There’s a little section in our store called “books on books” which we, and before us, Schwartz have had for a number of years. Previous to that, this kind of title was folded into literary criticism or biography, or sometimes reference. The subject can be about book design, booksellers (one of David Schwartz’s favorites was Sunwise Turn), or even a memoir that is about reading a whole mess of books in a year.
I used to be a bit obsessive about this section and as a buyer, I probably would have put The End of Your Life Book Club here, after it had its run of front of store, staff rec, and book club table (it’s currently one of our book club picks, and featured in the brochure), instead of the biography section where we currently have it. Though I was not as anti-biography section as the late Borders, I still wasn’t crazy about it for memoirs, although I did accept it for historical figures when another section (sports, music) didn’t make more sense. But I’m not moving it or anything, as I am reminded of the longtime bookseller I worked with whose quirk was demanding that every book she liked written by a woman should be in women’s studies.
That said, these books on books are the kind of titles that work great in indie bookstores and I’d often have great success featuring them in our Schwartz newsletter. They didn’t work very well in other markets, sort of the way a Wisconsin interest store wouldn’t sell well in Missouri. I think of this because of the release of Boris Kachka’s new Hothouse: The Art of Survival andthe Survival of Art at America’s Most Celebrated Publishing House, FarrarStraus and Giroux. To my knowledge, Simon and Schuster did not do a mass-mailing of advance copies to bookstores. Instead, they did a targeted distribution of print-on-demand, tape-bound galleys along with a note from the editor.
But this is the thing about these kinds of books. It seemed like just about everybody who got a copy read it, and liked it enough to get it to the #1 pickon the American Booksellers’ Association Indie Next List for August. Let me just say that this kind of percentage is very unusual. I am one of those people, of course. How could I not be interested in the story of FSG, responsible for the careers of many of the great writers of the 20th century, a house that one could say hoarded Nobel prize winners.
The stories that Kachka tells in his exhaustively researched story are fascinating or delicious, depending on whether you are focusing on nurturing, advances, successes and failures of the house, or the peccadilloes (this word somehow came to me and I was shocked when I looked it up that it was actually being used correctly) of the participants. This sort of high-low gossip reminded me a bit of The Devil in the White City’s “come for the urban planning history, stay for the true crime” sort of dichotomy. I could have done without the who slept with whom and how who got fired, especially when a lot of these folks are still around, but I understand that this really puts the story in a cultural context.
Here’s what I sent to the publisher after I read the book. It’s a little too long for a rec; there’s also a shorter version somewhere, but it explains what I liked.
“The family business may have been American Smelting and Refining (ASARCO), but for Roger W. Straus, starting a publishing company was the perfect mix of business and culture. Having started the eponymous company with John Farrar, an acclaimed editor recently pushed out of another family publishing business. The independent presses were legion in those days, and many of them boasted authors of note. But upstart Farrar, Straus (the third name rotated out like an accounting partnership until Robert Giroux came aboard), their mission was to carry the intellectual torch while outlasting everyone else.
“Of course the mission sometimes included at least one bestselling celebrity memoir, a diet book, and a series of commercial thrillers, but if I’ve learned one thing from a family business, it’s that there’s always going to be some contradictions. The company boasted an international lineup that included a streak of ten Nobel prizewinners in an 18 year period, and raised the profile of many a Jewish and Catholic writer. Reading Hothouse is a great introduction to 20th century publishing, but even someone well versed in the subject will find many insights into everything from new journalism to the shockingly sexual office politics of an earlier day.
“Much of Kachka’s book chronicles the tortured relationship between Roger and his son Rog, another hallmark of many a family enterprise. In the end, the best way out was a sale to Holtzbrinck, with the intellectual mantle passed to Jonathan Galassi. My only beef about this well-researched, smartly written, and often juicy read? There’s way more gossip about the folks who’ve passed away than then the ones that are still living. So here’s to a second edition in twenty years!”
