Author Archive

Vote for Your Favorite Book Bloggers

Friday, April 20th, 2012

The Independent Book Blogger Association asks you to vote for your favorite independent blog.

You can vote for one blog in each of four categories (you must be a member of Goodreads to be eligible to vote). The finalists will then be judged by a panel of industry members. The winners will be given a trip to BookExpo America.

Unfortunately, if your favorite book blog isn’t a candidate (we’re sorry that neither Overbooked nor Lesa’s Book Critiques entered), it can be tough to sort through all 800 entries. You might want to consider these library sites:

Wake County Public Libraries Book-a-Day Blog — in North Carolina

Reviews for You — from Half Hallow Hills Community Library (NY)

YAthink? — Burbank Public Library’s Teen Blog

Ryan O’Neal’s Memoir

Friday, April 20th, 2012

News stories that actor Ryan O’Neal has prostate cancer mention that he has a book coming out the week after next, a memoir of his relationship with Farrah Fawcett.

Both of Us: My Life with Farrah
Ryan O’Neal, Jodee Blanco, Kent Carroll
Hardcover: $26.00; 9780307954824
Publisher: Crown Archetype – (2012-05-01)
Audio: RH Audio; 9780307988515

The Pulitzer’s False Impression

Friday, April 20th, 2012

      

The Pulitzer Awards were overshadowed this week by a category which had no winner; fiction. For those that don’t know the inner workings of the Pulitzer decisions, this gave a false impression that, as the Huffington Post first reported, “This year, nobody was good enough.”

Among those who were shocked by the decision were the three members of  the fiction jury. On NPR’s Morning Edition, juror Susan Larson spoke for all of them, saying they were “shocked … angry … and very disappointed” and that any one of the three was worthy of the prize. Juror Michael Cunningham (who won for The Hours in 1999) told The Daily Beast that “there’s something amiss in a system where three books this good are presented and there’s not a prize.” Under that system, the jurors give a short list to the Pulitzer Board, which chooses the winner. When the board could not come up with a majority, no prize is awarded.

Why does it matter? As Ann Patchett points out in the NYT, the Pulitzer “gives the buzz that is so often lacking in our industry.” And that buzz translates into sales, as Publishers Weekly documents.

Julianne Moore May Play CARRIE’s Mom

Friday, April 20th, 2012

A new film version of Stephen King’s Carrie is in the works, starring Chloe Moetz in the title role. News this week that Julianne Moore is in talks to play her crazed  religious fanatic mother (Piper Laurie had the role in the Brian de Palma 1976 version) has changed reactions from “There they go again,” to “Intriguing.”

The movie is now set for release on March 15, 2013.

This version will be directed by Kimberley Peirce (Boys Don’t Cry). How will she approach it? On her Facebook page, she says she’s going back to the original material:

… I have gone back to the wonderful STEPHEN KING Book CARRIE; I am also modernizing the story as one has to in order to bring any great piece of work written in one era into the next and especially given how very relevant this material is right now.

Wiley Cash Chat on Tuesday

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

We’re seeing holds stack up in some libraries as attention builds for  Wiley Cash’s debut novel, A Land More Kind than Home (HarperCollins/Morrow; Blackstone Audio), published on Tuesday. Holds are particularly heavy in libraries in the author’s home state of North Carolina.

Good news; you can join us for a chat with the author this coming Tuesday, April 24.

This week, Cash was profiled in USA Today. His book also received several  great reviews:

Kansas City Star (syndicated); “Wiley Cash delivers a lyrical, poignant debut that melds crime fiction with Southern gothic for an emotional story about two brothers.”

St. Augustine Record, “For an author to settle so comfortably into the skin of a character that he can bring them to life as real as any person you’ve actually known is a special talent… and Cash does it times three.”

Milwaukee Journal Sentinal; compares it favorably to Tom Franklin’s Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter, adding, “Cash writes with confidence and compassion about a part of America ‘where people can take hold of religion like it’s a drug”…Cash’s story layers all of this into a beautifully written morality tale.”

Hope to see you on Tuesday for the chat.

Dude, Where’s My Book?

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

The following video has had over 16 million hits since its launch in December:

The two sequels have had over 8 million and 4 million hits each (face it, they’re just not up to the original).

Harlequin has just signed creators Kyle Humphrey and Graydon Sheppard for a book based on the series, to be released in October, as reported by several news sources (The L.A. Times, Publishers Weekly, and The Huffington Post). At this point, it is not listed on wholesaler, retailer, or the publisher’s web sites.

PROM In People

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

The Book Reviews section of People magazine is often a refreshing contrast to the relentlessly upbeat tone of the rest of the magazine. This week, it features a documentary photographer’s look at an American ritual and its delusions, Prom by Mary Ellen Mark, (Getty Publications).

A.J. Jacobs’ Finds the Right Formula

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

A.J. Jacobs’ Drop Dead Healthy is the third in his “triathlon devoted to upgrading my mind, my spirit and my body,” following The Know-It All (2004) which chronicled his reading of the entire Encyclopedia Britannica and The Year of Living Biblically, (2007), in which he did just that.

