Archive for April, 2015

Six Titles To Make You An RA Guru, Week of April 21

Friday, April 17th, 2015

“Highly anticipated” is the catch phrase for next week, with new titles from Toni Morrison, David Baldacci and Jon Krakauer, but don’t let those big names cause you to overlook a memoir by poet Elizabeth Alexander.

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 April 21, 2015

Holds Leaders

9781455586387_4b710David Baldacci, Memory Man, (Hachette/Grand Central; Hachette Audio; Hachette Large Print; OverDrive Sample)

The honorary chair for National Library Week introduces a new series with this book.  The “memory man” is Amos Decker, a former football player with a head injury that has a strange result. He forgets nothing. Now a small town P.I., he investigates a school shooting. Kirkus calls the character a “a quirky, original antihero.”

The trailer for the movie based on one of Baldacci’s earlier titles,  Wish You Well, has just been released. It goes straight to DVD and On Demand in June.

9780062311115_b417fGreg Iles, The Bone Tree, (HarperCollins/Morrow; HarperLuxe; Harper Audio; OverDrive Sample)

Two tragedies, a serious car accident and the loss of his father, caused author Greg Iles to think differently about his writing. After 13 books he realized, “life was too short to pull any punches. I decided there was no room in [my next] book for formula and fluff. The story had to be handled with appropriate gravitas. I had to deal with it not only the way it deserved but in a way that would make my father proud.”

The result was last year’s Natchez Burning. The first in a trilogy, it arrived to fanfare from librarians and  debuted at #2 on the NYT best seller list, Iles’s highest ranking on that list to date. It’s now been on the paperback list for two weeks in a row, setting readers up for the next title, The Bone Tree.

It is both an Indie Next and a Library Reads pick.

LibraryReads:
“Based on a real series of unsolved murders from the civil rights era in Louisiana, and the crusading journalist who uncovered the story, Iles’ novel shines a bright light of truth upon one of America’s darkest secrets. Iles’ compelling writing makes this complex tale of good versus evil a must-read for those who love thrillers, and those who want to learn a little bit of American history not normally taught in school.” — Ellen Jennings, Cook Memorial Public Library, Libertyville, IL

9780399165153_2c6d9Amanda Quick, Garden of Lies, (Penguin/Putnam; Recorded Books; Thorndike; OverDrive Sample)

This standalone mystery by Jayne Ann Krentz, writing under one of her pseudonyms, is set in Victorian London. Kirkus approves, “A lady with a secret to hide and a gentleman reputed to be mad make a dandy investigative team.”

 

Advance Attention

9780307594174_bddd5Toni Morrison, God Help the Child, (RH/Knopf; RH Audio; RH Large Print)

Morrison’s latest can easily be called the most hotly anticipated novel of the season, having appeared on all the seasonal previews. Morrison gets the New York Times trifecta, the cover of last week’s NYT Magazine, the cover of the upcoming NYT Book Review, plus the Friday review by Michiko Kakutani in the daily NYT. It is also reviewed by Ron Charles, the Washington Post, today. Sad to say, however, the reviewers  find the book a let down. Morrison is scheduled to appear on NPR’s Fresh Air on Monday.

Upcoming Media Attention

9780385538732_e12b5Jon Krakauer, Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town (RH/Doubleday; RH & BOT Audio; RH Large Print)

Best-selling nonfiction author Krakauer is known for writing about disturbing subjects, such as his personal account of a disastrous attempt to climb Mt. Everest, Into Thin Air (the movie Everest, to be released on Sept. 18, features Michael Kelly as Krakauer). In his new book, he turns his attention to a series of rapes at the University of Montana. The book is embargoed, so no reviews have appeared yet [UPDATE: The Wall Street Journal just released an interview with the author that has some details on the book} and the city of Missoula is bracing itself.

The author is scheduled to appear on the upcoming NPR Weekend Edition Sunday, followed by the CBS Early Show on Wednesday and NPR’s Diane Rehm Show the next day.

Picks

9781455599875_6176fElizabeth Alexander, The Light of the World: A Memoir, (Hachette/Grand Central; Hachette Audio; OverDrive Sample)

The #1 IndieNext pick for May:

“It is hard to find the right words to do justice to this very special book. Yes, it is by one of our greatest contemporary poets, Elizabeth Alexander, who wrote ‘Praise Song for the Day’ for President Obama’s first inauguration, so the language is gorgeous. And yes, it is a memoir of losing her husband at a young age and so it is, in parts, gut-wrenchingly sad. And yes, it is an ode to an extraordinary man we come to feel we know as an artist, chef, father, friend, and lover. But, above all, it is as beautiful a love story as I have ever read, and it lifts readers up and gives us hope and makes us believe. I will urge it on everyone I know.” — Carole Horne, Harvard Book Store, Cambridge, MA

Live Online Chat with Josh Lieb

Thursday, April 16th, 2015
 Live Chat with Josh Lieb, RATSCALIBUR(04/16/2015) 
4:43
Nora, EarlyWord: 
We will begin our live online chat with Josh Lieb in about 15 minutes.
Thursday April 16, 2015 4:43 Nora, EarlyWord
4:44
Nora, EarlyWord: 
Meanwhile, here’s the cover of Ratscalibur
Thursday April 16, 2015 4:44 Nora, EarlyWord
4:44
Nora, EarlyWord
The Cover!
Thursday April 16, 2015 4:44 
4:45
Nora, EarlyWord: 
RATSCALIBUR will be published in June by Penguin/Razorbill.
Thursday April 16, 2015 4:45 Nora, EarlyWord
4:46
Nora, EarlyWord: 

In case you need a refresher on the plot, below is a summary from the publisher:

When Joey is bitten by an elderly rat, he goes from aspiring seventh-grader to three-inch tall rodent. At first, Joey is amazed by his new rat self. The city streets call to him at night. Smells that would have repelled him before are suddenly tantalizing. (A chicken bone? Yes! A squashed cockroach? Like perfume!) And wow, the freedom! But when a bout of hunger leads Joey to pull the spork from the scone, he finds himself at the center of a longtime rat prophecy. Joey has unwittingly unlocked Ratscalibur; and now, it is up to him to protect his new rat friends from the evil crows who seek to destroy their peaceful kingdom. But what does an eleven-year-old know about actual swordplay? And what happens when Joey no longer wants to be a rat?

Thursday April 16, 2015 4:46 Nora, EarlyWord
4:47
Nora, EarlyWord: 

Reviews have started coming in:

Publishers Weekly – "…playful retelling of the legend of Excalibur … a charming take on an old favorite about overcoming lifeas twists and finding strength inside oneself."

Kirkus -- "A crowd-pleasing mix of quick action, true valor, clever wordplay, and gross bits"

Booklist -- "Full of clever dialogue and hilarious puns, this is a delightful homage to Brian Jacques' Redwall series, Lord of the Rings, and Arthurian legend."

Thursday April 16, 2015 4:47 Nora, EarlyWord
4:49
Nora, EarlyWord: 
Here's a clip of Edoardo Ballerini narrating the audiobook, published by Lisening Library:
Thursday April 16, 2015 4:49 Nora, EarlyWord
4:49
Ratscalibur Audio  Play
Thursday April 16, 2015 4:49 
4:59
Nora, EarlyWord: 

Our moderator is Lisa Von Drasek will join us shortly.


In addition to being EarlyWord’s Kids Correspondent, she is the curator of the Children’s Literature Research Collections at the University of Minnesota, one of the world’s largest collections of children’s literature manuscripts and original. Before that, she was the Children's Librarian of the Bank Street College of Education. She’s served on many awards committees including the Newbery, the National Book Awards for Young People's Literature and American Library Association's Notable Children's Books.



Thursday April 16, 2015 4:59 Nora, EarlyWord
4:59
Nora, EarlyWord: 

I see chat participants gathering!

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.

Don’t worry about typos – we’ll make them too!

Thursday April 16, 2015 4:59 Nora, EarlyWord
5:00
Nora, EarlyWord: 
Say hello, Lisa and introduce our guest!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:00 Nora, EarlyWord
5:01
lisa von drasek: 
Hello, Welcome to the Chat.

Say hello Josh!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:01 lisa von drasek
5:01
Josh Lieb: 
Hullo!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:01 Josh Lieb
5:01
lisa von drasek: 
Nora- I think the rave reviews were a great introduction!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:01 lisa von drasek
5:02
Josh Lieb: 
I think there should have been more
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:02 Josh Lieb
5:02
Nora, EarlyWord: 

Paricipants -- say hello to Josh!