Recently Chuck Klosterman stated that in his opinion, you can’t plagiarize yourself, but wasn’t that one of the 17 things that got Jonah Lehrer in trouble? Here’s the thing-if he had only reused ideas (and exact language) in multiple columns, would that have been enough to lose his appointments and contracts? I don’t know, because he did lots of other things too. I’m also not being paid for any of this, so there’s not the presumption of me recycling old work. But just in case, I put that recommendation in quotes from myself.
Let me emphasize that Hothouse really was a fascinating look at leadership transition at a small business. I was just talking to a friend in the consumer food business, who formerly worked in the grocery business, and we had a fascinating discussion about exit strategies. It depends how big you are, how you get your capital, and whether you are really making enough money to be sustained, or instead making money through growth. One of FSG’s biggest problems was their success in the 1980s with Tom Wolfe and Scott Turow. It brought them into the big leagues, and the small advances they paid previously weren’t cutting it when writers saw fellow authors being paid big bucks. There are no end of cautionary tales (The Time Traveler’s Wife comes immediately to mind) about a publisher strained by their success.
A couple of other people who liked Hothouse...
"Hothouse has both intelligence and wit in its revelations of publishing, publishers, and the capture of authors. The story of FSG is a dazzling, wide-lens view of decades of literary America. To call Boris Kachka's prose 'brilliant' is not a cliche, it has meaning."
Toni Morrison
"This is an amazing, once-in-a-lifetime book. With Hothouse Kachka has produced his very own Mad Men for the literary world--an exhilarating, beautifully written biography of FSG that's really an exhilarating, beautifully written biography of a literary culture."
Junot Diaz
So maybe if I were another kind of store, I might put this in biography, history, or even business. But for me, this is a “books on books” kind of book, through and through, at least after it works our way through the new releases and my staff rec shelf.
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
New and Noteworthy Fiction From Andrea Barrett, Mark Slouka, Alexander Maksik, Natsuo Kirino, and Jenni Fagan.
We're one step closer to fall, and that means a nice assortment of new fiction to enjoy. Andrea Barrett's new collection of fictions (I think that means stories) is Archangel (Norton). In these five fictons rich with fact, the publisher notes that Barrett explores the thrill and sense of loss that comes with scientific progress. Whether she's playing off of Darwin's theory of evolution, the theory of relativity, or the 20th the developments in genetics and x-ray technology, Barrett, as Valerie Ryan in Shelf Awareness notes, "combines fact and fiction in scenarios that bring the reader to a better understanding of the high cost, both personal and public, of scientific advances. For all that is gained, a great deal is lost: reputations, long-held beliefs, years of research. Her own scientific knowledge illuminates these complex questions and discoveries without sacrificing character or story."
Because W.W. Norton uses pub dates instead of on-sale dates, there are no to the moment trade reviews that I'm able to find using a search engine. Compare that to Alexander Maksik's A Marker to Measure Drift (Knopf) where there's already a Boston Globe review from former Granta editor John Freeman, who praises Maksik's effort to bring "a moving dignity" to this tale of a homeless Liberian woman in Greece and Africa. The publisher notes that the story is visceral and gripping, and contemplates ruin and faith, barbarism and love, and the devastating memories that contant the power both to destory us and redeem us.
If you want a little noir with your women's journey to awareness, try Natsuo Kirino's The Goddess Chronicle (Canongate), a slice of Japanese feminist noir of two sisters from a family of Oracles. Kaminkuu is admired for her beauty, while Namima lives in her sister's shadow, per the publisher. One nice thing about a book that's an American reprint is that the reviews are all there, ready to be linked. It seems that the Guardian seems to review every literary novel published in the UK, and this time, Tai Twan Eng reports "Kirino is a master at creating an atmosphere of unease and distrust between her characters. In her skilful hands we see that the divide between man and woman is greater than the one between humans and gods."
Mark Slouka is American and from W.W. Norton, which because they do pub date as noted above, won't have trade reviews yet. I bet they will be good, however, as there is a lot of good advance word on Brewster. I see he's touring to at least Northshire and Brookline Booksmith, so here's hoping those esteemed booksellers will continue the buzz. The new novel is a departure from his World War I set previous novel, with the newest being the story of four teens in 1968, set in the town where Slouka himself grew up. Publishers Weekly gave it a starred review, noting "Slouka’s laconic dialogue resonates with regional authenticity, his late-1960s pop culture references ring true, and the stripped-down prose style in his masterful coming-of-age novel recalls the likes of Tobias Wolff and Raymond Carver."
