Archive for February, 2011

JUDY MOODY, The Movie

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Above: Author Megan McDonald with Jordanna Beatty, who plays Judy Moody in the upcoming movie

The movie Judy Moody and the NOT Bummer Summer will be released in the US on June 10, 2011.

Candlewick will publish five totally Moody movie tie-in titles which go on-sale May 24th.

In more Moody News, to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Judy Moody books, Candlewick has reissued the entire series, with new covers (below is the first title; see them all in Candlewick’s Spring Catalog, pg. 92 or on the new Judy Moody Web site).

Judy Moody (Book #1)
Megan McDonald
Retail Price: $15.99
Hardcover: 160 pages
Publisher: Candlewick – (2010-02-09)
ISBN / EAN: 0763648507 / 9780763648503

See Candlewick’s Spring Catalog, pgs. 93 to 95 for the movie tie-ins.

Comic Book Adaptations

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

As Robin Brenner said in her most recent column, “Super heroes are everywhere lately.” That will only intensify at the movies this summer, as indicated by the Super Bowl ads. One movie news site calls it Comic Book Cacophony.

Below is the schedule, with the Super Bowl spots.

5/6 — Thor — Based on Stan Lee’s Marvel Super Hero series, and directed by Kenneth Branagh (!)

5/13 —Priest –  Not a Super Hero, but based on a manga series from TokyoPop.

6/3 —  X-Men: First Class — Based on another Marvel Super Hero series, this one did not get the Super Bowl treatment.

6/17 — Green Lantern — Based on a D.C. Super Hero series. Also no Super Bowl spot, outraging some fans.

7/22 — Captain America: The First Avenger – Marvel comics Super Hero adaptation.

7/29 — Cowboys & Aliens – The Western theme continues to be turned on its head; True Grit casts it in an ironic light. This adaptation of a non-Supero-Hero comic combines a Western with the theme of alien invastion. Highly anticipated, it’s directed by Jon Favreau and stars Daniel Craig and Harrison Ford.

Crystal Ball: A DISCOVERY OF WITCHES

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

A Discovery of Witches, by Deborah Harkness, releasing today is a debut that has the earmarks of a big hit. Consider increasing your orders.

Cuyahoga P.L. has taken a much larger stand on the book than other libraries we checked. Collection Development Coordinator Wendy Bartlett explains,

Ever since The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane, I’ve kept my eye out for another “witch” book that had a manuscript involved in some way, because readers loved that combo. Add to that, the setting is the Bodleian library at Oxford, book lovers’ Nirvana. Throw in vampires and excellent cover art, and it’s the hottest non-big-name title of the season!

She’s in good company. The book was one of the big titles at the Frankfurt Book Fair in 2009. It’s also received enviable coverage in the past week:

Parade Magazine pick of the week on Sunday

In last week’s Entertainment Weekly, twice, on the “Must List” and in a review that, although it awarded the book just a B+, attests to its appeal,

“…a thoroughly grown-up novel packed with gorgeous historical detail, has a gutsy, brainy heroine to match…Harkness writes with thrilling gusto about the magical world…Alas, there’s a bit of bloat to the book…[but] As the mysteries started to unravel, the pages turned faster, almost as if on their own. By the most satisfying end, Harkness had made me a believer”

O Magazine — “…romantic, erudite and suspenseful…Harkness attends to every scholarly and emotional detail with whimsy, sensuality and humor.”

A February pick by Amazon

One of Sessalee’s picks at B&N

Independent booksellers made it an IndieNext Pick for February

The author also has a great back story (like her character, she discovered a missing manuscript in the Bodleian), which she talked about during her presentation at the AAP Trade Libraries Breakfast at ALA MidWinter.

More will be coming; this is the first in a planned trilogy.

The author, who teaches at the U. of Southern California, also wrote The Jewel House: Elizabethan London and the Scientific Revolution (Yale University Press, 2007).

And, she writes the “Good Wine Under $20” blog (a book club idea — “Read the Book; Taste the Author’s Wine Selection”).