Thursday April 16, 2015 5:02 Nora, EarlyWord
5:02
lisa von drasek: 
Josh- can you say a few words about your "day job?"
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:02 lisa von drasek
5:03
Josh Lieb: 
I'm the Producer of the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:03 Josh Lieb
5:03
Josh Lieb: 
So I do a lot of writng and managing...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:03 Josh Lieb
5:03
[Comment From KathyKathy: ] 
Gotta love a kids book with a blurb from Jimmy Fallon on the cover!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:03 Kathy
5:03
Josh Lieb: 
and stressing out every day
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:03 Josh Lieb
5:04
lisa von drasek: 
why did you choose to write for kids?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 lisa von drasek
5:04
[Comment From FrannyFranny: ] 
Hi Josh – I am a fan. Thanks for doing this!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 Franny
5:04
[Comment From Kids LiberrianKids Liberrian: ] 
Love the cover. So many details for kids to pick over. The R with the rats tail gives me shivers
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 Kids Liberrian
5:04
Josh Lieb: 
I never stopped reading these books...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 Josh Lieb
5:04
[Comment From Judy P.Judy P.: ] 
Hi! From sunny N.J.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 Judy P.
5:04
Josh Lieb: 
I read other things too but...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 Josh Lieb
5:04
[Comment From JoeJoe: ] 
Love the main character’s name. Thanks for taking the time to chat with us.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 Joe
5:04
[Comment From KrystenKrysten: ] 
This is a thrill – thanks for doing it.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 Krysten
5:04
Josh Lieb: 
I've alwasy circled back around to childrens lit
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:04 Josh Lieb
5:05
lisa von drasek: 
Do you have a favorite children's book author?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:05 lisa von drasek
5:05
Josh Lieb: 
Hi everybody!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:05 Josh Lieb
5:05
[Comment From JaniceJanice: ] 
My kids are going to be SO impressed that I chatted with you!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:05 Janice
5:05
[Comment From LispethLispeth: ] 
Hi Josh – glad you could do this.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:05 Lispeth
5:05
Josh Lieb: 
I have a lot of them but...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:05 Josh Lieb
5:05
Josh Lieb: 
My favorite would have to be Daniel Pinkwater
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:05 Josh Lieb
5:06
lisa von drasek: 
Do you have a favorite book of his?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:06 lisa von drasek
5:06
Josh Lieb: 
I read "The Last Guru" when I was 8 and that...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:06 Josh Lieb
5:06
Josh Lieb: 
changed a lot of things
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:06 Josh Lieb
5:06
Josh Lieb: 
Revolutionary!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:06 Josh Lieb
5:06
lisa von drasek: 
okay...you need to be more specific ..
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:06 lisa von drasek
5:06
lisa von drasek: 
was it his brand of humor?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:06 lisa von drasek
5:07
Josh Lieb: 
Well, it was surreal of course...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:07 Josh Lieb
5:07
Josh Lieb: 
but it was based on real tenets of Tibetan Buddhism and reincarnation...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:07 Josh Lieb
5:07
Josh Lieb: 
as strange as it seemed to an 8 year old...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:07 Josh Lieb
5:07
Josh Lieb: 
it was more plausible than a lot of stuff I read. And it was hilarious...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:07 Josh Lieb
5:08
Josh Lieb: 
amazing whish fulfillment...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:08 Josh Lieb
5:08
Josh Lieb: 
I was being given a peek into a bigger, adult world
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:08 Josh Lieb
5:08
[Comment From LispethLispeth: ] 
How do you go from producing a late night TV show to writing kids books? Are there any similarities between the two?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:08 Lispeth
5:09
Josh Lieb: 
He did the same thing with dada in "Young Adult Novel"
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:09 Josh Lieb
5:09
Josh Lieb: 
I am aslo awfully forn for Edward Eager, E Nesbit, Elaine Raskin
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:09 Josh Lieb
5:10
lisa von drasek: 
From JoAnn in New Mexico - What inspired you to do this re-telling of Excalibur using the rat-realm?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:10 lisa von drasek
5:10
Josh Lieb: 
I love rats...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:10 Josh Lieb
5:10
Josh Lieb: 
and I love knights in shining armor...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:10 Josh Lieb
5:11
Josh Lieb: 
so it was a perfect combo...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:11 Josh Lieb
5:11
Josh Lieb: 
but really, I guess...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:11 Josh Lieb
5:11
Josh Lieb: 
I love the idea of hidden realms being just below our eyes...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:11 Josh Lieb
5:11
Josh Lieb: 
there if we only notced them...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:11 Josh Lieb
5:11
Josh Lieb: 
and I love the common tropes of so many stories...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:11 Josh Lieb
5:12
Josh Lieb: 
and fairy tales and songs that last for millenia...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:12 Josh Lieb
5:12
Josh Lieb: 
and this felt like acool way to revitalize these stories that we all know, almost without being told them
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:12 Josh Lieb
5:13
[Comment From Judy P.Judy P.: ] 
A spork in a scone? HOW did you come up with THAT?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:13 Judy P.
5:13
Josh Lieb: 
Thanks Judy!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:13 Josh Lieb
5:13
Josh Lieb: 
Unless you are being sarcastic...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:13 Josh Lieb
5:13
Josh Lieb: 
and have a museum full of sporks in scones...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:13 Josh Lieb
5:14
lisa von drasek: 
Librarians aren't a sarcastic bunch!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:14 lisa von drasek
5:14
Josh Lieb: 
I might have thought of that joke first!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:14 Josh Lieb
5:14
Josh Lieb: 
I don't believe it...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:14 Josh Lieb
5:14
Josh Lieb: 
Anyway, when I thought of that joke and that image...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:14 Josh Lieb
5:14
lisa von drasek: 
Can we talk about your writing process....
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:14 lisa von drasek
5:14
Josh Lieb: 
it committed me to writing the book
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:14 Josh Lieb
5:14
Josh Lieb: 
of course
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:14 Josh Lieb
5:14
lisa von drasek: 
Can you talk about your writing process? Do you get up at 4:00 am to write?

Thursday April 16, 2015 5:14 lisa von drasek
5:15
lisa von drasek: 
How do you find the time?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:15 lisa von drasek
5:15
[Comment From Judy P.Judy P.: ] 
I wasn't being sarcastic, but love the idea of a museum of scones!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:15 Judy P.
5:15
Josh Lieb: 
To Judy: I WAS being sarcastic because I already have a scone museum
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:15 Josh Lieb
5:15
Josh Lieb: 
to Lisa: I write whenever I can find the time...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:15 Josh Lieb
5:16
Josh Lieb: 
I'm very opportunistic...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:16 Josh Lieb
5:16
[Comment From Judy P.Judy P.: ] 
You are TOO much!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:16 Judy P.
5:16
Josh Lieb: 
weekends, nights, vacations....
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:16 Josh Lieb
5:16
Josh Lieb: 
I have less time to write now than ever before, which is disappointing...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:16 Josh Lieb
5:16
Josh Lieb: 
but I do love my job...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:16 Josh Lieb
5:16
Josh Lieb: 
ideally I would sit down at 9 and write all day...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:16 Josh Lieb
5:17
Josh Lieb: 
I've done that some points in my life...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:17 Josh Lieb
5:17
Josh Lieb: 
but for the most part I've always had a job, and then written wherever I could in the corners of my time
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:17 Josh Lieb
5:17
lisa von drasek: 
Was there anything that you wanted to put in the book that your editor made you take out?

Thursday April 16, 2015 5:17 lisa von drasek
5:17
Josh Lieb: 
No!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:17 Josh Lieb
5:18
Josh Lieb: 
What have you heard?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:18 Josh Lieb
5:18
lisa von drasek: 
Usually something is considered too gross or too violent for the age group
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:18 lisa von drasek
5:18
Josh Lieb: 
No, I didn't have anything too gross...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:18 Josh Lieb
5:19
Josh Lieb: 
... and it's all pretty firmly based in classi sources...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:19 Josh Lieb
5:19
Josh Lieb: 
I keep my audicnce in mind, too...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:19 Josh Lieb
5:19
Josh Lieb: 
I have kids. I am not a monster.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:19 Josh Lieb
5:19
[Comment From FrannyFranny: ] 
There’s so many references to classic fantasy. Do you think kids will get that?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:19 Franny
5:19
Josh Lieb: 
Probably not but...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:19 Josh Lieb
5:20
Josh Lieb: 
they don't have to..
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:20 Josh Lieb
5:20
Josh Lieb: 
it doesn't change your understanding of the plot of you go..
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:20 Josh Lieb
5:20
Josh Lieb: 
"oh, the king's lame like the Fisher King" or...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:20 Josh Lieb
5:21
Josh Lieb: 
"that's like TH White"...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:21 Josh Lieb
5:21
Josh Lieb: 
but maybe on re-reading or...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:21 Josh Lieb
5:21
Josh Lieb: 
when they read thpse boks later, they will make the connectin...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:21 Josh Lieb
5:21
Josh Lieb: 
and their experience will be enhanced...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:21 Josh Lieb
5:21
Josh Lieb: 
I want to remind them that these are not new stories...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:21 Josh Lieb
5:22
Josh Lieb: 
that this is all part of our collective consciousness
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:22 Josh Lieb
5:22
[Comment From FrannyFranny: ] 
That's a good point -- those of us who get the references get to enjoy them, but it doesn't mater if it passes over other's heads.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:22 Franny
5:22
[Comment From JoAnnJoAnn: ] 
Your humor and use of word play is hilarious (i.e. Spork in the Scone) How do you know what kids will laugh at? Or do you just hope?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:22 JoAnn
5:22
[Comment From JaniceJanice: ] 
Love the alliteration!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:22 Janice
5:22
Josh Lieb: 
I just hope...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:22 Josh Lieb
5:22
Josh Lieb: 
that's all anybody does when they make a joke, right? I think...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:22 Josh Lieb
5:23
Josh Lieb: 
parents are much more lilely to laugh at sporks in scone than kids are, actually...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:23 Josh Lieb
5:23
Josh Lieb: 
so it's an easter egg for us.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:23 Josh Lieb
5:23
lisa von drasek: 
As someone who had read “I am a Genius of Unspeakable Genius” how unlike this book is from that one….did you surprise your publisher?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:23 lisa von drasek
5:24
Josh Lieb: 
No as much as you'd think...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:24 Josh Lieb
5:24
lisa von drasek: 
well I screwed up that title!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:24 lisa von drasek
5:24
Josh Lieb: 
because they know me and knwo that the oter book was not a memoir...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:24 Josh Lieb
5:24
Josh Lieb: 
and we'd always talked about other stories that were a little less cyncical...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:24 Josh Lieb
5:25
Josh Lieb: 
Both books are very representative of me, I think, but they are very dfferent
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:25 Josh Lieb
5:25
lisa von drasek: 
Do you crack up when you are writing ? Do you make yourself laugh?


