July 14th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
Harry Potter in Seven Minutes
Warning: don’t watch this first thing in the morning or if you are at all jumpy.
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Links on the far right of the site offer information useful to readers advisors.
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July 14th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
Warning: don’t watch this first thing in the morning or if you are at all jumpy.
Posted in Books & Movies | Comments Off on Harry Potter in Seven Minutes
July 13th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
The premiere of the film adaptation of Tatiana de Rosnay’s novel Sarah’s Key at the MOMA in NYC has brought renewed attention to book, causing both the tie-in, released last week, and the original trade paperback to rise on Amazon’s sales rankings. The author is pictured at the left, with Diane von Furstenberg, who hosted the event.
The movie stars Kristin Scott Thomas and opens July 22.
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The author’s book, The House I Loved, is coming from St. Martin’s on Feb. 12, 2012; ISBN 9780312593308.
Posted in Books & Movies | 2 Comments »
July 13th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
The sequel to last year’s surprise hit movie, Sherlock Holmes, starring Robert Downey Jr. as the master detective and Jude Law as his sidekick, Dr. Watson, arrives on Dec. 16th. The first movie was “inspired” by Arthur Conan Doyle’s character, but the second, called Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows features Holmes’s nemesis, draws from the story, The Final Problem.
UPDATE:
Penguin will release an anthology of Sherlock Holmes stories in September that includes The Final Problem. A burst on the cover reads, “Inspiration for the Major Motion Picture.”
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…….
Last year, Penguin released the following collection of Holmes stories.
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Official Movie Site: SherlockHolmes2.WarnerBros.com
Note: The YouTube version embeded below is supposedly “only” on iTunes trailers, so it may disappear. In that case, link here.
The gypsy Sim, shown in the opening sequence is played by Noomi Repace who starred as Lisbeth Salander in the Swedish-language adaptations of Stieg Larsson’s Millenium trilogy. Rooney Mara will be playing that character in the English-language version of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, scheduled to open 12/21.
Posted in Books & Movies | Comments Off on Sherlock Holmes and THE FINAL PROBLEM
July 12th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
The Guardian examines J.K. Rowling’s history of hints that she has new books in the works.
Interviewed during the London premiere of the final HP movie last week, Rowling told MTV News that she has been doing “quite a lot” of writing and elaborated to BBC News, “I’ve got a lot of stuff and I suppose it’s a question of deciding which one comes out first. But I will publish again.”
Back in 2009, she talked about writing a political fairy tale for younger children. In 2007, she said she was working on a book for adults and another one for children, but ruled out another fantasy series. She has also said she will not write another HP.
But, at the London premiere, she teased, “Maybe I’ll just write another [Harry Potter].”
No further teases surfaced at the New York premiere last night, which Rowling did not attend.
The only definite is the launch of the site Pottermore.com in October. A lucky few (just one million) will get early access; information on how to enter for a chance to be one of the million will be announced on the site on July 31st.
Posted in Childrens and YA | Comments Off on Rowling Continues to Tease Fans
July 12th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
The first trailer for Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of The Adventures of Tintin, hit the Web yesterday. The director’s first animated film, it features the voices of Jamie Bell (Billy Elliot, Defiance) as boy reporter Tintin, with Daniel Craig (Quantum of Solace, Defiance) as the pirate, Red Rackham and uses performance-capture technology (the actors’ actual movements are the basis of the computer-generated animation).
The film, the first in a planned trilogy, is based on the first two books in Belgian artist Georges “Hergé” Remi’s Tintin comic series, Secret of the Unicorn and Red Rackham’s Treasure and is a joint project between Spielberg and Peter Jackson, who will direct the second in the series.
It is scheduled for release on Dec. 23.
Official Web site: TinTin.com
For information on Little Brown’s TinTin publishing program, including tie-in and re-releases of the original titles, see our earlier post.
Posted in Books & Movies, Childrens and YA | Comments Off on First Trailer for Tintin
July 11th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
Wendy Bartlett, Collection Development Manager, Cuyahoga P.L. emailed us that libraries may want to check their holds on The Long Drive Home (S&S, 5/17) by Will Allison, a novel about a man who gives in to rare fit of road rage, killing a teenager in the process. His subsequent lies and deceptions eventually tear apart his once perfect family.
It is a People magazine Pick in the 5/30 issue, which describes it as “a gripping morality tale …Allison’s eye for the quiet details of domestic life highlights what’s at stake, and he makes brilliant use of the precocious [six-year-old daughter] Sara…” The 7/4 NYT Book Review attests to the novel’s emotional power, although the reviewer questions the book’s key plot element and is “queasy” about being made to like the main character.