A Discovery of Witches: A Novel
Deborah Harkness
Retail Price: $28.95
Hardcover: 592 pages
Publisher: Viking Adult – (2011-02-08)
ISBN / EAN: 0670022411 / 9780670022410

Large type; Thorndike; March (9781410436337).

Audio: Recorded Books

WEIRD SISTERS ON NPR

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

How can you not love the Weird Sisters, portrayed in Eleanor Brown’s first novel? Their motto is “There is no problem a library card can’t solve.” Also, their Shakespeare-besotted, but emotionally distant father insists that they communicate via quotes from the Bard.

On NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday, Brown talked to Liane Hansen about how she found the right Shakespearean phrases. But, even with this elaborate conceit, says Brown, she wanted to write “…the kind of novel that I like to read — a novel about relationships and about family and about people getting lost but then finding themselves again.”

………………..

The Weird Sisters
Eleanor Brown
Retail Price: $24.95
Hardcover: 336 pages
Publisher: Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam – (2011-02-17)
ISBN / EAN: 0399157220 / 9780399157226

Penguin Audio; 9780142428948

Coming in Large Type from Thorndike in May, ISBN 13: 9781410437051, $30.99

SNOW FLOWER Movie

Monday, February 7th, 2011

The film adaptation of reader club favorite, Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, by Lisa See, has been scheduled for a July 15 release date.

It is directed by Wayne Wang (The Joy Luck Club, Maid in Manhattan and Because of Winn-Dixie). No trailer is available yet, but some stills have been released.

Snow Flower and the Secret Fan
Lisa See
Retail Price: $23.95
Hardcover: 272 pages
Publisher: Random House – (2005-06-28)
ISBN / EAN: 1400060281 / 9781400060283

See’s next book is Dreams of Joy, comes out in May.

Dreams of Joy: A Novel
Lisa See
Retail Price: $26.00
Hardcover: 416 pages
Publisher: Random House – (2011-05-31)
ISBN / EAN: 140006712X / 9781400067121

Super Bowl at the Movies

Monday, February 7th, 2011

Feeling left out because you didn’t see the Superbowl ads? No worries; you can see them on the USA Today site, minus the annoying interruptions, and ranked by a panel of viewers.

The cost of an ad this year? $3 million for a 30-second spot.

Among the movie ads, the top rated is children’s animation, Rango, with Johnny Depp as the voice of the chameleon Rango, arriving March 4th.

Below is the full trailer (but check out the spot — it gains in charm what it lacks in length).

Official movie site: RangoMovie.com

Sterling has the tie-ins:

6 and up:

Rango: The Novel
Justine Fontes, Ron Fontes
Retail Price: $4.95
Paperback: 144 pages
Publisher: Sterling – (2011-01-28)
ISBN / EAN: 1402784430 / 9781402784439

4 to 8:

Rango: The Movie Storybook
Justine Fontes, Ron Fontes
Retail Price: $9.95
Hardcover: 48 pages
Publisher: Sterling – (2011-01-28)
ISBN / EAN: 1402784422 / 9781402784422

..

Rango: The New Sheriff in Town
Annie Auerbach
Retail Price: $3.95
Paperback: 24 pages
Publisher: Sterling – (2011-01-28)
ISBN / EAN: 1402784414 / 9781402784415

Beginning reader:

Rango: A Hero at Last
Annie Auerbach
Retail Price: $3.95
Paperback: 32 pages
Publisher: Sterling – (2011-01-28)
ISBN / EAN: 1402784449 / 9781402784446

Also getting the Super Bowl treatment was The Eagle, based on Rosemary Sutcliffe’s 1954 ALA Notable Children’s book, opening this Friday, as well as the following children’s titles, which arrive this summer:

Rio (voices of Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg and Jamie Foxx)

