I was on the edge of my seat as I followed the girls’ tale and hoping for a safe outcome.” — Robin Nesbitt, Columbus Metropolitan Library, Columbus, OH

The full list of nominees in the Best Novel category:

This Dark Road to Mercy by Wiley Cash (HarperCollins/ Morrow; HarperLuxe)

Wolf  by Mo Hayder (Grove/Atlantic; Thorndike)

Mr. Mercedes by Stephen King (S&S/Scribner; S&S Audio; Thorndike)

The Final Silence by Stuart Neville (Soho Press)

Saints of the Shadow Bible by Ian Rankin (Hachette/Little, Brown; Thorndike)

Cop Town by Karin Slaughter (RH/ Delacorte)

Several LibraryReads picks were nominated in other categories:

Dry Bones in the Valley, Tom Bouman, Norton; Thorndike) — Best First Novel

“A body has been found in an elderly recluse’s field, neighbors are fighting over fracking, and meth labs and heroin dealers have settled deep in the woods of Officer Henry Farrell’s Wild Thyme Township. Bouman’s prose reveals not only the beauty of northeastern Pennsylvania, but also abject poverty and despair. A startling debut rich in setting and character with an intricate plot that will stay with readers after the last page.” — Jennifer Winberry, Hunterdon County Library, Flemington, NJ

The Life We Bury, Allen Eskens, (Prometheus/Seventh Street Books) — Best First Novel

“In this well-crafted debut novel, Joe Talbert has finally left home, but not without guilt over leaving his autistic brother in the care of his unreliable mother. A college assignment gets the young man entangled in a cold case, racing to clear the name of a Vietnam veteran. Characters with layers of suppressed memories and emotions only add to the suspenseful plot. Looking forward to more from this Minnesotan author!” — Paulette Brooks, Elm Grove Public Library, Elm Grove, WI

World of Trouble: The Last Policeman Book III, Ben H. Winters, (Quirk Books)  — Best Paperback

“Still the last policeman, Detective Hank Palace tirelessly pulls together clues from crime scenes and interrogates witnesses to find his missing sister. Winters paints a believable picture of a world awaiting its end thanks to an asteroid on a collision course. A great series for mystery and science fiction lovers, as well as anyone looking for a pre-apocalyptic tale without a single zombie.” — Jenna Persick, Chester County Library, Exton, PA

The Black Hour by Lori Rader-Day, (Prometheus/Seventh Street Books) — Mary Higgins Clark Award

“This first novel about two broken people is a psychological thriller like the best of Alfred Hitchcock. Amelia Emmet is a professor desperately trying to recover from a gunshot wound, and Nathaniel Barber is a student struggling to come to grips with his mother’s death and a lost love. Their journey, told in alternating chapters, is riveting and full of surprising discoveries. Highly recommended.” —Mattie Gustafson, Newport Public Library, Newport, RI

Live Chat with Debut Author,
M. O. Walsh

Wednesday, January 21st, 2015

We had a great chat with Neal; he is as thoughtful as you would expect based on his book. Scroll down to see what you missed.

 Live Chat with M. O. Walsh, MY SUNSHINE AWAY(01/21/2015) 
5:02
M.O. Walsh: 
Please do support The Poser! Cheers!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:02 M.O. Walsh
5:02
[Comment From janet_schneiderjanet_schneider: ] 
Thanks Nora and Neal!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:02 janet_schneider
5:02
M.O. Walsh: 
I know Jake. I went to school with him I remember reading the first draft of that book. So awesome that y'all will be talking with him.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:02 M.O. Walsh
5:02
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Thanks Nora! Neal, it was great to "meet" you!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:02 VNesting
5:02
M.O. Walsh: 
Are you kidding? This was awesome. No need to thank me. Thank y'all!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:02 M.O. Walsh
5:02
Nora - EarlyWord: 

Sadly, we have to end now.


Our next book is The Poser by Jacob Rubin. We’ll chat with Jake on March 4th.

Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:02 Nora - EarlyWord
5:01
M.O. Walsh: 
Ha. That would be great. I'd love to meet everybody.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:01 M.O. Walsh
5:01
Nora - EarlyWord: 

Thanks, everyone for such a great chat.


Thanks, Neal for your thoughtful answers. We’re looking forward to February 10th, when librarians will be able to put MY SUNSHINE AWAY into readers hands

Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:01 Nora - EarlyWord
5:01
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I am afraid I am out of that loop -- but librarians can contact you via your web site and slip you the password!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:01 Nora - EarlyWord
5:00
M.O. Walsh: 
What I want to know is, will there be a secret party in Chicago for ALA where all the hip librarians go? And, if so, what is the password?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 5:00 M.O. Walsh
4:59
Nora - EarlyWord: 

NO!