Based on holds, Wendy says she is now placing a 3rd order and put book on Cuyahoga’s popular “Coming Soon/Bestsellers” handout.
Tell us what books are taking off in your library ;email us, or leave a comment below.
Posted in 2010 - Summer, Fiction, Readers Advisory | 1 Comment »
July 11th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
It’s no wonder they took a pseudonym; the real names of the husband and wife team known as Lars Kepler are Alexander Ahndoril and Alexandra Coelho Ahndoril. Their book, The Hypnotist, (FSG, 6/21/11) is the most recent title to be hailed as the “next Stieg Larsson” (and, in fact, the authors chose the name “Lars” as a tribute to their predecessor).
The authors are profiled on NPR’s Morning Edition today. They say the real reason they chose a pen name for their first crime novel is that each is already a published writer in Sweden and they wanted to create a new identity. They are parents of three daughters, and much of the book’s violence is carried out by children and women. Why? Because, they say, books are scary if you “care for the people in the book…you don’t want anything bad to happen to them.” In writing The Hypnotist, they thought of how frightening it would be if their daughters became evil.
The book landed on the 7/17 NYT Fiction best seller list at #15. Libraries are show growing holds.
Holds are equally heavy for the an earlier “next Stieg Larsson” title, The Snowman by Jo Nesbo (Knopf, 5/10/11). It debuted on the NYT Hardcover Fiction list at #10, stayed on for four weeks and is now#28 on the extended list.
Posted in 2011 -- Summer, Mystery & Detective | Comments Off on HYPNOTIST’s Authors
July 11th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
Diane Sawyer’s Primetime interview last night with Jaycee Dugard sent her memoir, A Stolen Life (S&S), to #1 on Amazon sales rankings; the audio rose to #147. Dugard is also scheduled for Good Morning America, tomorrow, the book’s release date.
Posted in 2011 -- Summer, Memoirs | Comments Off on A STOLEN LIFE Is #1
July 8th, 2011 By: Charlotte Abbott
Next week in fiction, two buzzy titles arrive: NBA finalist Dana Spiotta returns with her third novel and British author Glen Duncan delivers a literary werewolf thriller for adults. In nonfiction, Jaycee Dugard tells the story of her kidnapping and 18 years as a captive of her abductor and will appear on major evening and morning news shows, while journalist Ben Mezrich returns with a real-life NASA-related adventure.
Stone Arabia by Dana Spiotta (Scribner) is the third novel by this National Book Award finalist, about a conflicted artist in Southern California and his sister, who is convinced he’s a genius. PW says its “clever structure, jaundiced affection for Los Angeles, and diamond-honed prose” make this “one of the most moving and original portraits of a sibling relationship in recent fiction.” It also gets an early review in New York magazine, which calls it “good, sly fun, but … also tender, rueful, and shrewd.”
The Last Werewolf by Glen Duncan (Knopf) is a literate page-turner about a 201-year-old werewolf who is the last of his kind. It’s getting a big push from the publisher, buzz from early readers, and has been mentioned at BEA’s Shout and Share as well as on our very own GalleyChat. This one’s a fun (and dirty!) read.
Iron House by John Hart (Thomas Dunne Books) is the story of two orphaned boys separated by violence. It’s the fourth literary thriller by this award-winning writer, whose last book (The Last Child) was a bestseller. This one has an announced 200,000-copy first printing and is the #1 Indie Next pick for August.
A Dance with Dragons by George R.R. Martin (Bantam) is the long awaited fifth installment of the epic fantasy A Song of Ice and Fire series. It already had a strong fan base that was expanded by HBO’s Game of Thrones, based on the first book. Its been in the Amazon Top Ten for a month. Recent news stories about spoilers surfacing on fan sites on the Web are just adding to the excitement.
Quinn by Iris Johansen (St. Martin’s) is a follow-up to Eve that delves deep into the life and psyche of Eve Duncan’s lover and soul mate, Joe Quinn. As a ruthless killer closes in, long-held secrets are gradually revealed. LJ, PW and Booklist all say it’s a pulse-pounder.
Then Came You by Jennifer Weiner (Atria) is the story of four women whose lives intertwine in creating a child through reproductive technology. LJ says, “fans of Marian Keyes, Anna Maxted, and other authors of serious chick lit will thoroughly enjoy this title for its humor mixed with a sympathetic portrayal of real women’s lives and challenges.”