In Theaters: May 27

Official Movie site: Rio-TheMovie.com

Tie-ins: HarperCollins, April 15

Transformers, Dark of the Moon

In Theaters: July 1

Official Movie site:  TransformersMovie.com

Tie-ins: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, May 17

Kung Fu Panda 2

In Theaters: May 27

Official Movie site: KungFuPanda.com

Tie-ins: Penguin, 4/28

Michael Oher Speaks

Monday, February 7th, 2011

Michael Oher, the offensive tackle for the Baltimore Ravens, finally tells his side of his adoption story, which is central to Michael Lewis’s bestseller The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game and the subsequent film starring Sandra Bullock. He explains on the Huffington Post that he wrote his memoir, I Beat the Odds: From Homelessness to the Blind Side and Beyond (with Don Yeager) because “I wanted to talk about some of the questions people have about how I was portrayed in the movie and about my life before I came to live with the Tuohys.”

Kirkus says: “The book is strongest when Oher conveys his hard-won wisdom through specific examples and anecdotes from his life. When he dispenses more generalized advice, the narrative reads like a generic public-service announcement.”

At libraries we checked, orders were in line with modest reserves.

I Beat the Odds: From Homelessness, to The Blind Side, and Beyond
Michael Oher
Retail Price: $26.00
Hardcover: 272 pages
Publisher: Gotham – (2011-02-08)
ISBN / EAN: 1592406122 / 9781592406128

Other Notable Titles on Sale Next Week

Known and Unknown: A Memoir by Donald Rumsfeld (Sentinel) chronicles the career of the Secretary of Defense during 9/11 and the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. In the New York Times, Michiko Kakutani calls it: “tedious, self-serving. . .  [and] filled with efforts to blame others — most notably the C.I.A., the State Department and the Coalition Provisional Authority (in particular George Tenet, Colin L. Powell, Condoleezza Rice and L. Paul Bremer III) — for misjudgments made in the invasion and occupation of Iraq, and the failure to contain an insurgency there that metastasized for years.” On Monday, February 7, Rumsfeld will appear on “World News” with Diane Sawyer at 6:30 p.m. ET and on “Nightline” at 11:35 p.m. ET. On Tuesday, February 8, he will appear on “Good Morning America” at 7 am ET.

Spousonomics: Using Economics To Master Love, Marriage, and Dirty Dishes by Paula Szuchman and Jenny Anderson (Random) is a quirky and practical look at relationships by, respectively, a front-page editor for the Wall Street Journal and an award-winning New York Times reporter who’s covered Wall Street. Based on the authors’ survey of 1,000 couples, Szuchman explains that the key to a good sex life is to keep it “affordable.” If couples are tired, “they make it quick. Maybe they don’t even bother to take their shirts off. When one of them is in the mood, they say so,” she says in an essay on the Daily Beast.

The Foremost Good Fortune by Susan Conley (Knopf)  is a memoir of family’s move from Maine to Beijing, only to find that the cultural differences between their two homes pale when the author gets a cancer diagnosis. Booklist calls it, “Beautifully written and insightful on many levels.”

Radio Shangri-La: What I Learned in the Happiest Kingdom on Earth by Lisa Napoli is a memoir of an ex-journalist’s search for wholeness and spiritual renewal in Bhutan, while helping to launch Kuzoo FM, the nation’s fledgling radio station. Kirkus says, “the author’s authentic voice and light, pleasant cultural insights make for a refreshingly uplifting book.”

Allison Pearson Reappears

Monday, February 7th, 2011

Fondly remembered by critics and booksellers for her 2003 debut hit I Don’t Know How She Does It, Allison Pearson returns next week with I Think I Love You, a wistful novel about a grown woman who looks back on her dream of becoming Mrs. David Cassidy in 1970s Wales, and winds up heading to Las Vegas to meet him in mid-life.

People gives it four stars and designates it a People Pick. Even the New York TimesMichiko Kakutani is wooed:

[Pearson] shows how Petra’s crush on David Cassidy is really a kind of rehearsal for the love and passion she wants to one day lavish on a real boy in real life, and how those youthful emotions both endure — and are transformed — as the years and decades tick by. . . . [A] groovy little novel whose charms easily erase any objections the reader might have to the prepackaged and heavily borrowed plot.

