Author Archive

Brunch with Nancy Pearl!

Monday, November 9th, 2009

If you will be in the New York/Brooklyn area on Saturday, Nov. 21 area, you have the opportunity to brunch with Nancy Pearl. The brunch is a benefit for the upcoming production of Terrible Things, performed by Katie Pearl (Nancy’s daughter, of course) and Lisa D’Amour. It’s being held at the Packer School in Brooklyn, which served as the  location for episodes of Gossip Girl.


You are invited to Brunch with
Nancy Pearl
Librarian, Action Figure, and Book Recommender to the World!

NancyP

Saturday November 21st 11-1:30pm
At the Packer Collegiate Institute, Brooklyn Heights, NY

To benefit the upcoming production of
TERRIBLE THINGS
A new performance by Katie Pearl (Nancy’s daughter!) and Lisa D’Amour
Premiering 12/4-12/20 at Performance Space 122, NYC

When you join us, you will:

Feast on local eats, coffee and cocktails
Indulge in book lust and conversation with Nancy Pearl
Luxuriate in the Cathedral-esque wonderland of the historic Packer School

SNEAK-A-PEAK at Nancy’s OBIE Award-winning daughter’s new performance, featuring stories from Nancy’s pre-action figure life!

GET YOUR TICKETS HERE:http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/87806

Ticket Information:
$35 – one ticket to the benefit
$50 – one ticket to the benefit, PLUS a ticket to opening weekend of TERRIBLE THINGS
$85 (15% off!) – two tickets to the benefit, PLUS two tickets to opening weekend of TERRIBLE THINGS
$250 – two tickets to the benefit, two tickets to any night of TERRIBLE THINGS, plus a one-on-one get together with Nancy!


The OBIE-Award winning team of PearlDamour turns PS122 into a low-rent IMAX in their newest dance theater piece TERRIBLE THINGS. Let them take you on a T-R-I-P inside the quarks, molecules, and memories of  Katie Pearl and her Action Figure Mom.  CLICK HERE for more info on the show, or visit us at PearlDarmour.com.

Dear NYT BR; What’s Happening?

Friday, November 6th, 2009

For the second time in two months, a potential bestseller appears on the cover of the Book Review; this Sunday’s issue gives the cover treatment to Stephen King’s Under the Dome. It is, however, difficult to decipher whether the reviewer likes the book. While King’s “continued and slightly frenzied commerce with his muse has been one of the more enthralling spectacles in American literature,” his prose is “not all smooth sailing. Given King’s extraordinary career-long dominance, we might expect him at this point to be stylistically complete, turning perfect sentences, as breezily at home in his idiom as P. G. Wodehouse.” (P.G. Wodehouse? Really?)

But, wait, there’s even more potential bestseller coverage. King’s unwitting cohort in the WalMart/Amazon/Target price wars, The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver, is also reviewed (“breathtaking”) as well as a book that appears on the nonfiction list for the first time this week, at #15, William Shawcross’s The Queen Mother (“more a document replete with data than a book designed to entertain”). Even more surprising, the #13 NF bestseller, My Life Outside the Ring, by Hulk Hogan is also reviewed; he “can be a lively, breezy narrator,” but “his compulsive confessing feels more like an effort to pre-empt the Us Weeklys and TMZs of the world than an authentic attempt at soul-searching.”

Adding to a string of acclaim for BEA librarian favorite,  Mennonite in a Little Black Dress, Kate Christensen (Trouble) declares that she “loved” Rhoda Jantzen’s book.

This issue also features children’s books, including the Best Illustrated Childrens Books of 2009, plus reviews of several childrens and YA titles:

Next Week’s Big Books

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Next week is relatively light in terms of number of titles from big names.

Memoirs

Open: An Autobiography
Andre Agassi
Retail Price: $28.95
Hardcover: 400 pages
Publisher: Knopf – (2009-11-09)
ISBN / EAN: 0307268195 / 9780307268198

Random House Audio; 9780739358566; $32

An excerpt from Open was the cover story in last week’s People and the press has been covering his admission that he took crystal meth. Agassi will be interviewed by Katie Couric on 60 Minutes on Sunday. The book gets a strong review in the new issue of Time. Despite all the publicity, holds in libraries are light.