I mean, OF COURSE!





Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:59 Nora - EarlyWord
4:59
M.O. Walsh: 
Can I ask a question?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:59 M.O. Walsh
4:59
M.O. Walsh: 
Sure. Read and write. Understand that the purpose of writing is to give people pleasure. Understand that the path to this is from sentence to sentence. And that the best books are those that effect the heart more than the mind. And don't let rejection get the best of you. Ha.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:59 M.O. Walsh
4:56
[Comment From James P.James P.: ] 
Any advice for young writers?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:56 James P.
4:56
Nora - EarlyWord: 
As you said, it's all in interpretation -- that just went from sounding weird to really great!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:56 Nora - EarlyWord
4:55
M.O. Walsh: 
Low Residency MFA programs are where most of the classes are online, but student all get together with faculty for a month or so out of the year for classes. SO, it is kind of like distance learning with 'low residency' requirements. Our residency is always abroad, though, This year we are going to Cork, Ireland!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:55 M.O. Walsh
4:54
Nora - EarlyWord: 

Your "day job" title is "Director, The Creative Writing Workshop, Traditional and Low Residency MFA Programs." I’m trying to figure out what the second part means!

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:54 Nora - EarlyWord
4:53
M.O. Walsh: 
Hi James!

Actually, I've not yet started on another novel. I have two half cooked ideas and several other little projects I'm working on but my main goal now is to enjoy this time of my life, spending time with my kids and doing things like this, talking to y'all, as this has been my dream since I was in the 8th grade or so.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:53 M.O. Walsh
4:51
[Comment From James P.James P.: ] 
Got another book up your sleeve?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:51 James P.
4:51
M.O. Walsh: 
I just think that everything is out of proportion during adolescence since teenagers have no frame of reference. Every love is the biggest, first love. Every rejection feels like the final one. So, negotiating those things is hard enough, but when you feel like the way people interpret your actions will define you forever, that makes it even harder.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:51 M.O. Walsh
4:49
M.O. Walsh: 
.....
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:49 M.O. Walsh
4:49
M.O. Walsh: 
Hi Pam-

Sure! Simply using the example of an adolescent boy, I think that there is a very fine line between being considered romantic and being considered creepy or a "stalker". You buy a girl flowers and you're romantic. You buy flowers one too many times and you're a stalker. This type of thing can crush you. The boy wants only for the girl to know of his affection. How people react to his actions can change the course of how people see him and, eventually, how he may see himself. ........
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:49 M.O. Walsh
4:47
[Comment From Pam, Public LibrarianPam, Public Librarian: ] 
In your video, you say you tried to capture what it is like to be an adolescent, which you did – and you add that it’s a time when interpretation is a big deal. I was fascinated by that. Can you expand on it?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:47 Pam, Public Librarian
4:47
M.O. Walsh: 
No. I'm really excited about that, though. The idea of anyone reading my book is weird enough to me, but to think of people in other countries reading it is just awesome. What a dream! I do know that Viking UK is really excited about it, though, and plan for it to be a lead title. Very cool. I also know that it took a long time to get a French publisher because most of the editors there though it was a bit 'too uplifting'. Ha. That seemed like a comment on the culture to me. My book wasn't dark enough. They like their existentialism over there!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:47 M.O. Walsh
4:46
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Ha! Maybe people in Britain will have the same reaction as Linda does from Maine.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:46 Nora - EarlyWord
4:45
[Comment From LindaLinda: ] 
I grew up in Maine, which is like another world entirely, but some of the early scenes especially, really brought me back to my childhood. Just something about the descriptions of kids hanging out outside in the 80s. It was very nostalgic for me in some ways.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:45 Linda
4:44
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Just posted the British cover.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:44 Nora - EarlyWord
4:44
Nora - EarlyWord
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:44 
4:44
Nora - EarlyWord: 

The book has been picked up to be published in other countries. The British cover is quite different from the American. Any thoughts on how the Brits might react to it?