It seems readers are more interested in his pursuit of physical perfection than in intellectual or spiritual. His newest title arrives on the USA Today best seller list at #42, the highest spot for the series to date.

Drop Dead Healthy
A. J. Jacobs
Retail Price: $26.00
Hardcover: 416 pages
Publisher: Simon & Schuster – (2012-04-10)
ISBN / EAN: 141659907X/9781416599074

Other Formats: Thorndike Press; Simon & Schuster Audio

NIGHT TO REMEMBER, A Best Seller Again

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

The classic title on the sinking of the Titanic, Walter Lord’s A Night to Remember, (Macmillan/Holt)  is back on the USA Today best seller list, nearly 60 years after it was first published in 1955, at #16. However, this time, it’s the e-Book edition that is listed (published by Open Road, which makes its books available to libraries via OverDrive).

Its most recent appearance was Jan. 15, 1998 (shortly after  James Cameron’s movie hit theaters the first time around).

 

Stephenie Meyer, Producer

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

Lois Duncan has a powerful fan. Variety announced yesterday that Stephenie Meyer’s production company, Fickle Fish, has acquired the film rights to Duncan’s 1974 novel Down a Dark Hall (Hachette/Little, Brown).

Meyer confirms the story on her Web site, commenting, “I grew up reading and loving Lois Duncan novels, and I can’t believe my good luck that I get to be involved with this project. Down a Dark Hall was my favorite of her novels (though it’s a very close race with Summer of Fear and Stranger with My Face) and it gave me some serious nightmares when I was nine.”

She also notes that filming of her own novel, The Host, is almost finished. It’s scheduled for release on March 29.

Debut Best Seller; THE LIFEBOAT

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

We’ve been following the rise of Charlotte Rogan’s debut novelThe Lifeboat, which has received admiring reviews (check out the Washington Post’s) and media attention (including an interview the author on NPR’s Weekend Edition Saturday) as well as growing holds.  It arrives on the new Indie Hardcover Fiction Bestseller list at #10 (you can also expect to see it on the upcoming NYT list).

The Lifeboat: A Novel
Charlotte Rogan
Retail Price: $24.99
Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: Hachette/Little, Brown/Reagan Arthur – (2012-04-03)
ISBN : 9780316185905

Also: Hachette Audio

An EarlyWord “Book of the Week,” Ron Rash’s The Cove (Harper/Ecco; Thorndike Large Print) is noted as “on the rise.”

Donna Leon is still on the rise. Her 21st Commissario Brunetti mystery, Beastly Things, (Atlantic Monthly; Thorndike Large PrintAudioGo), moves up to #7, after debuting at the highest spot ever for the author last week.

Unsurprisingly, John Grisham’s baseball novel, Calico Joe,(RH/Doubleday) arrives on the list at #1.

DOG DAYS On Its Way

Wednesday, April 18th, 2012

The trailer for Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days, the third movie in the series, has just been released. It lands in theaters on August 3.

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Yes, lead actor Zachary Gordon has done a bit of growing. Earlier this month, he told USA Today, “I’ve grown 13 inches since the first movie and my voice is really deep now. People will be surprised. But then they’ll see it is Greg. He’s still the same kid.”

The tie-in is the an expanded edition of the earlier The Wimpy Kid Movie Diary, with updates from the new movie. It arrives July 1.

THREE CUPS OF TEA Civil suit

Wednesday, April 18th, 2012

Now that Greg Mortenson has agreed to pay $1 million to settle a suit alleging he mishandled his charity’s money, attention it turning to a civil suit accusing him of misrepresentations in his best-selling books, Three Cups of Tea and Stones into Schools.

The Associated Press reports that a hearing is set for today. The suit asks the judge to order refunds to everyone who purchased the book. The story quotes a First Amendment expert who says, “It’s [Mortenson’s] story. It purports to be his experiences … He has the right to publish anything he wants about himself. The idea that you can be sued because perhaps they don’t like what you wrote, for whatever reason, is absurd.”

Ann Patchett on the Non-Pulitzer

Wednesday, April 18th, 2012

In today’s NYT Ann Patchett decries the Pulitzer Board’s decision to not award a winner in fiction this year. It’s worth reading just to find out what her favorite books were this year (in addition to being a writer, she is a bookseller). This one short essay is peppered with great lines. Here’s just two, to entice you to read the full piece:

1) With book coverage in the media split evenly between Fifty Shades of Grey and The Hunger Games, wouldn’t it have been something to have people talking about The Pale King…?

2) Unfortunately, the world of literature lacks the scandal, hype and pretty dresses that draw people to the Academy Awards, which, by the way, is not an institution devoted to choosing the best movie every year as much as it is an institution designed to get people excited about going to the movies.  The Pulitzer Prize is our best chance as writers and readers and booksellers to celebrate fiction.

Now It’s Really Official: FIFTY SHADES Is Mainstream

Tuesday, April 17th, 2012

The author of the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy, E. L. James,  appeared (very uncomfortably) on the Today Show this morning:

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