———————-

Last Words: A Memoir
George Carlin
Retail Price: $26.99
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Free Press – (2009-11-10)
ISBN / EAN: 1439172951 / 9781439172957

S&S Audio; 9781442303188; $29.99

Fiction

Holds are running heavier at most libraries for Linda Howard’s new book than they are for Stephen King’s.

Ice: A Novel
Linda Howard
Retail Price: $22.00
Hardcover: 208 pages
Publisher: Ballantine Books – (2009-11-10)
ISBN / EAN: 0345517199 / 9780345517197

Random House Audio; 9780307577610; $30
Large Print; Thorndike; 9781410420343; hdbk; $33.95

———————-

Under the Dome: A Novel
Stephen King
Retail Price: $35.00
Hardcover: 1088 pages
Publisher: Scribner – (2009-11-10)
ISBN / EAN: 1439148503 / 9781439148501

S&S Audio; 9780743597302; $75

Gets 3.5 out of a possible 4 stars in the new issue of People, saying “although it lacks the power and strangeness of works like It and The Shining, it is till a wildly entertaining trip.”

———————-

Wishin’ and Hopin’: A Christmas Story
Wally Lamb
Retail Price: $19.99
Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: Harper – (2009-11-01)
ISBN / EAN: 006194100X / 9780061941009

HarperAudio; 9780061953262; $19.99
HarperLuxe; 9780061950261; pbk; $19.99

THE LACUNA

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

The Lacuna is Barbara Kingsolver’s first novel since her 1998 highly acclaimed, best-selling, Oprah-annoited book, The Poisonwood Bible. Fans looking forward to the new title may have been disappointed by Maureen Corrigan’s review on NPR’s Fresh Air. Damning the book with faint praise, she calls it just “so-so”;

…[the main character], Harrison is so pallid, so retiring that it’s very hard to stay for extended periods in his company, and seeing history unfold from his wan point of view isn’t all that illuminating.

I admit it: I’m mystified… [it] that feels altogether vacant.

Equally so-so is the review in the current issue of Entertainment Weekly, which says that the book “never quite comes together…the plot grows muddy — and worse, a bit predictable.” Curiously, it still gets a B (is EW suffering from grade-creep?)

Other opinions have been decidedly different. People gave it 4 of a 4 possible stars, saying Kingsolver delivers “her signature blend of exotic locale, political backdrop and immediately engaging story line.”

In the UK, the Independent‘s reviewer loved the book so much that she swapped her bike for public transportation, so she could read it during her commute.

The Lacuna is one of the 10 titles in the Wal-Mart/Amazon/Target price wars; pre-ordered copies were priced at $8.98. The Lacuna is one three of the titles released on Tuesday and, as the AP reports, prices on those titles have since “moved up and down like stock market shares.”

Currently, The Lacuna is at #6 on Amazon’s sales rankings, where it’s now selling for $13.49 and #15 at WalMart.com, where it’s selling for $13.52. Large libraries are showing holds ratios ranging from 3:1 to 7:1.

The Lacuna: A Novel
Barbara Kingsolver
Retail Price: $26.99
Hardcover: 528 pages
Publisher: Harper – (2009-11-01)
ISBN / EAN: 0060852577 / 9780060852573

HarperAudio; 9780060853563; $44.99
HarperLuxe; 780061927560; pbk; $26.99
Audio and eBook downloadable from OverDrive

The Beck/Oprah Effect

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Two names you may not have expected to hear in the same sentence — Glenn Beck and Oprah Winfrey. Nonetheless, Motoko Rich’s headline in the NYT today says that “Glenn Beck Is Becoming New Oprah.”

But a Beck book is quite different from an Oprah book. Beck likes thrillers, especially ones that reflect his own political stances (Brad Thor, James Rollins, Vince Flynn). He’s also picked some authors who, as Beck delicately puts it, are “on the liberal side of things, which is, you know fine.”

Andrew Gross, for instance, tells Rich that the Beck attention gives with one hand and takes away with the other; conservatives who bought the book based on Beck’s recommendation are angry that they were duped into buying a “bunch of lefty” garbage. Meanwhile, his liberal fans are suspicious of his association with Beck.