Thursday April 16, 2015 5:25 lisa von drasek
5:25
Josh Lieb: 
I make myself laugh all the time...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:25 Josh Lieb
5:25
Josh Lieb: 
that's when I know something is really good...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:25 Josh Lieb
5:25
Josh Lieb: 
the best thing is to write something, forget it...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:25 Josh Lieb
5:25
Josh Lieb: 
then go back to revise it later...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:25 Josh Lieb
5:26
Josh Lieb: 
and be amazed at yourself.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:26 Josh Lieb
5:26
lisa von drasek: 
As a former New Yorker I was impressed how perfectly you captured NYC and the apt. Joey lived with his mom…. Did you draw on your own experience?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:26 lisa von drasek
5:26
Josh Lieb: 
Oh yes...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:26 Josh Lieb
5:26
Josh Lieb: 
I've definitely lived in Joey's and Mom's apartment...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:26 Josh Lieb
5:26
Josh Lieb: 
I've been in that apratment a hundred times...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:26 Josh Lieb
5:26
Josh Lieb: 
and I've MOVED an inifinte number of times...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:26 Josh Lieb
5:27
Josh Lieb: 
around the cvity and between both coasts...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:27 Josh Lieb
5:27
Josh Lieb: 
so I know that feeling of living out of boxes...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:27 Josh Lieb
5:27
Josh Lieb: 
how sunsettled that is
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:27 Josh Lieb
5:28
Josh Lieb: 
"sunsttled" that is a weird typo
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:28 Josh Lieb
5:28
[Comment From KrystenKrysten: ] 
I want to go back to your saying you like rats. WHAT do you like about them?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:28 Krysten
5:28
Josh Lieb: 
They're furry. they're small...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:28 Josh Lieb
5:28
Josh Lieb: 
they have teeth...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:28 Josh Lieb
5:28
Josh Lieb: 
if you look at them objectively...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:28 Josh Lieb
5:28
Josh Lieb: 
they're pretty cute...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:28 Josh Lieb
5:29
Josh Lieb: 
as long as they stay of my margarine...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:29 Josh Lieb
5:29
Josh Lieb: 
then it's gross
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:29 Josh Lieb
5:29
lisa von drasek: 
do you have a pet rat?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:29 lisa von drasek
5:29
[Comment From NMLibrarieanNMLibrariean: ] 
I personally find it pretty hard to look at rats objectively, lol.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:29 NMLibrariean
5:29
Josh Lieb: 
No. My suster had a gerbil named snowball...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:29 Josh Lieb
5:29
Josh Lieb: 
I do have lots of pets though...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:29 Josh Lieb
5:30
Josh Lieb: 
A terrier named Birdy, a mystery mutt named Sammy...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:30 Josh Lieb
5:30
Nora, EarlyWord
Birdy, the dog
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:30 
5:30
Josh Lieb: 
and a brand new adopted cat named Milan who just moved in last weekend
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:30 Josh Lieb
5:30
Nora, EarlyWord
Milan, the cat
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:30 
5:30
Nora, EarlyWord
Sammy, the dog
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:30 
5:30
lisa von drasek: 
We let the four year olds name the hamster at school. The winner after the class vote was Skinball
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:30 lisa von drasek
5:30
Josh Lieb: 
Skinbal is good...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:30 Josh Lieb
5:31
lisa von drasek: 
okay I am in love with Birdy
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 lisa von drasek
5:31
Josh Lieb: 
Skeeball would be a good name for a rodent...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 Josh Lieb
5:31
Josh Lieb: 
Birdy is a rat...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 Josh Lieb
5:31
Josh Lieb: 
I used to have a dog named Lollipop who...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 Josh Lieb
5:31
Josh Lieb: 
was immortalized in the last book
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 Josh Lieb
5:31
[Comment From KathyKathy: ] 
SKINBALL? That's TERRIBLE!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 Kathy
5:31
[Comment From NMLibrarieanNMLibrariean: ] 
But these rats were the exception to the rule.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 NMLibrariean
5:31
[Comment From KathyKathy: ] 
I can go one better on the moving story -- I know a guy who came back home to Brooklyn from college and his parents had MOVED!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 Kathy
5:31
[Comment From Kids LiberrianKids Liberrian: ] 
As I said before, I love the R on the cover in the form of a rat tail -- SO realistic. Did you have any input on the cover?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:31 Kids Liberrian
5:32
Josh Lieb: 
I did have input on the cover...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:32 Josh Lieb
5:32
Josh Lieb: 
I think Tom did an amazing job...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:32 Josh Lieb
5:32
Josh Lieb: 
I wanted the cover to show that monet when he has just...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:32 Josh Lieb
5:32
Josh Lieb: 
been discovered as the hero...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:32 Josh Lieb
5:32
Josh Lieb: 
he's just pulled Ratscalibur form the scone...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:32 Josh Lieb
5:33
Josh Lieb: 
he has no idea of the signficance...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:33 Josh Lieb
5:33
Josh Lieb: 
just that something has HAPPENED...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:33 Josh Lieb
5:33
Josh Lieb: 
I also asked Tom to tone down any magical sparkles on the sword...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:33 Josh Lieb
5:33
Josh Lieb: 
you'll see it's significance is cause by beams of light shinging off it...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:33 Josh Lieb
5:34
Josh Lieb: 
I didn't want this to look ike a comic book...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:34 Josh Lieb
5:34
[Comment From Kids LiberrianKids Liberrian: ] 
I agree on the artist -- my personal favorite bit is the strawberry in the wheelbarrow.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:34 Kids Liberrian
5:34
Josh Lieb: 
I was shooting more for Kurt Wiese who did the Freddy the Pig pcitures...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:34 Josh Lieb
5:35
Josh Lieb: 
I think he did a fantastic job.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:35 Josh Lieb
5:35
lisa von drasek: 
Did you grow up with books in your house?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:35 lisa von drasek
5:35
Josh Lieb: 
Oh yes we had books all over the place
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:35 Josh Lieb
5:35
Josh Lieb: 
That's the best thing my parents did for me...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:35 Josh Lieb
5:36
[Comment From JaniceJanice: ] 
LOVE Freddy the Pig. How did you discover him? Isn't he pretty British?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:36 Janice
5:36
Josh Lieb: 
always plenty of books, and I always saw them reading...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:36 Josh Lieb
5:36
Josh Lieb: 
No! Freddy is as American as corny syrup...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:36 Josh Lieb
5:36
Josh Lieb: 
My father is a big Freddy fan and was always collecting the books for me...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:36 Josh Lieb
5:37
Josh Lieb: 
He grew up reading them in Nebraska...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:37 Josh Lieb
5:37
Josh Lieb: 
I have a huge long book shelf od them waiting for when my kids get older
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:37 Josh Lieb
5:37
lisa von drasek: 
Your dad grew up in Nebraska...where did you grow up.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:37 lisa von drasek
5:37
Josh Lieb: 
I was born and raised in Columbia, SC
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:37 Josh Lieb
5:38
lisa von drasek: 
was that a big city?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:38 lisa von drasek
5:38
Josh Lieb: 
No, bit it wast tiny...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:38 Josh Lieb
5:38
Josh Lieb: 
I want to say.. 120k people?...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:38 Josh Lieb
5:38
Josh Lieb: 
we were the capital, and the university town...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:38 Josh Lieb
5:39
Josh Lieb: 
we evry much felt like we were in the boonies...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:39 Josh Lieb
5:39
Josh Lieb: 
I miss it there, but I escaped at the earliest possible opportunity
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:39 Josh Lieb
5:39
lisa von drasek: 
Have you had any kid reactions to the book yet?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:39 lisa von drasek
5:40
lisa von drasek: 
That was from Joe
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:40 lisa von drasek
5:40
Josh Lieb: 
Yes -- the boy across the street likes it...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:40 Josh Lieb
5:40
Josh Lieb: 
and he hates EVERYTHING...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:40 Josh Lieb
5:40
lisa von drasek: 
Is his name Mikey?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:40 lisa von drasek
5:40
Josh Lieb: 
and I saw a really nice review on... Lit Pic I think? from a kid...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:40 Josh Lieb
5:41
Josh Lieb: 
His name is Darrow. No one is named Mikey anymore
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:41 Josh Lieb
5:41
Josh Lieb: 
It means a lot more when a kid likes it...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:41 Josh Lieb
5:42
Josh Lieb: 
than an adutt...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:42 Josh Lieb
5:42
Josh Lieb: 
I like that if a kid likes a book...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:42 Josh Lieb
5:42
lisa von drasek: 
wow the time is going fast...is there anything you would like to share with the chatters that we haven't talked about?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:42 lisa von drasek
5:42
Josh Lieb: 
she'll read it over and over again
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:42 Josh Lieb
5:43
Josh Lieb: 
I can't think of anything...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:43 Josh Lieb
5:43
Josh Lieb: 
I feel pretty exposed....
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:43 Josh Lieb
5:43
lisa von drasek: 
what book have you read over and over again...for me it was Anne of Green Gables
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:43 lisa von drasek
5:43
Josh Lieb: 
All tye necyclopedia Browns...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:43 Josh Lieb
5:43
[Comment From JoAnnJoAnn: ] 
Do you see a sequel to this book?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:43 JoAnn
5:44
[Comment From JaniceJanice: ] 
Once you're a best selling author (as with your first book), does your publisher essentially let you do whatever you want to do?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:44 Janice
5:44
Josh Lieb: 
the Henry Reeds, too many more to mention
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:44 Josh Lieb
5:44
lisa von drasek: 
Henry Reeds!!!! I loved them...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:44 lisa von drasek
5:44
Josh Lieb: 
to Joann: I wouldlike to write a seque, and I have some ideas, but they are percolating...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:44 Josh Lieb
5:45
Josh Lieb: 
to Janice: I don't know how it is for everybody, but Ben Schrank and Razorbill...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:45 Josh Lieb
5:45
Josh Lieb: 
were extermely supportive of me...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:45 Josh Lieb
5:45
Josh Lieb: 
no real roadblocks...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:45 Josh Lieb
5:45
Josh Lieb: 
I realize I'm very lucky.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:45 Josh Lieb
5:46
Josh Lieb: 
Other books I read a millions times: Ginger Pye...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:46 Josh Lieb
5:46
Josh Lieb: 
"From the Mixed up Files..."
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:46 Josh Lieb
5:46
Josh Lieb: 
The Great Brain. Do kids stil read the Great brain books?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:46 Josh Lieb
5:46
lisa von drasek: 
Me too, I wanted so bad to run away and live in the metropolitan museum
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:46 lisa von drasek
5:47
Josh Lieb: 
you can still do it!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:47 Josh Lieb
5:47
lisa von drasek: 
kids do read the Great Brain but they are a bit dense and dated with all sorts of strange references
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:47 lisa von drasek
5:47
lisa von drasek: 
not with today's security!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:47 lisa von drasek
5:47
Josh Lieb: 
Yes the references were strange...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:47 Josh Lieb
5:47
Josh Lieb: 
even when we were kids, but...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:47 Josh Lieb
5:48
Josh Lieb: 
that's why they were great!...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:48 Josh Lieb
5:48
lisa von drasek: 
I couldn't even pronounce Jesuit in my head!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:48 lisa von drasek
5:48
Josh Lieb: 
When the Great Brain goes to the acadmey and makes a killing selling candy bars...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:48 Josh Lieb
5:48
Josh Lieb: 
was one of my favorite things ever.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:48 Josh Lieb
5:49
lisa von drasek: 
Were there words that you read and heard in your head but found out later how they were really pronounced?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:49 lisa von drasek
5:49
Josh Lieb: 
Encyclopedia...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:49 Josh Lieb
5:49
Josh Lieb: 
I pronounced it "Enex-plodey."
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:49 Josh Lieb
5:49
lisa von drasek: 
!!!!!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:49 lisa von drasek
5:49
[Comment From Kids LiberrianKids Liberrian: ] 
I liked the part about making touch choices. Are you conscious of imparting messages when you write for kids?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:49 Kids Liberrian
5:50
Josh Lieb: 
I am...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:50 Josh Lieb
5:50
[Comment From Kids LiberrianKids Liberrian: ] 
SORRY -- I meant "tough choices"!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:50 Kids Liberrian
5:50
Josh Lieb: 
I figure t out!...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:50 Josh Lieb
5:50
Josh Lieb: 
I wouldlike to think I am helping kids...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:50 Josh Lieb
5:51
Josh Lieb: 
if not MAKE tough choices, come to terms with the fact they wil have to make tough choices...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:51 Josh Lieb
5:51
Josh Lieb: 
at some point in their lives...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:51 Josh Lieb
5:51
Josh Lieb: 
and that's what makes them heroes
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:51 Josh Lieb
5:52
Josh Lieb: 
I am definitely aware that I am writing for an audience that isn't as resistant to change...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:52 Josh Lieb
5:52
Josh Lieb: 
and self-evaluation...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:52 Josh Lieb
5:52
Josh Lieb: 
... as some adult readers are
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:52 Josh Lieb
5:52
lisa von drasek: 
I loved when Joey found his courage was from within and not external...it was an ah ha moment for me.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:52 lisa von drasek
5:53
Josh Lieb: 
Tanks!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:53 Josh Lieb
5:53
Josh Lieb: 
That was Dumbo's Feather, right?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:53 Josh Lieb
5:53
lisa von drasek: 
I loved Joey's mom and really felt her sadness. what happened to Joey's dad?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:53 lisa von drasek
5:53
[Comment From Kids LiberrianKids Liberrian: ] 
Great answer -- helping kids deal with the fact that they will have to make those choices is a great thing to aspire to.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:53 Kids Liberrian
5:53
Josh Lieb: 
Thanks.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:53 Josh Lieb
5:54
Josh Lieb: 
Lisa, I will not tell you hwat happened to Joey's Dad
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:54 Josh Lieb
5:54
lisa von drasek: 
okay then
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:54 lisa von drasek
5:54
lisa von drasek: 
tell me what happened to that big mean cat!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:54 lisa von drasek
5:54
Josh Lieb: 
stop hounding me!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:54 Josh Lieb
5:54
lisa von drasek: 
stop that! I can't laugh and type!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:54 lisa von drasek
5:54
Josh Lieb: 
Maybe I will reveal Dad's fate later...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:54 Josh Lieb
5:55
Josh Lieb: 
but right now it doesn't matter...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:55 Josh Lieb
5:55
Josh Lieb: 
and I wanted to show a family in a very common situation...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:55 Josh Lieb
5:55
Josh Lieb: 
and let it pass without cmment
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:55 Josh Lieb
5:55
lisa von drasek: 
Peanut gallery...last call for questions ...we only have a few minutes left!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:55 lisa von drasek
5:56
lisa von drasek: 
What do you eat for breakfast?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:56 lisa von drasek
5:56
[Comment From Kids LiberrianKids Liberrian: ] 
I just want to say thanks!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:56 Kids Liberrian
5:56
[Comment From JoAnnJoAnn: ] 
What books and ages would you like to write for next?
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:56 JoAnn
5:56
Josh Lieb: 
I have coffee for breakfast usually
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:56 Josh Lieb
5:56
[Comment From KathyKathy: ] 
Enjoyed the chat. Can't wait to share the book with our kids!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:56 Kathy
5:56
Josh Lieb: 
I have an idea for another kids book...
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:56 Josh Lieb
5:57
Josh Lieb: 
but I'm kind of deciding what to devote my life to next
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:57 Josh Lieb
5:57
[Comment From Judy P.Judy P.: ] 
Always great to be able to share a book with kids that is funny AND meaningful.
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:57 Judy P.
5:57
[Comment From JoeJoe: ] 
I smell another best seller!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:57 Joe
5:57
Josh Lieb: 
You've all been very kind! I hope your kids like the book! Please let me know
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:57 Josh Lieb
5:58
[Comment From Jo AnnJo Ann: ] 
Thanks so much Josh! Really enjoyed this chat as well as the book!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:58 Jo Ann
5:58
Josh Lieb: 
This has been very encouraging... thanks so much
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:58 Josh Lieb
5:59
[Comment From JaniceJanice: ] 
Great Chat; Thanks~!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:59 Janice
5:59
lisa von drasek: 
Thank you everyone for reading and sharing this book with your kids. Josh it has been a pleasure!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:59 lisa von drasek
5:59
Nora, EarlyWord: 
Thanks, Josh and Lisa for a great chat. And thanks to all of you for joining us!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:59 Nora, EarlyWord
5:59
Josh Lieb: 
Thanks, Lisa!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:59 Josh Lieb
5:59
Josh Lieb: 
And thank you, Nora!
Thursday April 16, 2015 5:59 Josh Lieb
6:00
Nora, EarlyWord: 

