Archive for January, 2014

Literary Darling of the New Year: Chang-rae Lee

Saturday, January 4th, 2014

05cover-shadow-articleInline   On Such a Full Sea

Gathering the most reviews of the new year is the new novel by Chang-rae Lee, On Such A Full Sea, (Penguin/Riverhead; Penguin Audio; Thorndike), which arrives on Tuesday. In a cover review in the New York Times Book Review, Andrew Sean Greer (The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells) announces he is a fan from the  opening paragraph, 

Watching a talented writer take a risk is one of the pleasures of devoted reading, and On Such a Full Sea provides all that and more. It’s a wonderful addition not only to Chang-rae Lee’s body of work but to the ranks of “serious” writers venturing into the realm of dystopian fantasy.

Lee didn’t set out to write a dystopian novel, but a social realist novel about Chinese factory workers, as he tells the NYT BR editor, Pamela Paul in this week’s Inside the New York Times Book Review” podcast. Instead, he ended up writing about an enclosed settlement of Chinese-American refugees in a city called “B-Mor,” built on the ruins of Baltimore. He sees that city as a symbol of “a certain kind of urban decay,” but admits his only contact with it has been the view from a train window (something he has in common with songwriter Randy Newman who, 35 years ago, wrote the bleak song “Baltimore” based on the same experience. Up in arms, the city insisted on a visit and an apology).

The majority of the rest of the reviews equal the NYT BR in their praise:

Los Angeles Times – ‎‘On Such a Full Sea’ a cautionary tale of the future —

Who is a greater novelist than Chang-rae Lee today?

His new, his fifth — where have you been? — book seals this deal. A chilling, dark, unsettling ride into a dystopia in utopia’s guise, this is a novel that might divide but will no doubt conquer where it matters most.

Chicago Tribune – Review: ‘On Such a Full Sea’ by Chang-Rae Lee —

… not just a fully realized, time-jumping narrative of an audacious young girl in search of lost loved ones, but an exploration of the meaning and function of narrative, of illusion and delusion, of engineered personalities and faint promises of personhood, and of one powerful nation’s disappearance and how that indelibly affects another.

Entertainment Weekly  — ON SUCH A FULL SEA Chang-rae Lee — A-

The dystopia of On Such a Full Sea isn’t showy … instead Lee relies on specific, indelible images … and his usual perceptive writing to get at the warped morality that can drive a world into decline.

Cleveland Plain DealerChang-Rae Lee charts a rocky course toward freedom 

A new book by Lee is cause for giddy expectation … His latest … is both a detour and a confirmation: a detour because, as a dystopian vision, it is unlike his previous narrative forms; a confirmation, because despite that difference, his prodigious talents are still everywhere evident.

There are a couple of holdouts, however:

San Francisco Chronicle — On Such a Full Sea,’ by Chang-rae Lee

On some level, “On Such a Full Sea” feels totally characterless. It continually keeps the reader at arm’s length, declining to make us care much about its nearly faceless heroine…In part, this is due to the novel’s nature as a cautionary tale…As a consequence, the narration is rendered in a flat, somewhat formal, old-fashioned style that never allows us to get too close to the story’s emotional truth. For all its plot convolutions, the book still feels abstract and cold.

New York magazine, “A No-Frills Buyers’ Guide to January Books“:

The tired dystopian tropes Lee uses to evoke our current predicament—stratified societies, cruel market forces, a broken health-care system, etc.—are so heavy-handed that the book sometimes reads more like a diagnosis than a believable human story.

 

Today’s Online Chat With Timothy Lane

Friday, January 3rd, 2014

Click here to find out more about the book and to sign up for the program.

 

New Title Radar, Week of Jan. 6

Friday, January 3rd, 2014

The Invention of Wings - Oprah   Standup Guy  Your Life Calling

Arriving next week, Sue Monk Kidd’s new book, The Invention of Wings, (Penguin/Viking; Penguin Audio; Thorndike) already has a powerful endorsement as the first pick of the year for Oprah’s Book Club 2.0Entertainment Weekly, adds its endorsement, saying The Invention of Wings, “isn’t just the story of a friendship that defies an oppressive society; it’s a much more satisfying story of two people discovering together that their lives are worth the fight.” (for those attending Midwinter, Kidd is one of the speakers appearing at United for Libraries’ Gala Author Tea on Mon., Jan 27).

It is second in terms of holds for the week to Stuart Woods’ 28th title in the Stone Barrington series, Standup Guy,  (Penguin/Putnam; Penguin Audio; Thorndike).

Jane Pauley was in the news last week for simply making an appearance on her old Today Show stage. Her new book, Your Life Calling: Reimagining the Rest of Your Life, (S&S; S&S Audio, read by Pauley) is also likely to get media attention.

Several LibraryReads picks arrive next week:

Little FailureLittle Failure, Gary Shteyngart, (Random House)

“Little Failure is the marvelous tale of the Shteyngart family’s journey from Leningrad to Queens in the 1970s. Gary Shteyngart captures an amazing snapshot of that time in history, and this engaging memoir is suffused with conflict, love, and a lot of hilarity.” — Laura Scott, Park Ridge Public Library, Park Ridge, IL

Also, it gets a strong review from Entertainment Weekly.