NYT Best Illustrated Books

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Coming in this Sunday’s NYT Book Review — their selection of the ten best illustrated books (via Publishers Lunch). Only a few of the selections overlap with other lists.

We generally think of this list as being about childrens picture books, but there’s another kind of illustrated book out there, those in graphic format. This year’s list includes Tales from Outer Suburbia, a graphic format title that is shelved in YA by many libraries (although it appeals to a broader age range).

The only title that is not represented in most libraries is the pop-up book, White Noise.

Only a Witch Can Fly
Alison McGhee
Retail Price: $16.99
Hardcover: 32 pages
Publisher: Feiwel & Friends – (2009-08-04)

——————————

Moonshot: The Flight of Apollo 11 (Richard Jackson Books (Atheneum Hardcover))
Brian Floca
Retail Price: $17.99
Hardcover: 48 pages
Publisher: Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books – (2009-04-07)
ISBN / EAN: 141695046X / 9781416950462

——————————

The Odd Egg
Emily Gravett
Retail Price: $15.99
Hardcover: 32 pages
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing – (2009-01-27)
ISBN / EAN: 1416968725 / 9781416968726

——————————

A Penguin Story
Antoinette Portis
Retail Price: $17.99
Hardcover: 40 pages
Publisher: HarperCollins – (2009-01-01)
ISBN / EAN: 0061456888 / 9780061456886

——————————

The Lion & the Mouse
Jerry Pinkney
Retail Price: $16.99
Hardcover: 40 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers – (2009-09-01)
ISBN / EAN: 0316013560 / 9780316013567

On PW‘s Best Childrens Books list and #8 on Amazon Editor’s Picks, Top Ten Picture Books

——————————

Snow Day
Komako Sakai
Retail Price: $16.99
Hardcover: 32 pages
Publisher: Arthur A. Levine Books – (2009-01-01)
ISBN / EAN: 0545013216 / 9780545013215

——————————

Tales From Outer Suburbia
Shaun Tan
Retail Price: $19.99
Hardcover: 96 pages
Publisher: Arthur A. Levine Books – (2009-02-01)
ISBN / EAN: 0545055873 / 9780545055871

Also on PW‘s Best Childrens Books list

——————————

Yummy: Eight Favorite Fairy Tales
Lucy Cousins
Retail Price: $18.99
Hardcover: 128 pages
Publisher: Candlewick – (2009-08-11)
ISBN / EAN: 0763644749 / 9780763644741

Also on PW‘s Best Childrens Books list

——————————

White Noise: A Pop-up Book for Children of All Ages
David A. Carter
Retail Price: $22.99
Hardcover: 20 pages
Publisher: Little Simon – (2009-10-27)
ISBN / EAN: 1416940944 / 9781416940944

——————————

All the World
Liz Garton Scanlon
Retail Price: $17.99
Hardcover: 40 pages
Publisher: Beach Lane Books – (2009-09-08)
ISBN / EAN: 1416985808 / 9781416985808

On PW Best Kids list

Obama’s Half Brother Writes About Their Father

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

The Associated Press reports that Mark Obama Ndesandjo, President Obama’s half brother has acknowledged that his new novel about an abusive parent is based on his father, the man who was also the absent father President Obama wrote about in Dreams from My Father (by the way, there’s a great inside story about the publishing of that book in the Huffington Post today).

The book, Nairobi to Shenzhen, is being released by Aventine Press, a self-publishing company.

Libraries do not show the book on order; it is available through wholesalers.

Nairobi To Shenzhen
Mark Obama Ndesandjo
Retail Price: $16.95
Paperback: 358 pages
Publisher: Aventine Press – (2009-10-20)
ISBN / EAN: 1593306237 / 9781593306236

A book by another of the president’s half brothers, George Obama, will be published by Simon and Schuster in January 2010. It has not yet been reviewed pre-pub; it is described in the S&S Spring catalog, p 99.

Homeland
Homeland: An Extraordinary Story of Hope and Survival
George Obama
Retail Price: $25.00
Hardcover: 256 pages
Publisher: Simon & Schuster – (2010-01-05)
ISBN / EAN: 1439176175 / 9781439176177

The AP also reports that Obama’s half sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, daughter of Obama’s mother and her second husband, is working on a book as is Craig Robinson, Michelle Obama’s brother.