The next title in our program is:

The Education of Ivy Blake by Ellen Airgood

This thoughtful companion to Prairie Evers celebrates the strength it takes to rise above the negativity. Introvert Ivy finds power in her quiet ways and her ability to observe and appreciate life’s small, beautiful moments. Read More »

Thursday April 16, 2015 6:00 Nora, EarlyWord
 
 

More Than JUSTIFIED:
Elmore Leonard

Thursday, April 16th, 2015

Screen Shot 2015-04-16 at 10.36.48 AM

The final episode of FX’s Justified ran on Tuesday night, bringing renewed attention to Elmore Leonard via subtle homages to the author that were not lost on fans, the switching of the iconic Stetson hat to a version closer to the one Leonard lobbied for and a cameo of the book Leonard said he often re-read for inspiration, The Friends of Eddie Coyle by George V. Higgins (Macmillan/Picador, 1972; OverDrive Sample).

9780062120342_927acThe series, originally based on Leonard’s short story “Fire in the Hole” (from the collection When the Women Come Out to Dance, re-released in trade paperback as Fire in the HoleHarperCollins/Morrow; OverDrive Sample) and featuring the central character who also appeared in the novels Pronto, Riding the Rap, and Raylan, the last novel Leonard published before his death in 2013, has been a powerhouse show for the network and brought more fans to Leonard.

Both Fire in the Hold and The Friends of Eddie Coyle are currently rising on Amazon’s sales rankings.

Glowing reviews of the series’ end all laud Leonard as well, from New York Magazine’s in-depth conversation with executive producer Graham Yost to a consideration of Leonard’s character in Word & Film.

The renewed attention makes this a good time to promote Leonard’s extensive backlist and many adaptations through virtual and in-house displays.