But it appears the real outgrowth of on-sale dates is that Michiko Kakutani can set the tone by reviewing books in The New York Times over a week before the book's arrival. Is this because they don't care, or to show how important they are, or to mark the fates of the chosen. When it's a good review, who cares, and in the case of The Panopticon (Hogarth), by Jenni Fagan, it is good indeed. It's the story of a young woman set in Scotland's foster care system, a genre that seems to have bubbled to prominence, with the huge success of Vanessa Diffenbaugh's The Language of Flowers and Susan Nussbaum's Bellwether Prize winning Good Kings Bad Kings (at Boswell on August 8, 6 pm). Kakutani called the novel "fierce" at the beginning and "genuinely felt and deeply affecing" at the end, so even though she quibbles in the middle, that's a review that was meant to be perceived as positive. I've complained in the past about reviews that are cranky at the beginning and end but positive in the middle---this is sort of the opposite.
The Panopticon came out last week, but I had nothing else to group it with. That shouldn't be a problem going forward. August 6 is a big on-sale week. All titles listed, by the by, are Boswell's Best through Monday, August 5.
Because W.W. Norton uses pub dates instead of on-sale dates, there are no to the moment trade reviews that I'm able to find using a search engine. Compare that to Alexander Maksik's A Marker to Measure Drift (Knopf) where there's already a Boston Globe review from former Granta editor John Freeman, who praises Maksik's effort to bring "a moving dignity" to this tale of a homeless Liberian woman in Greece and Africa. The publisher notes that the story is visceral and gripping, and contemplates ruin and faith, barbarism and love, and the devastating memories that contant the power both to destory us and redeem us.
If you want a little noir with your women's journey to awareness, try Natsuo Kirino's The Goddess Chronicle (Canongate), a slice of Japanese feminist noir of two sisters from a family of Oracles. Kaminkuu is admired for her beauty, while Namima lives in her sister's shadow, per the publisher. One nice thing about a book that's an American reprint is that the reviews are all there, ready to be linked. It seems that the Guardian seems to review every literary novel published in the UK, and this time, Tai Twan Eng reports "Kirino is a master at creating an atmosphere of unease and distrust between her characters. In her skilful hands we see that the divide between man and woman is greater than the one between humans and gods."
Mark Slouka is American and from W.W. Norton, which because they do pub date as noted above, won't have trade reviews yet. I bet they will be good, however, as there is a lot of good advance word on Brewster. I see he's touring to at least Northshire and Brookline Booksmith, so here's hoping those esteemed booksellers will continue the buzz. The new novel is a departure from his World War I set previous novel, with the newest being the story of four teens in 1968, set in the town where Slouka himself grew up. Publishers Weekly gave it a starred review, noting "Slouka’s laconic dialogue resonates with regional authenticity, his late-1960s pop culture references ring true, and the stripped-down prose style in his masterful coming-of-age novel recalls the likes of Tobias Wolff and Raymond Carver."
But it appears the real outgrowth of on-sale dates is that Michiko Kakutani can set the tone by reviewing books in The New York Times over a week before the book's arrival. Is this because they don't care, or to show how important they are, or to mark the fates of the chosen. When it's a good review, who cares, and in the case of The Panopticon (Hogarth), by Jenni Fagan, it is good indeed. It's the story of a young woman set in Scotland's foster care system, a genre that seems to have bubbled to prominence, with the huge success of Vanessa Diffenbaugh's The Language of Flowers and Susan Nussbaum's Bellwether Prize winning Good Kings Bad Kings (at Boswell on August 8, 6 pm). Kakutani called the novel "fierce" at the beginning and "genuinely felt and deeply affecing" at the end, so even though she quibbles in the middle, that's a review that was meant to be perceived as positive. I've complained in the past about reviews that are cranky at the beginning and end but positive in the middle---this is sort of the opposite.