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:44 Nora - EarlyWord
4:43
M.O. Walsh: 
Oh yeah. the heat is a real thing down here. I love this place and there are times that I wonder why any human can survive it. These are usually times when I am getting into my car on a black top parking lot in August at 3 p.m.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:43 M.O. Walsh
4:42
M.O. Walsh: 
Yes, there is a tour (11 cities, I think) from Feb 10-20th or so.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:42 M.O. Walsh
4:42
[Comment From janet_schneiderjanet_schneider: ] 
The sense of place (as LJ noted) comes through so clearly. The "earthiness" of the prose too, makes the reader almost feel the insects, humidity and stickiness... I grew up in South Texas and it reminded me of home so much. (And how we'd mostly stay inside in the air-conditioning in August.)
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:42 janet_schneider
4:41
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I think you have several events coming up, right Neal -- check his Web site -- http://www.mowalsh.com/CONTACT.html
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:41 Nora - EarlyWord
4:41
M.O. Walsh: 
That sounds great!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:41 M.O. Walsh
4:41
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Wish I could be at ALA Midwinter! Kind of funny to think of going all the way to Chicago to meet a Louisiana author though. Hope to see you somewhere in South Louisiana when the book is released. And maybe we can get you to come visit our library!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:41 VNesting
4:41
M.O. Walsh: 
I understand that the comparison is an honor, though, and I thank you for it.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:41 M.O. Walsh
4:40
M.O. Walsh: 
You know, in one of many moments of shame I'm sure you could pull from me, I've never actually read Pat Conroy. I know the name and the titles, obviously, but haven't actually read a book. In the way that y'all likely have way too many suggested books to read, my work as a teacher and writer provides me with a similar list. I actually spend way more time reading unpublished manuscripts that my students write than I do reading new published work. And, when I teach literature, I am often re-reading some of the classics. So, despite all the great things I've heard about Conroy, I've never gotten the chance to read him.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:40 M.O. Walsh
4:38
Nora - EarlyWord: 

Here is a question one of our participants sent in advance:

The tone and language of your book reminds me of the southern charm portrayed in Pat Conroy's novels. Is he an author you read and whose work you enjoyed?

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:38 Nora - EarlyWord
4:38
M.O. Walsh: 
I definitely think that there are misconceptions about Louisiana and the South, in general. But I am just as interested in some of the stereotypes that we embrace as I am the ones that make me cringe. I have found myself actually having to explain to people that I did not ride a boat to school before and chase alligators off the porch. That was kind of surreal to do. At the same time, though, if someone asks me if we eat alligator down here, I''ll be the first to say, Hell yeah! It's delicious! Let me get you the recipe for the dipping sauce."
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:38 M.O. Walsh
4:36
Nora - EarlyWord: 
No problem -- it's about having to explain it to outsiders, like LJ put it, the book “gives the reader an intimate understanding of the place as if it were a beloved but misunderstood grandmother.”
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:36 Nora - EarlyWord
4:35
M.O. Walsh: 
Awesome! OK, I missed a question about South Louisiana, I think.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:35 M.O. Walsh
4:35
[Comment From Sue D., St. Charles, MOSue D., St. Charles, MO: ] 
I plan to be first in line to get my ACR signed!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:35 Sue D., St. Charles, MO
4:34
M.O. Walsh: 
That will be great! I look forward to it.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:34 M.O. Walsh
4:34
M.O. Walsh: 
Y'all going to be at ALA?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:34 M.O. Walsh
4:34
[Comment From Sue D., St. Charles, MOSue D., St. Charles, MO: ] 
You are headed to Chicago in a few days, what do you think about meeting all of us?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:34 Sue D., St. Charles, MO
4:34
M.O. Walsh: 
Man, its really weird to hear your own voice on audio isn't it? I'm like, who is that person? I'd much prefer a deeper baritone. Ha.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:34 M.O. Walsh
4:33
Nora - EarlyWord: 

I like what the Library Journal reviewer said, that MY SUNSHINE AWAY “gives the reader an intimate understanding of the place as if it were a beloved but misunderstood grandmother.”

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:33 Nora - EarlyWord
4:33
Nora - EarlyWord: 

I will never again assume that all parts of Southern Louisiana are alike! Do you feel you have to explain that to outsiders a lot?

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:33 Nora - EarlyWord
4:32
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
That's wonderful! Thank you, Neal.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:32 VNesting
4:31
Neal Reading Hurricane Katrina section  Play
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:31 
4:31
Nora - EarlyWord: 

Looks like Neal didn't need the time!


The section I asked him to read is about what events after Hurricane Katrina, when many people took refuge in Baton Rouge, I enjoyed the section’s understated humor and insight into how humans can change from grateful to picky. it's a good example of his "voice" and in his real voice.