Blood Work: An Original Hollows Graphic Novel by Kim Harrison (Del Rey) brings the authors popular urban crime fantasy series to visual form.
Dragon’s Oath by P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast (St. Martin’s Griffin) is the first in a new mini-series of novellas, and tells the story behind the fencing instructor in the bestselling House of Night series.
Forever by Maggie Stiefvater (Scholastic) concludes the Wolves of Mercy Falls werewolf trilogy.
A Stolen Life by Jaycee Dugard (Simon & Schuster) is a memoir by a woman who was kidnapped in 1991 at age 11 and endured 18 years of living with her abductor and his wife, bearing and raising his child before she was discovered in 2009. This one has an impressive news lineup. It’s on the cover of the July 18 issue of People, with an excerpt and a brief Q&A with Diane Sawyer about her two-hour interview with Dugard, to air on ABC’s PrimeTime July 10th. Sawyer says that her spirit “will astonish you” and that “everything she says makes you stop and examine yourself and your life.” She is also scheduled for Good Morning America on July 12th.
Sex on the Moon: The Amazing Story Behind the Most Audacious Heist in History by Ben Mezrich is the story of a fellow in a NASA program who schemed to steal rare moon rocks as a way to impress his new girlfriend. The author wrote Accidental Billionaires (the basis for the movie The Social Network). Our own view is that the details about the space program will be catnip for space junkies (and even those who are not – the James Bond stuff they have at the Johnson Space Center is amazing), but the central character doesn’t have the celebrity value of Mark Zuckerberg, so it may not draw a wider audience. It is currently being developed for a movie, by the same production team that created Social Network, but with Will Gluck (Easy A) directing, rather than David Fincher.
I’m Feeling Lucky: The Confessions of Google Employee Number 59 by Douglas Edwards (Houghton Mifflin) is the story of Google’s rise from the perspective of the company’s first director of marketing. PW says, ” The book’s real strength is its evenhandedness” and that it’s “more entertaining than it really has any right to be,” though Kirkus finds it less focused than it could be, given all the other books written about Google.
Of Thee I Zing: America’s Cultural Decline from Muffin Tops to Body Shots by Laura Ingraham and Raymond Arroyo (Threshold) criticizes the contemporary American culture of consumerism.
Posted in 2011 - Summer, 2011 -- Summer, Biography, Business, Chick Lit, Fiction, Literary, Memoirs, Mystery & Detective, New Title Radar, Nonfiction, Politics and Current Events, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Thriller | 1 Comment »
July 7th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
The top two books in the business category on Amazon’s sales rankings right now are not owned by most libraries.
The Lean Startup, coming in September, is by Eric Ries, who is called “the face of the lean startup movement.” He’s even trademarked the concept and promotes it constantly at tech conferences. Several blogs call the concept the “next big thing” in business (Fast Company’s Expert Blog, Forbes’s Rethink, SmartMoney’s Encore).
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Crown is a Random House imprint, so the book will also be available from OverDrive.
The number two book (number 1 last week), is also aimed at entrepreneurs. Anything You Want by CD Baby founder Derek Sivers is published by Seth Godin’s “cut out the middleman” Domino Project, which he launched with Amazon in December. It’s promoted with this engaging video, “I Miss the Mob,” sure to appeal to anyone who has dealt with MBA types or business consultants. Personally, I could watch it all day long.
Talk about a lean startup; Sives began CDBaby.com, a distributor of independent music, in 1998 with $500 and grew it with no outside investors. Ten years later, he sold it for $22 million. He didn’t pocket the money himself, however. It all went to a charitable trust for music education.
The book is available through library wholesalers. It is also on audio from Brilliance and downloadable from OverDrive.
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Posted in 2011 -- Fall, 2011 -- Summer, Business | Comments Off on Top Two Business Books
July 7th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
Hold your groans; this is one may not come to pass.
Rupert Wyatt (Rise of the Planet of the Apes; releasing Aug. 5 and expected to a summer’s blockbuster) is talking about doing a big-screen adaptation of George Orwell’s Animal Farm.
Entertainment Weekly reports the news and comments on the “motion-capture” technique Wyatt plans to use, “Seeing as how blown away we were by Wyatt’s use of the technology in clips for Apes, [watch trailer here] it’s easy to get excited about the prospect of Farm, which would feature a diverse group of human-like barn animals leading a rebellion.”
On the other hand, if Rise of the Planet of the Apes does as well as expected, the director may turn his attention to making it a franchise.