Analyzing THE HELP

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

We’ve been tracking the amazing trajectory of the debut novel, The Help for over a year (including a giveaway of the audio back in February).

In the New York Times today, Motoko Rich writes about the book’s continuing word of mouth, which has kept it in the top five on the NYT Fiction list since August; quite a feat in normal times, but even more so in the midst of this particularly big-named-filled fall book season.

The novel, set in Mississippi in the early sixties, is about a young white writer who gains the trust of several black maids, most of whom work for her friends and family. She interviews them about their lives and how they feel about their white employers as material for a book. The young writer has to hide what she is doing, since this crossing of color lines would not be acceptable to her social circle, but the maids have even stronger reasons to keep what they are doing a secret, facing job loss an worse.

Several reviewers have been uncomfortable with the fact that the book’s author, Kathryn Stockett, who is white, portrays black women, using ’60’s southern dialect for their voices. In the NYT, Rich focuses whether this is ethical, quoting one blogger who calls Stockett a racist, while others feel she manages to walk the “racial tightrope”  (coincidentally, another recent word-of-mouth success, Mudbound, by Hillary Jordan, is also by a white woman, writing in the voices of Mississippi blacks).

Rich does not successfully address the question of what makes The Help resonate so strongly with readers. Last week, on the Huffington Post, Jesse Kornbluth offered some compelling reasons:

The Help is about Something
“That is, something real. Something that matters. Most of all, something that matters to women, who are, as it happens, America’s most dedicated readers.”

It Rings True
“The maids are long-suffering, delightful, spicy; they’re a dream team of strength, wisdom and compassion. The white women — and this is the novel’s big achievement — are small-minded and pitiable, but they’re never cartoon villains.”

No Sugarcoating, But No Horror
“Smartest of all, Stockett has downplayed the horror that was Mississippi in 1962…[she] doesn’t sugarcoat racism but keeps the guns and violence always a few miles away. Smart thinking. In popular fiction like this, riling readers with false accusations of stolen silverware works just as well.”

I have another element to add to that — Stockett’s portrayal of the developing relationship among the women as they work on their project. You feel them becoming fans of each other, supporting and encouraging each other as they grow in mutual respect.

Libraries have been adding copies as the book continues to grow in popularity, but most are still showing heavy holds. Unfortunately, as the NYT points out (and we reported in mid-Sept), the paperback is being held off until June 1.

The Help
Kathryn Stockett
Retail Price: $24.95
Hardcover: 464 pages
Publisher: Putnam Adult – (2009-02-10)
ISBN / EAN: 0399155341 / 9780399155345

Penguin Audio; ISBN: 9780143144182 $39.95
Downloadable from OverDrive in both eBook and audio

NUBS on the TODAY SHOW

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Actually, the Marine steals the show:

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

—-

Nubs: The True Story of a Mutt, a Marine & a Miracle
Brian Dennis, Mary Nethery, Kirby Larson
Retail Price: $17.99
Hardcover: 48 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers – (2009-11-01)
ISBN / EAN: 031605318X / 9780316053181

Audio from Hachette Audio; 1600248713; $17.98
Also on PlayAway; 1607884313; $39.99
Book and audio downloadable from OverDrive

Dueling Top Tens

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Amazon has just announced the final ten in their Top 100 Editors Picks countdown, close on the heels of PW‘s Top Ten released last week.

How do the two Top Ten lists compare? Unlike PW, Amazon manages to include books by women in their top ten. At #3 is this year’s Booker winner, Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel.

At #5 is the forthcoming YA novel, Beautiful Creatures, which raises the count, since it is actually by two women, Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl (on Amazon, you can find a video of the authors discussing their writing process).

Beautiful Creatures
Kami Garcia, Margaret Stohl
Retail Price: $17.99
Hardcover: 576 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers – (2009-12-01)

Hachette Audio: MP3 CD; 12/1; 9781600248467; $29.98

Several libraries have not yet ordered Beautiful Creatures. Lisa Von Drasek, EarlyWord Kids, says, “it’s one of the best of the crowded field of supernatural romance out this year.” It also received a strong review in Booklist.