I Think I Love You
Allison Pearson
Retail Price: $24.95
Hardcover: 336 pages
Publisher: Knopf – (2011-02-08)
ISBN / EAN: 1400042356 / 9781400042357

CD: Random House Audio, $40, ISBN 9780307747525

Check Your Holds

A Discovery of Witches: A Novel by Deborah E. Harkness (Viking), a debut is the first in a planned trilogy, about witches and vampires that is rising fast on Amazon (now at #3), with growing holds in libraries. Part of the story is based on real events; like her main character, Harkness discovered a manuscript, missing since the 1600’s, that was once owned by Queen Elizabeth’s astrologer.  Entertainment Weekly gives it a B+, complaining of some bloat, but summing up, “as the mysteries started to unravel, the pages turned faster, almost as if on their own.”  Parade Magazine was unequivocal on Sunday, making it a Pick of the Week and calling it “580 pages of sheer pleasure.” Harkness spoke at the AAP Trade Libraries Breakfast at ALA MidWinter. It will be available in large type from Thorndike in March (9781410436337).

Usual Suspects

The Secret Soldier by Alex Berenson (Putnam) is the fifth thriller featuring ex-CIA man John Wells, by the winner of the 2007 first novel Edgar for The Faithful Spy. Kirkus says, “the plot unfolds along predictable lines in a story arc that Tom Clancy readers or viewers of TV’s 24 will find old hat.” 

A Red Herring Without Mustard: A Flavia de Luce Mystery by Bradley Alan (Delacorte) is Ms. Flavia de Luce’s third outing, after her bestselling debut in The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie and return in The Weed That Strings the Hangman’s Bag. Here, she demonstrates a firm knowledge of poisons while saving a gypsy from accusations of child abduction. PW calls it, “a splendid romp through 1950s England led by the world’s smartest and most incorrigible preteen.” 

The Matchmaker of Kenmare by Frank Delaney (Random) is the sequel to Venetia Kelly’s Traveling Show, in which matchmaker Kate Begley plies her profession in neutral WWII Ireland. Booklist says, it “combines the charm of an Irish yarn with the excitement of a political thriller and the romance of a 1940s war movie.”

Heartwood: A Novel by Belva Plain (Delacorte) explores the inevitable endings of romantic relationships through the experiences of a mother and daughter. 

Also worth watching:

The Revenge of the Radioactive Lady by Elizabeth Stuckey-French (Doubleday) is the tale of a once unwitting subject of an experiment in radioactivity, who sets out to avenge the dire consequences of that same study. It follows the author’s much praised 2002 debut novel, Mermaid on the Moon. LJ says, “mixing the suburban angst of Tom Perrotta with the snarky humor of Carl Hiaasen, Stuckey-French has written a page-turner that is thoughtful, amusing, and nearly impossible to put down.”

Kids:

No Passengers Beyond This Point by Gennifer Choldenko (Dial) is a children’s fantasy about three siblings whose plane lands in a mysterious world, by an author best known for her Newbery Award-winning historical fiction. Kirkus calls it, “convoluted” with “a confusing host of secondary characters. Fascinating, if not entirely successful.”

WINTER’S TALE to Movies

Friday, February 4th, 2011

Long-time readers adviser favorite, Winter’s Tale by Mark Helprin is set for the full Hollywood treatment, a Warner Bros movie with a $75 million budget. Casting is about to begin, according to the movie news site Deadline.

The movie will be directed by Akiva Goldsman, who wrote the scripts for A Beautiful MindThe Da Vinci Code, Batman & Robin and I am Legend, for which he was also one of the producers.

Winter’s Tale
Mark Helprin
Retail Price: $16.00
Paperback: 768 pages
Publisher: Mariner Books – (2005-06-01)
ISBN / EAN: 0156031191 / 9780156031196

NYT Expands Best Seller Lists

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Get ready for 14 NYT best seller lists, rather than the usual 8.

The Feb. 13 lists expand to include E-Books (adult Fiction and Nonfiction), as well as Combined Print and E-Books lists.

Also, there are new combined paperback and hardback lists in both fiction and nonfiction.