Hallmark Entertainment released a made-for-TV version of Animal Farm in 1999, with Kelsey Grammar doing the voice of Snowball.
Posted in Books & Movies | Comments Off on ANIMAL FARM To the Big Screen
July 6th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
George R.R. Martin has threatened to go all medieval on the Amazon.de employee who accidentally shipped 180 copies of A Dance with Dragon before its official release date. Spoilers have now appeared online and Martin’s response is to threaten to put the person’s head on a spike.
How important are spoilers, really? Go The F@@k To Sleep, continues to be s bestseller, even though it was available online in its entirety before publication. In fact, many attribute it’s success to just that fact.
Nonetheless, a lot of passion is being expressed online about A Dance with Dragon‘s release now being “marred.”
But those supposed spoilers may be red herrings; Entertainment Weekly quotes Elio M. Garcia, Jr. webmaster for Martin fansite Westeros.org, that most of them are “inaccurate or garbled.”
So, what’s the punishment for inaccurate spoilers?
The book’s official release date is Tuesday, July 12
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Posted in 2011 -- Summer, Fiction, Science Fiction & Fantasy | Comments Off on Warning: Fake Spoilers
July 6th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
If you were to cast the movie of the high-concept comic novel, Gods Behaving Badly by Marie Phillips (Little, Brown, 2007), which imagines the Greek gods are alive and living in a modern-day moldy brownstone in London, who would you pick to play Zeus, the down-on-his-luck, now crazy patriarch?
Would you choose a quirky, somewhat scary actor, like Christopher Walken?
If so, then you’d be in agreement with director Marc Turtletaub (producer of Little Miss Sunshine, Everything is Illuminated and Away We Go), who has also chosen a roster of other well-known American actors, necessitating a switch in location to a brownstone in NYC. Shooting begins mid-July (via Thompson on Hollywood).
The rest of the cast includes:
Alicia Silverstone and Ebon Moss-Bachrach — Kate and Neil, mortals who share the house with the Olympians
Sharon Stone — Aphrodite, a phone-sex operator
Oliver Platt — Apollo, a TV psychic
Edie Falco — Artemis, a dog-walker
Nelsan Ellis — Dionysus, a night-club owner
Phylicia Rashad — Demeter
John Turturro — Hades
Rosie Perez — Persephone
Posted in Books & Movies | Comments Off on THE OLYMPIANS For Adults
July 6th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
Following the success of her debut novel, Push, which was adapted into the Oscar-winning 2009 movie Precious, the book’s author Sapphire has published a sequel, The Kid (Penguin Press), released yesterday. The story begins with the death of Precious, and follows the difficult life of her son Abdul Jones into his teens.
USA Today‘s Bob Minzesheimer says the new book, which “…explores the shame of the foster home system and why more black kids like Abdul aren’t adopted” is “…more ambitious” than the first book.
Reviewers agree that Abdul’s life is harrowing; Carolyn Kellogg in the Kansas City Star, calls it “…an accomplished work of art, but it is a grueling story, one whose depictions of brutality and desire may be too challenging for some readers.” Michiko Kakutani in yesterday’s NYT takes a more dim view, “What is meant to be provocatively obscene in this novel, however, often feels merely willfully perverse, just as what is meant to be shocking often feels like sensationalistic contrivance.” People gives it 3.5 of 4 stars in the 7/11 issue.
The author was interviewed by USA Today at NYPL’s Harlem branch, at the beginning of her 17-city book tour. Below is the video of the interview that accompanies the story on the USA Today Web site:
Library holds are light, averaging 1:1 in the libraries we checked, on modest ordering.
Posted in 2011 -- Summer, Fiction | Comments Off on THE KID, Sequel to PUSH
July 6th, 2011 By: Nora Rawlinson
Fortune magazine reports that the title of Walter Isaacson’s forthcoming bio of Steve Jobs has been changed, causing the book to zoom up Amazon’s sales rankings to #51 (from #16,712). It is scheduled for release next Spring, March 6, 2012.
According to Fortune, Isaacson’s wife and daughter lobbied to change it from the “too cutsey” title chosen by publisher S&S, iSteve: The Book of Jobs to the prosaic, Steve Jobs.
Steve Jobs: A Biography |
Walter Isaacson |
Retail Price: | $30.00 |
Hardcover: | 448 pages |
Publisher: | Simon & Schuster – (2012-03-06) |
ISBN / EAN: | 1451648537 / 9781451648539 |
Posted in 2012/13 - Winter/Spring, Biography, Business, Nonfiction | Comments Off on The Book of Jobs
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