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:31 Nora - EarlyWord
4:30
M.O. Walsh: 
Good question! I don't know if it's an either or kind of thing. They kind of come to me together (character and voice, especially in 1st person POV). I know after I'd finished that opening chapter, I sent it to a good friend of mine who I trust (a really good writer named Sean Ennis) and he said, "Man, that's a great voice! Think you can keep it up?" So, I took that as a challenge.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:30 M.O. Walsh
4:29
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Vicki -- another great question. I'll give Neal a chance to catch his breath and answer it. Meanwhile, I asked him to read a section of the book, and I will post the audio.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:29 Nora - EarlyWord
4:28
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
I love your narrative voice (which you may have already guessed from my review that Nora posted earlier). Voice is such a challenge to do well. Do you focus more on developing the character and letting the voice flow from that, or did you actually focus on the voice to show the conflicting feelings and motivations of the teenage narrator?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:28 VNesting
4:28
M.O. Walsh: 
I once wrote 50 pages of a novel I was super psyched about. I went to the bar one night and told my professor at the time how great it was and how good I felt. he said,. "What page are you on?" I said, "page 50!" He said, "Talk to me when you get to page 60."

He was right. I crashed and burned after page 50 because I had to start dealing with stuff.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:28 M.O. Walsh
4:27
M.O. Walsh: 
one more anecdote about that...
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:27 M.O. Walsh
4:26
M.O. Walsh: 
The beginning of books are often really easy to write because you haven't yet dealt with any of the situations or conflicts you're creating in the opening chapter. You're basically just a machine gun spewing out cool ideas. It's when you have to actually make them hang together and be meaningful and engaging that things get tricky.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:26 M.O. Walsh
4:25
M.O. Walsh: 
But I should also say....
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:25 M.O. Walsh
4:25
M.O. Walsh: 
Hi Janet! Thanks. Well, I say it was easy meaning the first draft of the chapter came out really quickly. I probably revised it for another 3 months to get the language right before I moved on to chapter 2.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:25 M.O. Walsh
4:24
[Comment From janet_schneiderjanet_schneider: ] 
Hi Neal, What an opening chapter! The most gripping I have read in ages. How interesting for you to say that the first was easy to write, and the rest not so much...This book is absolutely un-put-downable, and perfect for so many different readers too.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:24 janet_schneider
4:23
M.O. Walsh: 
I'd always wanted to, and had tried a couple of other times, but never had an idea strong enough to carry me through. I'd write 150 pages or so, realize it was terrible, and trash it. This was the first idea I had that never left me. I never grew bored with it, never stopped thinking about it. It took me about 7 years, I had two kids in the process, moved cities, changed jobs, etc., and I never wanted to stop working on it.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:23 M.O. Walsh
4:21
[Comment From MD. LibrarianMD. Librarian: ] 
You’ve written short stories, why did you decide to do a novel?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:21 MD. Librarian
4:20
M.O. Walsh: 
I don't know if the reveal made it any more difficult than just the fact that it is a novel and I'd never written one before. I'd always written short stories, where you can always feel where you started and where you are going to end it. When you get into the middle of a novel, it's a new experience. Getting through that was more difficult than negotiating the POV, which felt pretty natural to me.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:20 M.O. Walsh
4:19
Nora - EarlyWord: 

Uh, I think ALL of us have said much worse in out time!The book’s point of view is fascinating and isn’t actually revealed until the end. How difficult was it to structure the book?

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:19 Nora - EarlyWord
4:18
M.O. Walsh: 
(sorry for saying crap)
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:18 M.O. Walsh
4:17
M.O. Walsh: 
It just kind of hit me at the dinner table one night. I looked at my wife and was like, "Oh crap. I think I know the title." I'd always had the lyrics as an epigraph but never knew the song would be the title. Which proves, I think, that writers aren't always so smart. Ha. But, I like the way that the phrase was enough to remind you of the song, but also point you in another direction. I like the phrase very much.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:17 M.O. Walsh
4:15
Nora - EarlyWord: 

How did you decide which part of the song to use for the title?

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:15 Nora - EarlyWord
4:15
M.O. Walsh: 
A happy chorus, filled with sad verses. I like the tension there.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:15 M.O. Walsh
4:15
M.O. Walsh: 
Oh, yeah. As I said in the video, that song is the state song of Louisiana. It's really important to people down here. In the same way Louisiana has multiple sides to it, I realized that the song did too. That youth does, that nostalgia does, etc. it felt like a good fit.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:15 M.O. Walsh
4:14
M.O. Walsh: 
I get more of a thrill out of being a LibraryReads pick than a mention in Entertainment Weekly, to be honest, because I know Librarians care about literature in the same way I do.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:14 M.O. Walsh
4:14
Nora - EarlyWord: 

I have heard "You Are My Sunshine" since I was a little girl (my father sang it to me) and never saw the dark side of it. You had me hooked with that alone.

Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:14 Nora - EarlyWord
4:13
M.O. Walsh: 
I know it makes my Mom happy, though!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:13 M.O. Walsh
4:13
M.O. Walsh: 
And I feel like the words between the covers are the only thing I control. The fact that it is being published is plenty enough for me. So, the good press and all that, it is all just extra good news.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:13 M.O. Walsh
4:12
M.O. Walsh: 
...
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:12 M.O. Walsh
4:12
M.O. Walsh: 
Well, it feels really good that people like the book. People like librarians and book reviewers, etc. That feels really good. All of the other stuff (hype, if you'd call it), I'm much more skeptical of. It doesn't really give me a feeling. Maybe dread is the feeling? I'm not sure. I try to only concern myself with the stuff I can control.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:12 M.O. Walsh
4:11
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Being in South Louisiana, it's easy to just tell people it's a coming of age tale set in Baton Rouge in the late 1980s. But I love the video and think it's a great tool to get people interested.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:11 VNesting
4:10
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Reviewers are using terms like “addictive” and, “"Suspenseful, compassionate" and “a page-turner you want to read slowly and a literary novel you can't look away from.” It’s been picked by booksellers as a favorite, as well as by librarians for LibraryReads. It’s on Entertainment Weekly s "20 Books We’ll Read in 2015" AND they called you someone to watch in 2015. How does it feel”
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:10 Nora - EarlyWord
4:10
M.O. Walsh: 
Yeah. Everyone at Putnam has done an incredible job with the book. I'm really lucky to have a crew like that on my side!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:10 M.O. Walsh
4:09
Nora - EarlyWord: 
MY SUNSHINE AWAY unfolds in a Baton Rouge neighborhood best known for cookouts on sweltering summer afternoons, cauldrons of spicy crawfish, and passionate football fandom. But in the summer of 1989, when fifteen-year-old Lindy Simpson—free spirit, track star, and belle of the block—experiences a horrible crime late one evening near her home, it becomes apparent that this idyllic stretch of Southern suburbia has a dark side, too.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:09 Nora - EarlyWord
4:09
Nora - EarlyWord: 
You've got a pretty good one -- I thought the publisher described the book very well:
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:09 Nora - EarlyWord
4:08
M.O. Walsh: 
Whoa! Can I hire y'all as my PR team?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:08 M.O. Walsh
4:08
[Comment From Julie WolfJulie Wolf: ] 
Can’t wait to share this book with our library customers!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:08 Julie Wolf
4:08
[Comment From Laura, ProvidenceLaura, Providence: ] 
I’d say, “you’ll read it because you’ll want to know what happens, but you’ll love it even better for how it’s told. It will haunt you for weeks.”
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:08 Laura, Providence
4:08
[Comment From Fran B., ChicagoFran B., Chicago: ] 
I’d just say, “Trust me, you’ll love it.”
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:08 Fran B., Chicago
4:08
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Help Neal out -- how would the rest of you sell it?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:08 Nora - EarlyWord
4:07
M.O. Walsh: 
Thanks Vicki!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:07 M.O. Walsh
4:07
Nora - EarlyWord
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:07 
4:07
Nora - EarlyWord: 
By the way, that review is from Vicki, who is with us today!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:07 Nora - EarlyWord
4:07
M.O. Walsh: 
See? Much better when other people do it than me!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:07 M.O. Walsh
4:06
Nora - EarlyWord
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:06 
4:06
M.O. Walsh: 
Oh, thanks. I felt a little bad for subjecting y'all to that singing and guitar playing but thought it might be good to explain the title.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:06 M.O. Walsh
4:06
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Maybe we can help you. A couple of our participants posted reviews on Edelweiss that would certainly work. I’ll post them.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:06 Nora - EarlyWord
4:06
[Comment From Sue D., St. Charles, MOSue D., St. Charles, MO: ] 
What an awesome book. Liked the video introducing the title. Great little tidbit for getting patrons to pick it up.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:06 Sue D., St. Charles, MO
4:05
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I understand that.Sue D. says she'd use your video:
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:05 Nora - EarlyWord
4:05
M.O. Walsh: 
Its really hard to summarize something you've worked on for so long.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:05 M.O. Walsh
4:05
M.O. Walsh: 
Oh no! Not the elevator pitch! I seriously turn into a quivering ball of jelly when asked to do this. I was lucky enough to go on a pre-pub tour where me and some other writers were asked to pitch our books and I just did the verbal equivalent of .............
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:05 M.O. Walsh
4:04
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Librarians often have to come up with a quick, pithy way to get someone to want to read a book. Booksellers call this the “hand sell.” How would you hand sell MY SUNSHINE AWAY?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:04 Nora - EarlyWord
4:04
M.O. Walsh: 
Hi Anne. Glad you're here, too!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:04 M.O. Walsh
4:03
[Comment From AnneAnne: ] 
Hi - Looking forward to the discussion. Finished the book in the nick of time :)
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:03 Anne
4:03
M.O. Walsh: 
It just kept getting shorter and shorter, I guess.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:03 M.O. Walsh
4:03
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Wow, that sounds like " everyone knew her as Nancy.”
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:03 Nora - EarlyWord
4:03
M.O. Walsh: 
My grandfather went by Milton, my dad by O'Neal, and they called me Neal
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:03 M.O. Walsh
4:02
M.O. Walsh: 
Some people call me M.O.. My family and friends call me Neal. My name is Milton O'Neal Walsh.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:02 M.O. Walsh
4:02
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Hi Nora, Neal, everyone!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:02 VNesting
4:02
[Comment From Pam, Public LibrarianPam, Public Librarian: ] 
Wait, your name is M.O. Walsh, what do I call you?
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:02 Pam, Public Librarian
4:02
M.O. Walsh: 
Wow. Thank y'all so much for reading it. I imagine your reading stacks are pretty high.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:02 M.O. Walsh
4:01
[Comment From Book LoverBook Lover: ] 
Thanks for doing this,
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:01 Book Lover
4:01
[Comment From James P.James P.: ] 
Thanks for taking the time to chat with us.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:01 James P.
4:01
[Comment From Julie WolfJulie Wolf: ] 
I’m telling my customers that this a book they will be dying to talk to others about!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:01 Julie Wolf
4:01
M.O. Walsh: 
Very cool to get a chance to talk to librarians and to be a Library Reads pick! Who has better taste in books than librarians? NOBODY.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:01 M.O. Walsh
4:01
[Comment From MD. LibrarianMD. Librarian: ] 
I don’t have many questions, just want to say I love this book!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:01 MD. Librarian
4:01
[Comment From Laura, ProvidenceLaura, Providence: ] 
No longer lurking, I’m joining THIS chat!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:01 Laura, Providence
4:01
[Comment From Fran B., ChicagoFran B., Chicago: ] 
Ready to chat!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:01 Fran B., Chicago
4:01
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I'll give our participants a chance to say hi...
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:01 Nora - EarlyWord
4:00
M.O. Walsh: 
Hi everybody! I'm excited to be in the little chat box with you!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:00 M.O. Walsh
4:00
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Hi, Neal, Welcome!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:00 Nora - EarlyWord
4:00
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I see Neal is here.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 4:00 Nora - EarlyWord
3:59
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Don’t worry about typos – (and please forgive ours)
Wednesday January 21, 2015 3:59 Nora - EarlyWord
3:59
Nora - EarlyWord: 
You can send your questions through at any time. They'll go into a queue, and we'll submit as many of them as we can to the author before the end of the chat.
Wednesday January 21, 2015 3:59 Nora - EarlyWord
3:59
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I see chat participants gathering!
Wednesday January 21, 2015 3:59 Nora - EarlyWord
3:51
Nora - EarlyWordNora - EarlyWord
Wednesday January 21, 2015 3:51 
3:51
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Neal recorded the following video specifically for First Flight participants:
Wednesday January 21, 2015 3:51 Nora - EarlyWord
3:35
Nora - EarlyWord
Wednesday January 21, 2015 3:35 
3:35
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Meanwhile, here’s the cover of MY SUNSHINE AWAY, to be published by Penguin/Putnam on Feb. 10
Wednesday January 21, 2015 3:35 Nora - EarlyWord
3:34
Nora - EarlyWord: 
We will begin our live online chat with M.O. “Neal” Walsh at 4 p.m., EST
Wednesday January 21, 2015 3:34 Nora - EarlyWord
 