You can read an excerpt here.

Publishers Weekly‘s Best Children’s Books list is also in the current issue. Beautiful Creatures is not on that list, although another paranormal romance, Shiver, by Maggie Stiefvater, made the cut.

The only title that appears on both Top Ten lists is the graphic format Stitches by David Small. It is also a National Book Award finalist, making it the only one to appear on all three lists. Only two other NBA titles appear on either of the lists; Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann is on Amazon’s Top Ten and In Other Rooms, Other Wonders by Daniyal Mueenuddin is on the PW Top Ten.

It looks like it’s that time is unpon us — we’ve set up a new Best Books ’09 links section, to the right, and will be adding to it as new lists appear.

PP&Z — The Prequel

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Entertainment Weekly announces “exclusively” on their blog “Shelf Life” that those crazy folks at Quirk have come up with a new title for their Jane Austen/monster mashup series — a prequel to Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, to be published in March.

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls (Quirk Classics)
Quirk Books
Retail Price: $12.95
Paperback: 320 pages
Publisher: Quirk Books – (2010-03-24)
ISBN / EAN: 1594744548 / 9781594744549

Having trouble keeping up? Quirk feels your pain and has created a “fancy new web site” (their description), quirkclassics.com, with all the latest on their monster mashups.

Or, just keep reading EarlyWord; we wrote earlier, thanks to Jeffrey Gegner at Hennepin P.L., that two new Quirk Classics were in the works. Dawn of the Dreadfuls is one of those titles, we’re still waiting for information on another one:

Quirk Classic 4
Quirk Books
Retail Price: $12.95
Paperback: 0 pages
Publisher: Quirk Books – (2010-03-03)
ISBN / EAN: 1594744602 / 9781594744600

FORD COUNTY

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

While praising his new book, Janet Maslin gives Grisham a backhanded compliment in today’s NYT, saying the short story form frees him from “subplots and padding” and that this “vacation from whatever grueling work goes into the construction of fully rigged best sellers…invigorates him in ways that show up on the page.”

Although the is showing heavy holds, there are not nearly as many as one would expect for a full-length Grisham.

Ford County: Stories
John Grisham
Retail Price: $24.00
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Doubleday – (2009-11-03)
ISBN / EAN: 0385532458 / 9780385532457

Random House Audio; UNAB; 9780307702104; $35
Random House Large Print; 9780739377383; pbk; $24
Audio downloadable from OverDrive

It’s All in the Timing

Friday, October 30th, 2009

We’re willing to bet that McFarland, the publisher of reference and scholarly books, has never been featured in USA Today.

As a lead-up to Halloween McFarland’s Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff: The Expanded Story of a Haunting Collaboration gets the USA Today love.

Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff: The Expanded Story of a Haunting Collaboration, with a Complete Filmography of Their Films Together
Gregory William Mank
Retail Price: $75.00
Hardcover: 701 pages
Publisher: McFarland – (2009-05-13)
ISBN / EAN: 0786434805 / 9780786434800

Coming the Week of Nov. 1

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

The first three titles being discounted in the book price wars release next week:

11/3 Grisham, John, Ford County
11/3 Kingsolver, Barbara, Lacuna
11/3 Robb, J.D., Kindred in Death

Ironically, some independent booksellers have cancelled their original orders and will be buying their stock from the enemy [11/2 UPDATE: the online retailers have now imposed a limit on the number of copies customers can order, so this is no longer an option].

On Fiction_L, we asked if any libraries were planning to do the same. All the responders said no, because they get their books cataloged and processed by their wholesaler. Estimating that the savings would amount to $10 a book as opposed to the discounted price through the wholesaler, all said that it would not be worth the cost and effort to switch the orders, catalog, jacket and process the books.

Below is a list of major titles with pub dates next week (some may already be available).