The only revelation from the new lists is that people buy the same titles in eBooks as they do in print — James Patterson’s Tick Tock tops the fiction in both formats and Lauren Hillenbrand’s Unbroken leads in nonfiction.

Tiger Mom’s Husband

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

You have to wonder if, when Jed Rubenfeld, author of the 2006 best seller Interpretation of Murder, contemplated the release of his next book, he imagined that he would be doing interviews for another role, as husband of “Tiger Mom” Amy Chua.

Reviews are also coming in for Rubenfeld’s second novel, The Death Instinct, a mystery based on a real story. Today’s New York Times calls it a “tremendous follow-up” to his previous book. Earlier, Carol Memmott in USA Today, called it “brilliantly concocted and more than just a little eerie. The fictional and actual events surrounding the 1920 bombing are as relevant today as they were nearly a century ago.”

The Death Instinct
Jed Rubenfeld
Retail Price: $26.95
Hardcover: 464 pages
Publisher: Riverhead Hardcover – (2011-01-20)
ISBN / EAN: 1594487820 / 9781594487828

Thorndike Large Print; ISBN 13: 9781410435620; $31.99

Audio: Books on Tape; 14 CDs; 9780307913883; $40

Rumsfeld Embargo Broken

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

The Washington Post reviews former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s memoir, Known and Unknown, which releases on Tuesday. As a result, the book rose to #8 on Amazon sales rankings (library holds, however, are modest for now).

The book is published by Sentinel, Penguin’s conservative imprint.

Known and Unknown: A Memoir
Donald Rumsfeld
Retail Price: $36.00
Hardcover: 832 pages
Publisher: Sentinel HC – (2011-02-08)
ISBN / EAN: 159523067X / 9781595230676

Penguin Audio; UNABR; 24 CDs; ISBN 9780142428382

Goldman Advance Readers Copies

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Monday’s New Yorker features a moving story  by Francisco Goldmans about his young wife Aura, who died after a surfing accident, “The Wave; A tragedy in Mexico” (by subscription only).

The events are the basis of Goldman’s forthcoming book, Say Her Name, to be published by Grove Press in April 2011.

The publisher is making copies available to EarlyWord readers.  UPDATE: Sorry, we’ve run out of copies; you can still get the title from NetGalley.

The New Yorker story is nonfiction, but the book is a novel. Goldman explains why he chose that form,

I’ve surrounded Aura and myself with a fictionalized family and friends for numerous reasons, including the duty to protect, to keep secrets, including our own secrets, while providing the space to write a true account of our lives – Aura’s and my own, with and without her.

Say Her Name: A Novel
Francisco Goldman
Retail Price: $24.00
Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: Grove Press – (2011-04-05)
ISBN / EAN: 0802119816 / 9780802119810

Yes, You CAN Find a Library Job

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

A teacher completing her MLS last fall wrote on the school librarians listserv,  LM_NET, that she was concerned about being able to get a job. With all the doom saying on listservs, blogs and professional journals, she wanted learn how to make herself more marketable as she applied for jobs in the coming spring.

I started to write some advice about marketing; how to focus a resume, what to include in a cover letter, how to prepare a demo lesson and what to avoid, based on things actual job seekers did that drove me crazy (like being late for interviews, bringing a friend and dressing inappropriately — yes, one candidate actually wore  flip-flops).

I  soon realized that it was way too much to post on LM_Net, and it evolved in to the cover story of the new issue of School Library Journal, “Hang in There: How to Get a Job Against All Odds.” It may give hope to those who fear they’ll never get a library job.

Most Popular Book Club Picks

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

ReadingGroupGuides.com is compiling a list of the 2010 Most Discussed Books of the Year.

Book club members are asked to share the books that their groups read each month in 2010. Groups who submit their lists are automatically entered in a contest to win 12 copies of one of the 33 featured titles, which include both recently published titles and upcoming 2011 books.

To view the complete list of featured titles click here. The 2010 Most Discussed Books of the Year feature and contest will be open through February 21, 2011.

Full details and contest rules are available here.