The Panopticon came out last week, but I had nothing else to group it with. That shouldn't be a problem going forward. August 6 is a big on-sale week. All titles listed, by the by, are Boswell's Best through Monday, August 5.
Monday, July 29, 2013
Monday Event Post--Craig Wilson, Find Waldo Local Wrap and Brain Quest Challenge, and Michael Zummo.
Monday, July 29, 7 pm, at Boswell:
Craig Wilson, author of A Little More Line: A Kite's View of Wisconsin and Beyond
Craig M. Wilson is Madison-based, award-winning photographer and kite enthusiast. Many of his kites are hand-sewn and he has taken part in kite festivals worldwide.
A Little More Line is a new collection of aerial photography from the kite-flying photojournalist behind Hanging by a Thread, capturing unique perspectives in full-color. In addition to continuing to show Wisconsin in a fresh and magical way that only a kite can, A Little More Line also drifts across our state’s borders. Discover new ways of seeing places like the Milwaukee Art Museum, Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesen, Door County, Apostle Islands, Chicago's Millenium Park, Michigan’s Mackinac Island, Iowa's Field of Dreams, Duluth's shipping harbor, and more.
“This new book is sure to make new converts as well as delight the many longtime fans of his remarkable art.” —Doug Moe, Wisconsin State Journal
In between the taxidermy segements, here's Craig Wilson on the public television show Outdoor Wisconsin.
Wednesday, July 31, 4 pm, at Boswell:
Find Waldo Local and Brain Quest Challenge.
We'll be wrapping up our great month of Find Waldo Local Milwaukee, with a drawing for the great prizes from retailers Fischbergers, Cafe Hollander, Yo Mama, Indulgence Chocolatiers (two), Zoom Room, Just Kidding Kids Cuts, Boswell (ten $10 gift cards), and the grand prize, a boxed collection of hardcover Waldo books.
As part of our celebration, at 4:30, we'll be hosting the Brain Quest Challenge, a great activity for kids 4-12. Based on the Brain Quest game, our Brain Quest refs will split kids into two teams, and each kid will get to answer age-appropriate questions in a fun and exciting program. All attendees will get prizes.
And yes, there will be snacks, sponsored by Outpost Natural Foods.
Saturday, August 3, 7 pm, at Boswell:
Michael Zummo, author of D'Mok Revival: Awakening
Milwaukee-based developer and programmer Michael Zummo takes a departure from his present world of interactive storytelling and web-based game creation for that of classic science fiction. While D'Mok Revival: Awakening is his first novel, he has been a storyteller since her created his first game, The Great Beyond, in high school.
Millenia ago, the Nukari eradicated the ancient space-exploring D’mar race. In spite of his immense efforts and superhuman abilities, not even D’mok, the greatest of the D’mar warriors, could stop the annihilation of his people. Now, the Nukari’s attack on the fledgling human coalition leaves a space station destroyed and one lone survivor. Haunted by grief for his murdered family even as unexpected D’mok-like powers awaken within him, Rhysus Mencari finds himself thrust into alien territory.
Next Week Event Preview...
Monday, August 5, 7 pm, at the Milwaukee Public Library Loos Room, 733 N. Eighth Street, 53233:
ReShonda Tate Billingsley, author of A Family Affair.
This event is co-sponsored by the Milwaukee Public Library and V100.7, WKKV.
NAACP Award-winner Billingsley, whose bestselling fiction "tackles some of life's toughest situations" (The Florida Times Union), unravels the secrets in a mother's past that turn her daughter's life upside down—by revealing the family she never knew existed. Billingsley’s #1 bestselling novels include the NAACP Image Award winner Say Amen, Again, and Let the Church Say Amen, soon to be a BET original movie.
Her new novel is A Family Affair, on sale this Tuesday, July 30.