Screen Shot 2015-04-16 at 11.07.50 AM  Screen Shot 2015-04-16 at 11.08.01 AM  Screen Shot 2015-04-16 at 11.08.24 AM

The three Justified novels. as well as the collection featuring the original short story, have been reprinted with bursts on the covers to make the connection, “Featuring RAYLAN GIVENS, from the new FX Series, JUSTIFIED.”

Beyond the series, classic examples of Leonard’s style include Hombre, Rum Punch, Be Cool, and Killshot. The Morrow imprint of HarperCollins recently re-released those titles as well several others in new trade paperback editions.

Many of Leonard’s books have been made into movies such as 3:10 To Yuma, Get Shorty, Jackie Brown, and the recent Life of Crime (based on The Switch). The first five seasons of Justified are available on DVD and the final is on its way.

Don’t forget the audio versions. Favorite narrators Frank Muller and George Guidall served as narrators for many of his titles.

BEA — First-Timers Guide
for Librarians

Thursday, April 16th, 2015

EW-logo-BEABook Expo America is just six weeks away — time to start planning so you can get the most out of the show.

Several EarlyWord’s GalleyChatters, veteran BEAers, have created the EarlyWord BEA First-Timers Guide for Librarians to share tips and recommendations.

We’ve set it up as a forum, so you can ask questions, make connections with like-minded librarians before the show (maybe even find a roommate) and enter your own favorite tips.

We like to think of this as a free-flowing pre-BEA cocktail party, so please join in.

Live Online Chat with M.J. Arlidge

Wednesday, April 15th, 2015

The chat has now ended. Please join us for the next one on Wed., June 4

 Live Chat with M. J. Arlidge: Eeny Meeny(04/15/2015) 
5:26
Nora: 
The next book in the First Flights program is

The Star Side of Bird Hill by Naomi Jackson

Read more about it here

Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:26 Nora
5:26
[Comment From kimkim: ] 
Thanks - enjoyed as always. With you (in spirit ) at the pub in the rain!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:26 kim
5:25
[Comment From LucyLucy: ] 
:-)
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:25 Lucy
5:25
mj: 
Pubs close in 30 mins here so I'll have to run. But I'll drink a toast to you all!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:25 mj
5:25
[Comment From LucyLucy: ] 
Thanks!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:25 Lucy
5:24
Nora: 

I think it's time for you to retreat to the pub (am I being stereotypical?)

Thanks to our First Flight members for joining the chat. You make it fun.

Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:24 Nora
5:24
mj: 
Thanks so much Nora and to everyone who participated. Great fun! Sorry for the late start. A small hiccup in the special relationship. Thanks again!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:24 mj
5:23
Nora: 
Thanks M.J. for this great chat and for giving us some extra time with you. We look forward to the next books in the series and to the TV shows.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:23 Nora
5:23
mj: 
Hi Elaine. We have just started talking about it and I hope to be in the US in July - in New York and Minneapolis and poss more besides. One of the great joys of this job is travel - I've already been to Oslo, Lyon, Milan and more besides. It's so nice meeting readers all round the world. Their enthusiasm and passion is always so inspiring!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:23 mj
5:21
[Comment From Elaine, N.J.Elaine, N.J.: ] 
Are you doing a U.S. book tour?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:21 Elaine, N.J.
5:20
mj: 
Ha ha. I love writing in the "u's" just knowing you'll have to take them out! Interestingly, only the US close edits the books, whilst everywhere else just translates. But that's fine by me - every country is different and whatever works best for them is fine by me. I just want as many people to read it as possible.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:20 mj
5:19
[Comment From ElaineElaine: ] 
Did much change in the book(s) in the editing process? And, does each country edit the book, or just translate it (or, in our case, take out all those extra u's)?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:19 Elaine
5:18
mj: 
I was. Principally because I was in love with the books of Roald Dahl. I think he has a unique and special imagination. James and the Giant Peach was one of the very first books I remember reading. It could only have been written by Dahl – the premise, the wacky characters and the notion that parents can be trampled to death by an escaped rhino!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:18 mj
5:17
[Comment From SuperLibrarianSuperLibrarian: ] 
Were you a big reader as a kid?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:17 SuperLibrarian
5:16
mj: 
Depends who was standing in front of me! We all like to think we’d do the right thing, but I suspect there is something innate in all of us which would want to survive, no matter what the cost.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:16 mj
5:15
Nora: 

What do YOU imagine you would have done in a similar situation?

Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:15 Nora
5:14
mj: 
From watching reality television! We live in a competition culture. Shows like X-Factor, I’m a Celebrity and Big Brother have helped to create a world in which we are constantly judging other people. Who’s hotter? Who’s more talented? Who do we like more? Who’s good, better, best? I thought it would be interesting for a serial killer to pose this question, raising the stakes so it becomes a matter of life and death. From this original notion, Eeny Meeny grew. It’s set not in the world of celebrity but in the world of ordinary people and as such the question posed is a universal one – faced with the ultimate dilemma, could you kill another to save yourself? Most of us would like to say “no”, or at the very least say we might do it because we have a wife and children who needs us etc. But is that true? Or is there just a basic instinct in all of us to survive, to live?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:14 mj
5:13
Nora: 

Your characters all respond to a similar situation -- having to decide which of them will live and which will die. How did you come up with that concept?

Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:13 Nora
5:13
mj: 
My background is in TV and in screenplays you are used to changing POV and location every minute or two. It's risky because you can lose your readers/audience if pace overwhelms character, but I love the vigour and speed that intercutting different story lines and characters gives you. All my novels will be written in this fast style I think.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:13 mj
5:10
Nora: 

Tell us about changing voices from chapter to chapter -- it requires skill by the author and I also think trust in the reader.

Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:10 Nora
5:10
mj: 
Novels are very manipulative.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:10 mj
5:10
Nora: 

Interesting -- I've asked other writers how they decide when a chapter is finished. Most don't really have an answer. Love yours about "maximum tease"!



Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:10 Nora
5:08
mj: 
Thanks, Lucy!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:08 mj
5:08
mj: 
I break them when I have achieved the maximum tease. I have never liked long chapters in books. I want each chapter to be an espresso - short and extremely powerful!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:08 mj
5:07
[Comment From LucyLucy: ] 
GREAT start with that !
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:07 Lucy
5:07
mj: 
Too right, Elaine. Snore!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:07 mj
5:07
Nora: 

Tell us about writing such short chapters (117 in all)! How do you decide when to break them?

Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:07 Nora
5:07
[Comment From ElaineElaine: ] 
So true -- no more middle age men with drinking problems!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:07 Elaine
5:06
mj: 
Hi Lucy - so glad you could join us! And thank you - it's my mission to put strong female police officers and interesting female serial killers on the map!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:06 mj
5:05
[Comment From LucyLucy: ] 
Came in late but have been quickly scrolling through the chat. My questions have already been asked but wanted to say I love an author, especially a male author, who loves to write strong female characters! Thanks for that!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:05 Lucy
5:05
mj: 
Hi Elaine - great question. They were very relaxed as EM came out in the slipstream of Fifty Shades and Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. Helen's sexuality stems from her desire to punish herself, her need to atone. So those scenes, rather than being erotic per se, are more about the controlled use of pain to manage your emotions. It's not something I'd recommend, but it happens and I thought it made her more interesting than, say, a middle age man with a drink problem.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:05 mj
5:03
[Comment From Elaine, N.J.Elaine, N.J.: ] 
There's some pretty heavy duty erotic scenes in the book. Why did you want to include them? Were your editors OK with them?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:03 Elaine, N.J.
5:02
mj: 
Many people think I'm a woman. Which I take as a compliment.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:02 mj
5:02
[Comment From Ruth R.Ruth R.: ] 
I hope you take this as a compliment -- I thought for a while that this WAS written by a woman.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:02 Ruth R.
5:01
mj: 
In short, Ruth, yes. The decision to use my initials was a deliberate decision – I wanted to be gender neutral! For me the writer should be as anonymous as possible, so people come to the novel without any preconceptions. Sometimes people baulk at the prospect of a man writing a novel with a female protagonist or vice versa and I wanted to avoid that. But it’s not just about gender. The more elusive or enigmatic the writer is the better, as far as I’m concerned, so you can just lose yourself in their work. To be honest I’m never that interested in whether authors are married, have kids, like dogs – too much information destroys the mystery for me. Less is more!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 5:01 mj
4:59
[Comment From Ruth R.Ruth R.: ] 
Thanks for saying that! On the other side -- women writers used to hide their gender behind initials. Are you doing the same by using your initials?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:59 Ruth R.
4:58
mj: 
Because women are more interesting than men! And their lives are much harder – which is great for a fictional protagonist. People find strong, uncompromising women challenging. And they find women with unusual emotional and sexual needs even more challenging! Women have to fight battles daily that men never have to face – which makes their eventual triumph all the more satisfying.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:58 mj
4:57
[Comment From Ruth R.Ruth R.: ] 
Why did you use a female, rather than a male detective?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:57 Ruth R.
4:57
mj: 
Thanks, Ruth. I’m a big fan of Stieg Larsson and you can see his influence in the creation of Helen Grace. I adored Lisbeth Salander as a character – so unconventional, so fearless, so uncompromising – and wanted Helen to have her spirit. They are both complex women – emotionally, sexually, psychologically – and share a dogged determination and sense of social justice that I find very appealing. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo was the first crime book I’d read in which the heroine was a more interesting character than the bad guys she was hunting.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:57 mj
4:56
[Comment From Ruth R.Ruth R.: ] 
How did you come up with Helen -- she's a fascinating character.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:56 Ruth R.
4:53
mj: 
Good question. I always like to research and spent many happy hours in Southampton plotting dark deeds. But in the end it is the flight of your imagination that creates the most memorable and surprising things, so having done my research I just closed my eyes and let my mind wander…
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:53 mj
4:52
mj: 
I owe you, Kim. Thanks!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:52 mj
4:52
[Comment From SuperLibrarianSuperLibrarian: ] 
Loved that you shot your video intro in front of the British Library. Did you do any research for your book?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:52 SuperLibrarian
4:52
[Comment From kimkim: ] 
It seems to be the trend that books starting off in Europe come to us in trade paper. We also will be buying the book - paperback or not.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:52 kim
4:52
mj: 
My pleasure. This is fun!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:52 mj
4:51
Nora: 
Just to let you know, everyone, M.J. has agreed to stay with us a bit longer, since we had a rocky beginning. Thaks, M.J.!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:51 Nora
4:51
mj: 
EM is set in Southampton. Southampton is a fascinating port city on the South Coast of England. The Titanic set sail from Southampton in 1912 on its maiden journey and it has always been a prosperous, vibrant place. It was heavily bombed during WWII and now has a slightly fractured identity as a result, many of its very old buildings having been destroyed by Hitler’s firebombs. Port cities and towns always interest me – they have a certain atmosphere, a sense of threat and simmering criminality that I always find exciting.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:51 mj
4:50
mj: 
Me too, Kim.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:50 mj
4:50
mj: 
She's been in loads of things, but she specialises in the really dark, highly sexualised films like Antichrist and Nymphomania. Not everyone's cup of tea, but I love them.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:50 mj
4:50
Nora: 
Tell us more about the setting of EENY MEENY (you may know  that Southampton NY is quite a different place). Why did you choose to set the books there
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:50 Nora
4:50
[Comment From kimkim: ] 
I kept seeing a young Helen Miren playing Helen Grace - perfect for the screen
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:50 kim
4:49
Nora: 
That DOES sound amazing -- I am a fan as well. She starred in THE SWIMMING POOL, right?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:49 Nora
4:47
mj: 
Hi Janet, thanks for you great question. I've sold the film rights and the prod company are busy developing it into a UK "True Detective". They want Charlotte Gainsbourg to play Helen which would be extremely interesting as I am a massive fan of her work with Lars Von Trier. She is French but educated in England so has a good accent!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:47 mj
4:46
[Comment From janet_schneiderjanet_schneider: ] 
So great to be able to chat. Are there plans to dramatize the series for television in the UK? Southampton would be a lovely setting.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:46 janet_schneider
4:46
mj: 
Thanks so much, Kim. Really glad it captivated you. Most people seem to read EM very quickly. The record is six hours I think.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:46 mj
4:45
Nora: 
Just stepping in to explain that TLA is the TEXAS LIBRARY ASSOCIATION conference.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:45 Nora
4:44
[Comment From kimkim: ] 
Sorry that the day is not going well. I almost missed this because of TLA but I was really glad I made it back. I really enjoyed hiding from the world for a few days so I could finish this book - one of my favorites!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:44 kim
4:44
mj: 
Another excellent question. She doesn't like scary books but surprised everyone by saying she actually really enjoyed EM. I got my own back by telling everyone that the S&M elements in the book were all inspired by her.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:44 mj
4:43
[Comment From Jennie, AZJennie, AZ: ] 
Speaking of your wife, JENNIE -- what does she think of Helen?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:43 Jennie, AZ
4:43
mj: 
You'd have to talk to my publishers! I'm a great fan of paperbacks - they are cheap and democratic, but it's out of my hands. I was amazed when i went to Lyons, France, recently to publicise my book there. It was on sale for 22 euros. Which for a debut author is a huge amount, I think. So i love paperbacks.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:43 mj
4:41
[Comment From Jennie, AZJennie, AZ: ] 
My library is delighted that this is a paperback; means we can buy more than if it were hardcover. Are all the books going to be paperback?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:41 Jennie, AZ
4:41
mj: 
No. Oddly I only discovered James as I was writing my second novel. Penguin had long harboured ambitions of doing a series of thrillers with child-like titles and Eeny Meeny as a title was their idea.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:41 mj
4:40
Nora: 

You mention James Patterson as an influence (and he certainly is an example of someone who has a fast publishing schedule!).


I’m sure you’re aware he also wrote a book titled Pop Goes the Weasel. Is your title an homage?

Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:40 Nora
4:39
mj: 
Good question, Jennie. You share my wife's name and her spelling of it, so I'm predisposed to like you! I don't know how many there will be but loads I hope. I love Helen and want to write her for as long as possible.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:39 mj
4:38
[Comment From Jennie, AZJennie, AZ: ] 
Have you decided how many books there will be in the series?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:38 Jennie, AZ
4:38
mj: 
Thanks so much Diana. Really thrilled you enjoyed it.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:38 mj
4:38
[Comment From Diana HowellDiana Howell: ] 
Enjoyed the book and the characters immensely. Looking forward to the next one coming out in October.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:38 Diana Howell
4:37
mj: 
No, I just write quickly. When I first pitched the series to Penguin, I pitched them the first seven Helen Grace novels. They now have me delivering one every six months. Which is hard work!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:37 mj
4:36
Nora: 

T

Two other titles in the series have already been released in the U.K.

    Pop Goes the Weasel

    The Doll's House

And a third is coming in September

      Liar Liar.

Your output is prodigious. Do you write quickly, or did you have a group of novels you sold at once?

Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:36 Nora
4:36
mj: 
That was a tense half an hour. So pleased to be joining you at last. I always like to arrive fashionably late.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:36 mj
4:35
Nora: 
Hurrah -- feels like you just flew in from London!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:35 Nora
4:35
mj: 
Only Romania. They have no kids rhyme that equates to this. Weird.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:35 mj
4:34
Nora: 
Are there any countries that didn’t have a cultural equivalent?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:34 Nora
4:33
Nora
Polish Cover
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:33 
4:33
Nora: 
And, here's the Polish cover!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:33 Nora
4:33
Nora: 
From M.J. --

Am Stram Gram is the french version. Um Do Li Ta is the Portugese. They are both kids nursery rhymes to decide whose turn it is next. My favourite is the Polish cover which says "Ene Due Smierc". This is a real children's nursery rhyme in Poland and translates as "Eeny Meeny Death". Perfect.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:33 Nora
4:33
Nora
Portuguese Cover
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:33 
4:32
Nora: 
And about the Portugese one:

Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:32 Nora
4:31
[Comment From kimkim: ] 
I am having trouble getting on. Are you still having technical issues?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:31 kim
 
Nora: 
Hi Kim; We've had to resort to email!
  Nora
4:30
Nora
French Cover
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:30 
4:30
Nora: 
I'm curious about this one:
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:30 Nora
4:29
Nora: 
M.J. responds:

It has been an amazing experience being published in over 25 countries. Every country has a different take on what the book means and adapt their covers accordingly. The Scandinavians go very dark, the Italians go sexy, the French go sophisticated - its very stereotypical.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:29 Nora
4:29
Nora
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:29 
4:28
Nora: 

I just asked him about I’m fascinated by the comment he made in is intro video about the covers – that each country’s represents a different take on the book.

Penguin UK posted a range of them in a photo on Twitter:
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:28 Nora
4:25
Nora: 
Hold off a moment -- we think we have a solution.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:25 Nora
4:25
[Comment From SuperLibrarianSuperLibrarian: ] 
Hi! Thanks for doing this. You scared me SO BAD with this book.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:25 SuperLibrarian
4:25
[Comment From Jennie, AZJennie, AZ: ] 
Hi from sunny Arizona!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:25 Jennie, AZ
4:24
[Comment From Elaine, N.J.Elaine, N.J.: ] 
Looking forward to the chat!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:24 Elaine, N.J.
4:24
[Comment From Ruth R.Ruth R.: ] 
Hi. M.J. -- thanks for taking the time to chat with us.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:24 Ruth R.
4:24
[Comment From PennyPenny: ] 
Still calming down after reading your book. That book trailer didn't help!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:24 Penny
4:24
[Comment From Judy P.Judy P.: ] 
Hi from the midwest. Have you ever been to the "flyover" states?
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:24 Judy P.
4:24
[Comment From janet_schneiderjanet_schneider: ] 
Hello M.J. Helen is a brilliant character. I loved the existential themes of the book--how doing the right thing can go so awry.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:24 janet_schneider
4:24
Nora: 
Say hi to M.J., everyone!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:24 Nora
4:23
Nora: 
M.J. is in London -- just asked him if Spring has arrived. He responds:

Yes, it's been an amazing day here today. Sunshine all day - a rarity for England!
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:23 Nora
4:17
Nora: 
While we are trying to solve the connectivity problems, M.J. is going to email me his comments and I will post them.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:17 Nora
4:08
Nora: 
While we're waiting, feel free to enter your comments & questions.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:08 Nora
4:04
Nora: 
Hang on, everyone, having a few technical issues.
Wednesday April 15, 2015 4:04 Nora
3:57
Nora: 

I see chat participants gathering. 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 M.J. before the end of the chat. Don’t worry about typos – and please forgive ours.

Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:57 Nora
3:48
NoraNora
Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:48 
3:48
Nora: 

M.J. made a somewhat calmer video to introduce himself to all of you:

Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:48 Nora
3:47
Nora: 

But to get a real flavor, watch this book trailer from the U.K.

Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:47 Nora
3:47
NoraNora
Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:47 
3:47
Nora: 

Publishers Weekly reviewed it recently:

"British author Arlidge’s engrossing first novel, a crime thriller, introduces Det. Insp. Helen Grace of the Hampshire police. When a fiend abducts a young woman and her boyfriend and torments them in an ingeniously cruel way that leads to the death of one of them, Helen investigates, but before she can make any headway there is a second similar case, then a third. Helen believes there’s a connection among the victims, but the only link she can see is that they were all acquaintances of hers. Helen is herself a severely damaged woman. Professional stress and a guilty family secret make her withdrawn and defensive in her personal life; her main relief comes from employing a professional dominator to whip her. Plot complications include Helen’s detection of a mole within the department and her complex relationship with an otherwise talented subordinate who’s sinking into debilitating alcoholism. Readers will look forward to seeing more of this strong, intelligent, and courageous lead."

Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:47 Nora
3:46
Nora
American cover
Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:46 
3:46
Nora: 
Meanwhile, here is the cover:
Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:46 Nora
3:44
Nora: 

We will begin our online chat at 4 pm. with M.J. Arlidge, author of the internationally best selling debut thriller, Eeny Meeny , to be published in the U.S. on June 2nd, by Penguin/NAL

Wednesday April 15, 2015 3:44 Nora
 
 

David Brooks Dives Deep

Wednesday, April 15th, 2015

Screen Shot 2015-04-15 at 8.21.10 AMColumnist and commentator David Brooks’s new book, The Road to Character (Random House; RH Audio; OverDrive Sample) is a blend of self-examination and an exploration of what makes a richly fulfilling inner life.

In an interview yesterday on NPR’s All Things Considered, he says he began this journey after meeting a group of people who tutor immigrants and realizing that they “radiated gratitude for life,” a quality he found missing in his own life, despite his outward successes.

The Guardian calls the book “a powerful, haunting book that works its way beneath your skin.”

It rose to #2 on Amazon’s sales rankings today, possibly benefiting not only from people on the search for their own roads to character, but from those on the search for interesting (if pointed) graduation gifts. As The Washington Post‘s Ron Charles points out in a story satirizing printed version of famous graduation speeches aimed at that market, it is the season for such books.

Nina Stibbe: An Author To Watch

Wednesday, April 15th, 2015

Screen Shot 2015-04-15 at 9.12.22 AMAs we reported earlier, Nina Stibbe’s second book, A Man At the Helm (Hachette/Back Bay original trade pbk; OverDrive Sample), has received glowing attention.

The daily New York Times plays catchup this week with another shining review, placing her in the same company as fellow British comic mastermind P.G. Wodehouse. Says reviewer John Williams, “Ms. Stibbe is in her early 50s, and Man at the Helm is the second book to appear in relatively quick succession and establish her reputation as a top-shelf comic writer.”

"Screen

Williams also reports that Nick Hornby is adapting Stibbe’s first book, a memoir about her stint as a nanny, Love, Nina, for the BBC. There’s still many steps to its becoming a reality, so it’s too early to speculate on whether it will also be broadcast in the US.

Reading GO SET A WATCHMAN Under Watchful Eyes

Wednesday, April 15th, 2015

Go Set a WatchmanMost of the world is still holding their breath for the publication of Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman,(Harper; HarperAudio; HarperLuxe; HarperCollins EspañolHarperCollins Español AudioeBook) in July.

But as the London Book Fair opens, a select few are getting an early look at the manuscript. International publishers interested in acquiring territorial rights (25 countries have already signed up) are queuing up to read the manuscript in agent Andrew Nurnberg Associates’ London offices under heavy security, reports The GuardianBecause of the desire for secrecy, they are only allowed to read the manuscript in paper form.

We’re on the alert for the first leaks.

Favorite Library and Indie May Titles

Tuesday, April 14th, 2015

Genres dominate the May LibraryReads List, with two Fantasy novels, two Science Fiction picks, two Crime stories, rounded out by one chick lit and a few literary titles.

Screen Shot 2015-04-14 at 12.12.50 PMCalled a stand-alone fairy tale for adults, Naomi Novik’s Uprooted (RH/Del Rey; OverDrive Sample) is the top pick this month. Lucy Lockley of St. Charles City-County Library (MO) offers this description of the Fantasy:

“A young girl is unexpectedly uprooted from her family and becomes involved in a centuries-old battle with The Wood, a malevolent entity which destroys anyone it touches. Fast-paced, with magic, mystery and romance, Novik’s stand-alone novel is a fairy tale for adults.”

Screen Shot 2015-04-14 at 12.13.37 PMThe second fantasy, again with a fairy tale feel, is Sarah J. Maas’s A Court of Thorns and Roses (Bloomsbury USA Children’s; OverDrive Sample), a YA book with cross over appeal. Jessica C. Williams, Westlake Porter Public Library (OH) says:

“The human world is in peril. Feyre, a semi-literate girl, hunts for her family’s survival. After she kills an enormous wolf, a fierce fey shows up at her doorstep seeking retribution. Feyre is led to beautiful eternal springs, but the journey is not without danger. Maas masterfully pulls the reader into this new dark fantasy series which feels like a mix of fairy tales, from Beauty and the Beast to Tam Lin.”

The May Indie Next List of 20 titles offers a different distribution – and no overlap with the LibraryReads list.

The list is notable this month for the large number of debuts among the marquee names such as Anne Enright, Lisa Scottoline, Greg Iles, and Matthew Pearl.

Screen Shot 2015-04-14 at 12.14.42 PMWell-known poet Elizabeth Alexander earns the #1 pick for her debut memoir The Light of the World (Hachette/Grand Central; Grand Central Audio; OverDrive Sample), and receives this glowing annotation:

“It is hard to find the right words to do justice to this very special book. Yes, it is by one of our greatest contemporary poets, Elizabeth Alexander, who wrote ‘Praise Song for the Day’ for President Obama’s first inauguration, so the language is gorgeous. And yes, it is a memoir of losing her husband at a young age and so it is, in parts, gut-wrenchingly sad. And yes, it is an ode to an extraordinary man we come to feel we know as an artist, chef, father, friend, and lover. But, above all, it is as beautiful a love story as I have ever read, and it lifts readers up and gives us hope and makes us believe. I will urge it on everyone I know.” —Carole Horne, Harvard Book Store, Cambridge, MA

Screen Shot 2015-04-14 at 12.15.27 PMAmong the many other debuts is The Turner House by Angela Flournoy (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; Blackstone Audio; OverDrive Sample) which receives an equally appreciative description:

“The greatest testament to the skill of a writer is the ability to make what might seem alien to the reader completely recognizable and utterly engaging. Such was my experience reading The Turner House. Mine is a tiny white family from a small town with no sense of heritage, yet every moment I spent with the Turners — a family of 13 children shaped by the Great Migration to Detroit — I felt at home. Their struggles and joys are universal, yet told with an exacting eye that always finds the perfect detail. This is a truly impressive debut.” —Kim Fox, Schuler Books & Music, Grand Rapids, MI

A Two-Book Week for Jon Stewart

Tuesday, April 14th, 2015

Author Fareed Zakaria will appear on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart tonight, and U.S. Navy SEAL Eric Greitens on Thursday.

Screen Shot 2015-04-14 at 10.43.55 AMCNN host Zakaria, a frequent guest on Stewart’s show (see his post 9/11 appearance here), generally writes about  the Middle East. Last week, he engaged in a heated discussion with Bill Maher on HBO’s Real Time about Maher’s views on Islam.

His newest book, In Defense of a Liberal Education (Norton; S&S Audio), addresses a different topic. A short ode to the value of a well-rounded education, it is an argument against the growing focus on vocational training over more traditional subjects.

Zakaria advocates for the importance of learning how to think critically, write well, and communicate effectively, and perhaps most of all, for acquiring the ability to continuously learn over the course of a lifetime, a message well-timed for college graduation gifs.

Eric Greitens, who appears on Thursday, is the founder, chairman and CEO of The Mission Continues. Librarians might recognize his name from his 2011 New York Times bestseller The Heart and the Fist.

Screen Shot 2015-04-14 at 10.44.51 AMHis newest book, Resilience: Hard-Won Wisdom for Living a Better Life (HMH; Macmillan Audio; OverDrive Sample), is a series of letters (which read like a cross between a pep talk and an essay) written to a fellow solider in need of aid. The central message is the importance of resilience and ways to live a more focused, wise, and strong life.

 

The New Age of Storytelling

Tuesday, April 14th, 2015

Screen Shot 2015-04-13 at 12.29.34 PM

After the breakout success of Serial, the “audio media space” industry (a mix of radio and podcast producers as The Hollywood Reporter describes it) is scrambling to satisfy a newly discovered audience for long form narrative storytelling.

Serial and Invisibilia, both hot properties on NPR (Invisibilia created a best seller of the book it’s based on), are examples of the new direction towards multi-part, lengthy, story-based nonfiction segments that hook listeners and supply them with episodic fixes similar to The Walking Dead or Game of Thrones.

Second seasons of both shows are in the works but producers admit that finding follow-up topics is a challenge, “It’s uncharted territory. Invisibilia and Serial broke into new audiences and opened up the space a bit, but we’re making it up as we go.”

The shifting audio landscape may be a new challenge for producers, but many librarians have already figured out how to take advantage of the trend.

As we reported earlier, librarians have supported Serial with booklists. Others offer podcasts of library programs, such as those from the Free Library of Philadelphia, the Enoch Pratt Free Library, and the Seattle Public Library, Libraries are also partnering with programs such as StoryCorps to help archive and build story collections.

The DC Public Library even offers their own class on how to create audio stories and posts student’s projects on SoundCloud.