 

Lessons of Scarcity

Wednesday, January 21st, 2015

pioneer-girl-ciA headline from yesterday’s SlateA Tiny Press Printed Only 15,000 Copies of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Autobiography. Big Mistake, has sent Pioneer Girl: The Annotated Autobiography, Laura Ingalls Wilder, edited by Pamela Smith Hill, (South Dakota Historical Society Press) flying back up Amazon’s sales rankings.

Part of the appeal may be the comment that, now that the book is out of stock, “ ‘Used’ copies on Amazon (in this case meaning ‘existing’) started at $399 as of this writing,” (see our earlier stories on the book, from August and December).

Holds are also climbing in many libraries. Cross your fingers that circulating copies will be returned.

Making Headlines:
GUANTÁNAMO DIARY

Wednesday, January 21st, 2015

Guantanamo DiaryBook news is currently dominated by Guantánamo Diary  (Hachette/Little, Brown), a memoir by Mohamedou Ould Slahi and Larry Siems. The author, who is still being held at the prison, details the tortures he has endured there. Featured on yesterday’s Morning Edition, the host noted, “The Pentagon confirmed to NPR that for a brief period at Guantanamo in 2003, a ‘special interrogation plan’ was designed for Slahi, and it was outside the military’s own standard interrogation procedures.”