The wind is not a riverThe Wind Is Not a River, Brian Payton, (Harper)

“A tender love story about a reporter stranded during World War II on one of the Aleutian Islands, and his feisty wife, who travels to find him. The geographical and historical setting of American warfare in the North Pacific, little known to most, is very intriguing. Readers will fall in love with the main characters’ fierce determination to survive and love against all odds.” –Paulette Brooks, Elm Grove Public Library, Elm Grove, WI

And in movie tie-ins:

Winter's Tale MTI  Flowers in the Attic

Winter’s Tale (Movie Tie-In Edition), Mark Helprin, (HMH/Mariner Books) — starring Colin Farrell, Jessica Brown Findlay, Russell Crowe, the adaptation opens on Velentine’s Day.

Official Web site: WintersTaleMovie.com

Flowers in the Attic, V.C.  Andrews, (S&S/Gallery Books and Pocket Books; AudioGo) — Lifetime explores new territory with this remake of a cult classic, set to debut on Jan 18.

Official Web site: MyLifetime.com/movies/fFowers-in-the-attic

All the above titles, and more coming next week, are listed on our downloadable spreadsheet, New Title Radar, Week of Jan 6

Nancy Pearl Interviews … a Hollywood Screenwriter

Thursday, January 2nd, 2014

9781477848937Nancy Pearl inadvertently goes Hollywood in her most recent  interview with Jon Cohen, the author of  The Man in the Window(Amazon Publishing; Brilliance Audio; originally published by Warner Books in 1991).

It’s one of the titles in Nancy’s Book Lust Rediscoveries series, which brings some of her favorites back in print. We asked Nancy for some background and she replied, “the hardest part of getting this book signed up was finding Jon Cohen.” Google kept taking her to the author of the screenplay for the Steven Spielberg movie starring Tom Cruise, Minority Report. That made no sense to her because “it’s so different from The Man in the Window.”

Finally she and her editor at Amazon decided it was worth getting in touch with that Jon Cohen, just in case, and it turned out he was indeed the same person. “He was thrilled to learn that we wanted his novel to be part of the series, and I was thrilled because it’s long been one of my favorites.” Cohen explains in the interview below how he went from a career as a registered nurse to one as a full-time writer.

About the book, Nancy adds,

It’s the kind of novel you just want to hug, and, as I say in my introduction, it’s the sort of novel that I don’t usually enjoy because this kind of plot can feel manipulative and awfully saccharine. But Jon leavens the plot both with both humor and a bit of magic realism, and it all works wonderfully well. [Main characters] Louis and Iris are indelibly sketched in my heart.

Janus Turns His Head

Thursday, January 2nd, 2014

What’s on people’s minds for the new year?

people-cover-300In a word: Diets.

Today, Amazon’s Movers and Shakers list of books that have moved up the most in terms of sales rankings in the last 24 hours, is filled with diet books. How much this is self-motived and how much is the result of  media attention (such as People‘s new issue featuring those who lost Half Their Size!), is anyone’s guess.

Soon, the media will turn their attention from the best books of 2013 to previews of what’s coming in 2014. Meandwhile, check out our links at the right, under “Coming Soon” for a quick overview of titles coming in the next few weeks. Highlights, below:

Perfect Rachel Joyce   9780385348997

New York Magazine picks their favorites of January, recommending:

Rachel Joyce’s Perfect (Random House, Jan 14) by the author of the 2012 librarian favorite, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry),

Shovel Ready by Adam Sternbergh (RH/Crown, Jan 14;), calling it  a “darkly funny first books the the culture editor of The New York Times Magazine)

Gary Shteyngart’s Little Failure (Random House, Jan. 7). This memoir also got attention on NPR’s All Things Considered this week, where it was called an “unambivalent success“).

Mrs. Lincoln's Dressmaker   Mrs. Lincoln's Rival

Costco’s influential book buyer, Pennie Ianiciello, picks the paperback edition of Jennifer Chiaverini’s novel from last year, Mrs. Lincoln’s Dressmaker as the featured book of the month. Chiaverini’s next book, Mrs. Lincoln’s Rival, (Penguin/Dutton, Jan 14) is one of the month’s picks by The Book Reporter.

Archetype   Prototype

On the IndieNext list for February is one of our Penguin First Flights titles, Archetype by M.D. Waters, (Penguin/Dutton, Feb. 6) — check out our live online chat with the author here (and please join us tomorrow for our chat with Timothy Lane, author of Rules for Becoming a Legend).

Librarians have been tweeting that they can’t wait for the next in Waters’ series, Prototype (they won’t have to wait long, it’s coming in July). For those attending Midwinter, the author will be featured on the AAP Debut Author Panel, Sat., Jan. 25, 3:00–4:00 pm (RSVP HERE with your interest in attending by Monday, January 13th).

The KeptThere’e nearly universal acclaim for one debut, The Kept, by James Scott (Harper; Jan 7) — it’s picked for January by LibraryReadsIndieNext the BookReporter, and is an Amazon featured debut. The following is the annotation from LibraryReads:

“Scott has written a haunting novel about two characters who are tormented by regret and guilt and who do all the wrong things to find redemption. Beautiful writing and unforgettable characters mark this first novel that has been compared to the work of Cormac McCarthy and Michael Ondaatje.”

Alison Kastner, Multnomah County Library, Portland, OR

Digital advanced readers copies are still available from Edelewiss and Netgalley (but hurry, they may no longer be available after next week’s pub. date).