The new attention to podcasts is an opportunity for storytelling librarians to reach out in new ways and for readers’ advisory and collection development librarians to expand their services. Let us know in the comments section what your library is doing.

M TRAIN Cover Reveal

Tuesday, April 14th, 2015

M Train Patti SmithThe release of the cover for Patti Smith’s upcoming memoir, M Train (RH/Knopf; RH Audio, Oct. 6) is bringing a raft of media attention, from Rolling Stone to the New York Times and even the Religion News Service (“Patti Smith’s spiritual curiosity on display in sequel to Just Kids“).

Entertainment Weekly claims to have the “exclusive cover reveal,” and describes the cover image as, “a sacred memento for Smith: It shows her at Cafe ‘Ino in Greenwich Village, where M Train begins, and where Smith went every morning for a breakfast of black coffee and brown bread. On the last day before Cafe ‘Ino closed, a passing photographer took the picture. Smith calls it ‘the first and last picture at my corner table in Ino … My portal to where.’ ”

The title of the book refers to the NYC subway line which runs through the Brooklyn neighborhood where she once shared an apartment with Robert Mapplethorpe and in to Greenwich Village. The book itself is described by the publisher as “a journey through eighteen ‘stations.’ It begins in the tiny Greenwich Village café where Smith goes every morning for black coffee.”

New Best Sellers, AT THE WATER’S EDGE and READY PLAYER ONE

Monday, April 13th, 2015

At the Water's EdgeSara Gruen’s At The Water’s Edge (RH/Spiegel & Grau; BOT Audio; RH Large Print; Overdrive Sample) debuts at the highest spot ever for the author (#6 on the NYT Hardcover Fiction list and #12 on USA Today‘s general list).

Her 2006 novel, Water for Elephants was a slow build, eventually hitting #1 in paperback in anticipation of the movie starring Reese Witherspoon. Her next book, 2010’s Ape House debuted at #8 on the NYT list (#65 on USA Today‘s), lasting just a few weeks.

The new success is featured in both the NYTInside the List” column and USA Today, “Sara Gruen’s Loch Ness novel is a hit.”

Gruen herself is not so worried about matching her earlier success. As she tells NPR’s Weekend Edition, “I don’t tend to think ‘oh, I peaked at 38,’ I tend to think ‘I’m so happy about what happened with Water for Elephants, but I know I was struck by lightning’ … it’s not going to happen again and that’s ok. I get to keep doing what I love to do.”

While lightning may not strike twice, it appears Water’s Edge will attract a wider audience than did Ape House and fulfill predictions from collection development librarians that it will circulate briskly through the summer. It is rising on Amazon sales rankings this week and most libraries show growing holds.

Ready Player OneThe NYT trade paperback list offers the tale of another slow build, similar to Water for Elephants. Ernest Cline’s Ready Player One, (RH/Crown, 2011) hits the Trade Paperback Fiction list for the first time, after several weeks on the extended list (the hardcover also spent a few weeks on the extended list), probably based on news that Steven Spielberg has signed to direct the film adaptation as well as anticipation of the release of the next title, Armada (RH/Crown, RH & BOT Audio), set for publication on July 24th.

Cline will be one of the featured speakers the AAP/LibraryReads Dinner during BEA this year.

 

Western Passage: Ivan Doig
Dies at 75

Monday, April 13th, 2015

Screen Shot 2015-04-12 at 3.13.59 PM   Screen Shot 2015-04-12 at 3.12.46 PM

Ivan Doig died on Thursday, in his home in Seattle. Both a novelist and a nonfiction writer, Doig published over a dozen books including This House of Sky (which was a finalist for the National Book Award), The Whistling Season, The Bartender’s Tale, and Sweet Thunder.

His final work, slated for publication on August 18th, is Last Bus to Wisdom.

The New York Times, Entertainment Weekly, and the LA Times offer remembrances.

On his website Doig begins a note to his readers with this:

No one is likely to confuse my writing style with that of Charlotte Bronte, but when that impassioned parson’s daughter lifted her pen from Jane Eyre and bequeathed us the most intriguing of plot summaries—’Reader, I married him’—she also was subliminally saying what any novelist, even one from the Montana highlands rather than the Yorkshire moors, must croon to those of you with your eyes on our pages: ‘Reader, my story is flirting with you; please love it back.’ Our books come to you with bright-cheeked hope…

Readers who want to explore Doig’s writing with that same “bright-cheeked hope” might wish to begin with his memoir This House of Sky.

Eight Titles to Know and Recommend, The Week of April 13

Friday, April 10th, 2015

The leaders in holds next week are Nora Roberts and Lisa Scottoline. Also arriving is a memoir by a black woman who makes the horrifying discovery (while browsing in a library) that her grandfather was a notorious Nazi. Readers advisors can look to several LibraryReads and Indie Next picks for titles to recommend.

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 April 13, 2015

Holds Leaders

9780399170867_15d84  9781250010117_2e3ab

The Liar, Nora Roberts (Penguin/Putnam; Brilliance Audio)

Readers, she married a liar and only finds out after he dies. In a starred review, Booklist says, “Roberts excels at effectively incorporating lots of domestic details about her heroine’s life in a slow-burning fuse of a plot that ultimately explodes in a nail-biting conclusion.”
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Every Fifteen Minutes, Lisa Scottoline (Macmillan/St. Martin’s; Macmillan Aurio; Thorndike, OverDrive Sample)

Starred reviews from all four trade publications

Advance Attention

9781615192533_c9619My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me: A Black Woman Discovers Her Family’s Nazi Past, Jennifer Teege, Nikola Sellmair, Carolin Sommer (The Experiment, dist. by Workman; Blackstone Audio)

Workman’s hottest ARC at Midwinter, according to library marketer Mike Rockliff.

People magazine ran an excerpt, with the description, “Adopted as a child, Jennifer Teege recently discovered a family secret her grandfather was the monstrous SS officer played by Ralph Fiennes in Schindler’s List.” She is also featured on NPR’s web site. With all this advance attention, you can expect more to come. Below is the trailer:

Picks

9780062225467_d3103Where They Found Her, Kimberly McCreight, (Harper; Blackstone Audio; HarperLuxe; OverDrive Sample)

Excitement comes from many quarters for McCreight’s second novel after her 2014 Edgar and Anthony nominee Reconstructing Amelia, beginning with a cover blurb by Gillian Flynn, “McCreight creates a world that pulls us in completely and genuinely, with characters that can enrage, amuse, and fill us with empathy. It’s a thrilling novel.”

Librarians and booksellers are also fans. It’s both an Indie Next and a LibraryReads pick :

“Molly Sanderson is covering a feature for the Ridgedale Reader that not only stirs up her recent grief over a stillborn child, but secrets that have been kept hidden for over two decades in this northern New Jersey college town. As the stories of four different women unfold, a new piece of the puzzle is revealed. Chilling and gruesome at times, this is a novel with characters who will stay with the reader long after the final page is turned.” — Jennifer Winberry, Hunterdon County Library, Flemington, NJ

Also note, McCreight has an YA speculative fiction trilogy in the works, titled The OutliersFilm rights for all three books were acquired by Lionsgate, with Reese Witherspoon as one of the producers.

9780804178112_7a06cHouse of Echoes, Brendan Duffy, (RH/Ballantine; RH Audio; OverDrive Sample)

LibraryReads:
“Eager to get out of the big city, Ben and Caroline Tierney purchase a large, old house upstate hoping to renovate it into a hotel. However, their house, called The Crofts, has a dark, mysterious past, and terrifying secrets begin to threaten the family. This wonderfully eerie and atmospheric debut novel is a great recommendation for fans of Bohjalian’s The Night Strangers and McMahon’s The Winter People.” — Sara Kennedy, Delaware County District Library, Delaware, OH

9780812993158_c5971The Dream Lover, Elizabeth Berg, (Random House; Brilliance Audio; OverDrive Sample)

LibraryReads:
“George Sand leaves her estranged husband and children to embark on a life of art in bohemian Paris. A talented writer who finds monetary and critical success, Sand adopts a man’s name, often dresses as a gentleman and smokes cigars. Through her writing, politics, sexual complexities and views on feminism, Sand is always seeking love. This novel has spurred me to learn more about George Sand, a woman truly ahead of her time.” — Catherine Coyne, Mansfield Public Library, Mansfield, MA

9780544303164_a65baThe Turner House, Angela Flournoy, (HMH; Blackstone Audio)

Indie Next
“The greatest testament to the skill of a writer is the ability to make what might seem alien to the reader completely recognizable and utterly engaging. Such was my experience reading The Turner House. Mine is a tiny white family from a small town with no sense of heritage, yet every moment I spent with the Turners — a family of 13 children shaped by the Great Migration to Detroit — I felt at home. Their struggles and joys are universal, yet told with an exacting eye that always finds the perfect detail. This is a truly impressive debut.” —Kim Fox, Schuler Books & Music, Grand Rapids, MI

9781476777931_d5083The Given World, Marian Palaia, (S&S; OverDrive Sample

Indie Next
“In this fresh take on stories about the devastation that war visits on those left behind as well as on those who are sent to fight, Riley resists believing her beloved older brother never emerged from the tunnels of Cu Chi. Since his body was never found, she follows this hope from the Montana plains to Vietnam and then spirals down into the back streets of 1980s San Francisco. As Palaia details Riley’s struggle to move from denial to the eventual acceptance of reality, she portrays the starry Montana nights as vividly as the streets of Saigon and the bars of Haight-Ashbury. A brilliant debut!” —Cheryl McKeon, Book Passage, San Francisco, CA