Excerpts are published in People magazine, it will be on the cover of the Feb. 15 NYT Book Review (online now, three weeks ahead of the print version, presumably to coincide with the publication), is featured in the L.A. Times, reviewed by The Washington Post. and the basis for a NYT Op-Ed piece.

The Guardian. which is serializing the book, features a documentary about it on their Web site:

In the U.K., celebrities, including Colin Firth, Jude Law, Benedict Cumberbatch and Nick Cave are supporting the “Free Slahi” campaign.

Check your orders. Most libraries have ordered conservatively and holds are light so far, but we expect them to surge as the story creates even more headlines.

UPDATE: coverage is expected on Friday’s PBS Newshour. ABC This Week is planning coverage, TBA, and the daily NYT is also planning a review. The book was embargoed, so no advance reviews. LJ noted it in Prepub Alert in July and  Kirkus  just posted their review online.

Guantánamo Diary
Mohamedou Ould Slahi, edited by Larry Siems,
Hachette/Little, Brown,  January 20, 2015
Hachette Audio and Blackstone Audio,  9781478986942
E-Book, 9780316328609

NPR Book Club Wraps

Tuesday, January 20th, 2015

9780374280604_abe23The new NPR Morning Edition book club wrapped up today with a discussion of the first selection, Deep Down Dark: The Untold Stories of 33 Men Buried in a Chilean Mine, and the Miracle That Set Them Free by Hector Tobar (Macmillan/FSG; Macmillan Audio; OverDrive Sample; Oct), picked in December by bookstore owner and author Ann Patchett.

The book, which has hit the lower rungs of the NYT best seller list as a result of the selection, is also one of five finalists for the NBCC Nonfiction Award, announced yesterday and  has been made into a movie, titled The 33, starring Antonio Banderas, Juliette Binoche and Gabriel Byrne. Currently in post-production, the release date has not yet been announced.

The next title in the club will be announced soon; we will let you know when it is.

Buy Alert: MARCH, BOOK TWO

Tuesday, January 20th, 2015

marchbookone_softcover_lg  march_book_two_72dpi_lg

The second book of the award-winning graphic memoir by Congressman John Lewis, the next in a planned trilogy, arrives today.

Featured today in Entertainment Weekly ‘s “Shelf Life” column, the story notes that Book One, “took the world by surprise. Acclaimed by the comics press and social justice activists alike, it was an engaging and accessible work of nonfiction about one of the most important moments in American history.” It also a Coretta Scott King Honor Book, an ALA Notable Book, one of YALSA’s Top 10 Great Graphic Novels for Teens and was on multiple best books list for the year.

Book Two may have taken the library world by surprise. Reviewed last week in Kirkus and yesterday in SLJ‘s “Good Comics for Kids” column, it does not appear on library catalogs we checked.

March: Book Two
Congressman John Lewis, Andrew Aydin and Nate Powell
Top Shelf; January 20, 2015

m00eIn a  feature about the books on CNN in July, Lewis said he used the comic format because many in his generation in the ’60s were deeply inspired by a comic book called Martin Luther King Jr. and the Montgomery Story (watch the video to the end, for a story about libraries).

Top Shelf Comics has republished that comic book in print as well as in a digital bundle with Book One.

Amazon Turns to Books

Monday, January 19th, 2015

A few years ago, Netflix introduced the world to the idea of bingeing on an entire season of a new series, by streaming all the episodes of House of Cards at one time, following up with Orange is the New Black.

Amazon also got into that game. Its series Transparent just made history as the first online series to win two Golden Globe awards, one for best comedy and another show’s star, Jeffrey Tambor as best actor,

Now they have announced their first drama series. This time, it is based on books. Boschfeaturing the character from Michael Connelly’s best-selling Harry Bosch series, debuts February 13 on Prime Instant Video.

+-+31003037_140   9781455519644

Connelly, who is also a producer for the show, co-wrote the script. According to a story about the production in the Wall Street Journal, it is based on two Bosch titlesThe Concrete Blonde, (1991, Hachette/Little Brown; #3 in the series) and (City of Bones, 2002; #8 in the series).

Amazon has also just released their 4th “pilot season,” which gives viewers the opportunity to watch and rate seven new pilots aimed at adults and six more for kids (Woody Allen who recently struck a deal with Amazon to create his own series next year, will not have to go through this process. His series will go direct to release).