Childrens

11/1 Dennis, Brian, Nubs: The True Story of a Mutt, a Marine & a Miracle

Nubs: The True Story of a Mutt, a Marine & a Miracle
Brian Dennis, Mary Nethery, Kirby Larson
Retail Price: $17.99
Hardcover: 48 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers – (2009-11-01)
ISBN / EAN: 031605318X / 9780316053181

Audio from Hachette Audio; 1600248713; $17.98
Also on PlayAway; 1607884313; $39.99
Book and audio downloadable from OverDrive

Many librarians fell in love with this book at BEA, including Lisa Von Drasek

Lots of media is on tap for this, including the Today Show on Monday (8:30 a.m.); Conan O’Brien on 11/9; People magazine, 11/16 (on newsstands 11/6).

————

11/1 O’Connor, Jane Fancy Nancy: Splendiferous Christmas

11/3 Lupica, Mike, Million-Dollar Throw

Fiction

11/3  Grisham, John, Ford County — A departure for Grisham, this is a collection of short stories.
11/3  Bell, Madison Smartt,  Devil’s Dream
11/3  Brown, Sandra, Rainwater
11/3  Jacobs, Kate, Knit the Season
11/3  Keillor, Garrison,  Christmas Blizzard
11/3  Kingsolver, Barbara, Lacuna
11/3  Robb, J.D., Kindred in Death
11/3  Shaara, Jeff, No Less Victory

Nonfiction

11/2  Foer, Jonathan Safran Eating Animals

Eating Animals
Jonathan Safran Foer
Retail Price: $25.99
Hardcover: 352 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company – (2009-11-02)
ISBN / EAN: 0316069906 / 9780316069908

Downloadable eBook from OverDrive

The current issue of Entertainment Weekly gives Eating Animals a solid B, saying,

You can agree wholeheartedly with huge chunks of novelist Jonathan Safran Foer’s sprawling and stirring new pro-vegetarian polemic, Eating Animals, and at the same time find it pompous and annoying.

The Huffington Post is running a series about the book and plans to do so for several weeks, describing the pieces as “a diverse range of responses” and not “your usual book reviews. They are the start of a conversation that some powerful people in agribusiness would rather we not have.” The responses are from a diverse group of people, from Natalie Portman to Andrew Weil and Rabbi David Wolpe, but have all been positive so far.

11/3  Johnson, Paul Churchill — Biography
11/3  Karr, Mary Lit: A Memoir
11/3 Dwight Garner Read Me: A Century of Classic American Book Advertisements
11/3 Gore, Al, Our Choice: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis
Gore will appear on Letterman on the day the book is published and on Jon Stewart the next evening.
11/3 Plouffe, David, The Audacity to Win
Time mgazine is running an exclusive four-page excerpt in the 11/9 issue (on newstands tomorrow). Will appear on Jon Stewart that evening.

The Audacity to Win: The Inside Story and Lessons of Barack Obama’s Historic Victory
David Plouffe
Retail Price: $27.95
Hardcover: 352 pages
Publisher: Viking Adult – (2009-11-03)
ISBN / EAN: 0670021334 / 9780670021338

Audio from Penguin Audiobooks; ISBN: 0143142720; $39.95
Both eBook and audiobook downloadable from OverDrive.

11/3 Osteen, Joel, It’s Your Time

CAKE WRECKS

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

A friend’s father had a heavy Russian accent, but had little tolerance for those who couldn’t understand him. If questioned about what he said, he’d just get angry and repeat it exactly, but louder, MUCH louder. Sending him on an errand could be dangerous. That was reinforced the time he proudly came home bearing a cake decorated with the words “Happy Boy’s Day.”

If only he’d lived to learn that he’s not alone. The new book Cake Wrecks, based on the inspired blog, shows he could have done worse.

Wrecks

You’re unlikely to get your hands on a copy, since holds are heavy in every library we checked. The NYT recently put together a slide show of prime examples and, of course, there’s also the blog.

If you’re looking for a readalike, try The Gallery of Regrettable Food. Amazingly, libraries are showing copies on the shelf.

The Gallery of Regrettable Food
James Lileks
Retail Price: $22.95
Hardcover: 192 pages
Publisher: Crown – (2001-09-11)
ISBN / EAN: 0609607820 / 9780609607824

Cake Wrecks: When Professional Cakes Go Hilariously Wrong
Jen Yates
Retail Price: $12.99
Hardcover: 208 pages
Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing – (2009-10-01)
ISBN / EAN: 0740785370 / 9780740785375