One of those pilots is based on a book, The Man in the High Castle, adapted by Ridley Scott from the iconic alternative reality novel by Philip K. Dick. The press is giving it high marks (see Entertainment Weekly, the Telegraph and the Seattle Times).

RA Alert: Scott McCloud’s
THE SCULPTOR

Monday, January 19th, 2015

Screen Shot 2015-01-18 at 5.07.12 PM

The book on many a comics readers’ mind in the next few weeks (and maybe all year) will be Scott McCloud’s The Sculptor (Macmillan/First Second, Feb. 3), a massive 496 page graphic novel that Cory Doctorow called McCloud’s “magnum opus” back in April. Due out on February 3rd, it is the story of a washed up young artist who makes a deal with Death to create art that will be remembered – but he only gets to live 200 days to do so.

The comic book scene is buzzing with anticipation and Entertainment Weekly listed it as one of the “20 Books We’ll Read in 2015.” For advisors who need a bit of backstory, McCloud is a writer/artist that readers treasure for his nonfiction books (drawn, of course) explaining how comics work (Understanding Comics, Reinventing Comics, and Making Comics – all published by William Morrow). The Sculptor is his first graphic novel in over a decade and follows in the wake of his cult favorite title Zot! (which HarperCollins reprinted in 2008). McCloud discussed creating the book, which took five years, in USA Today last June, sharing that he wanted to make a book that was “an engrossing read — a page-turner from beginning to end.”

Macmillan offers a look at McCloud’s innovative page design, use of perspective, and his color palette of pale blues and deep blacks. First Second provides more images as well as a glimpse of the cover and the spine – showing just how big a book The Sculptor is.

Many libraries have yet to order it, in spite of glowing reviews and stars from library trade journals and the long-simmering publicity.

THE SLAP Is “Not About the Slap”

Monday, January 19th, 2015

The SlapThe first full-length trailer for the 8-episode TV series based on the controversial award-winning Australian novel, The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas, (Penguin, 2010) was released on Friday.

TV critics asked the cast questions about the act that sets off a series of events, a man slapping someone else’s child at a neighborhood barbecue. At one point, during panel at the Television Critics Association winter press tour, Zachary Quinto, the actor who administers the act of corporal punishment told the critics, “It’s not really about the slap. All of these characters come to the table with a tremendous amount of internal conflict and struggle about different aspects of their lives. The great thing about it is it’s a launching point for very little black and white and a lot of gray.”

Also starring Uma Thurman, the series is directed by Lisa Cholodenko, (HBO’s Olive Kitteridge and the movie The Kids are All Right). It premieres Thursday, Feb. 12 at 8 p.m. NBC.

The book became a reading group staple in both Australia and the U.K. and was made into a popular Australian TV series in 2011 (as a result, some reports cite the new adaptation as a remake of that series, without noting the original source material).

Released in the U.S. as an original trade paperback, it received a strong endorsement from the Washington Post. The reviewer praised it for giving American readers a sense of life in Australia, while exploring subjects that resonate here,

In The Slap we live for a few short weeks in suburban Australia, learning the language, becoming intimate with the characters and experiencing their customs. But finally the novel transcends both suburban Melbourne and the Australian continent, leaving us exhausted but gasping with admiration.

The setting for the American version is Park Slope, Brooklyn.

STILL ALICE, Oscar Bump

Monday, January 19th, 2015

Behind American Sniper, a second, quieter film did well at the box office this weekend. Also the recipient of good timing  Still Alice, based on the novel by Lisa Genova, expanded nationwide this weekend and was able to capitalize on the movie’s star, Julianne Moore, becoming the front-runner for this year’s Best Actress Oscar.

It’s a Cinderella story for both the book and the movie. Unable to get an agent for the book, Genova self-published it. Her guerrilla marketing was so successful that she then landed an agent and a mainstream publisher, Simon & Schuster. Released as an original trade paperback in 2009, it went on to become a best seller. Appropriately, as the author recently told the Boston Globe, for the film rights, the she took a chance on a “very small new production company,” because she felt, “they really understood the intent of the story.”

In libraries we checked, Still Alice is neck-and-neck in holds with American Sniper.

Genova, a neuroscientist, has published two novels since, both dealing with brain disorders. Left Neglected is about the results of a brain injury and Love Anthony, about autism. In her next novel, Inside the O’Briens, (S&S/Gallery; S&S Audio; 4/7/14), she writes about a family dealing with Huntington’s Disease.

Tie-ins:

9781501107733_6d66bStill AliceLisa Genova
S&S.Gallery: December 16, 2014
Trade Paperback

Mass Market, S&S/Pocket Books

Audio CD, &S Audio