Her dream of studying dance at Juilliard is within reach, but Olivia Dawson turns down the opportunity, choosing instead to stay with her ailing mother in the Houston projects where they barely make ends meet. Lorraine Dawson is Olivia's whole world, and now Olivia insists on being there for her. But when Lorraine learns Olivia is sacrificing college for her sake, she reveals a secret: Olivia’s father, Bernard, isn’t dead, but alive and doing very well for himself in Los Angeles where he lives with a wife and son. When Olivia’s mother succumbs to her ailments, she sees no other choice but to track down the man that might be her father, and confront him about the lifelong deception. Opening up the past, however, is more complicated than Olivia—or Bernard—expected, and the pain of yesterday's sins must be confronted before true healing and a bright tomorrow can begin.
Craig Wilson, author of A Little More Line: A Kite's View of Wisconsin and Beyond
Craig M. Wilson is Madison-based, award-winning photographer and kite enthusiast. Many of his kites are hand-sewn and he has taken part in kite festivals worldwide.
A Little More Line is a new collection of aerial photography from the kite-flying photojournalist behind Hanging by a Thread, capturing unique perspectives in full-color. In addition to continuing to show Wisconsin in a fresh and magical way that only a kite can, A Little More Line also drifts across our state’s borders. Discover new ways of seeing places like the Milwaukee Art Museum, Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesen, Door County, Apostle Islands, Chicago's Millenium Park, Michigan’s Mackinac Island, Iowa's Field of Dreams, Duluth's shipping harbor, and more.
“This new book is sure to make new converts as well as delight the many longtime fans of his remarkable art.” —Doug Moe, Wisconsin State Journal
In between the taxidermy segements, here's Craig Wilson on the public television show Outdoor Wisconsin.
Wednesday, July 31, 4 pm, at Boswell:
Find Waldo Local and Brain Quest Challenge.
We'll be wrapping up our great month of Find Waldo Local Milwaukee, with a drawing for the great prizes from retailers Fischbergers, Cafe Hollander, Yo Mama, Indulgence Chocolatiers (two), Zoom Room, Just Kidding Kids Cuts, Boswell (ten $10 gift cards), and the grand prize, a boxed collection of hardcover Waldo books.
As part of our celebration, at 4:30, we'll be hosting the Brain Quest Challenge, a great activity for kids 4-12. Based on the Brain Quest game, our Brain Quest refs will split kids into two teams, and each kid will get to answer age-appropriate questions in a fun and exciting program. All attendees will get prizes.
And yes, there will be snacks, sponsored by Outpost Natural Foods.
Saturday, August 3, 7 pm, at Boswell:
Michael Zummo, author of D'Mok Revival: Awakening
Milwaukee-based developer and programmer Michael Zummo takes a departure from his present world of interactive storytelling and web-based game creation for that of classic science fiction. While D'Mok Revival: Awakening is his first novel, he has been a storyteller since her created his first game, The Great Beyond, in high school.
Millenia ago, the Nukari eradicated the ancient space-exploring D’mar race. In spite of his immense efforts and superhuman abilities, not even D’mok, the greatest of the D’mar warriors, could stop the annihilation of his people. Now, the Nukari’s attack on the fledgling human coalition leaves a space station destroyed and one lone survivor. Haunted by grief for his murdered family even as unexpected D’mok-like powers awaken within him, Rhysus Mencari finds himself thrust into alien territory.
Next Week Event Preview...
Monday, August 5, 7 pm, at the Milwaukee Public Library Loos Room, 733 N. Eighth Street, 53233:
ReShonda Tate Billingsley, author of A Family Affair.
This event is co-sponsored by the Milwaukee Public Library and V100.7, WKKV.
NAACP Award-winner Billingsley, whose bestselling fiction "tackles some of life's toughest situations" (The Florida Times Union), unravels the secrets in a mother's past that turn her daughter's life upside down—by revealing the family she never knew existed. Billingsley’s #1 bestselling novels include the NAACP Image Award winner Say Amen, Again, and Let the Church Say Amen, soon to be a BET original movie.
Her new novel is A Family Affair, on sale this Tuesday, July 30.
Her dream of studying dance at Juilliard is within reach, but Olivia Dawson turns down the opportunity, choosing instead to stay with her ailing mother in the Houston projects where they barely make ends meet. Lorraine Dawson is Olivia's whole world, and now Olivia insists on being there for her. But when Lorraine learns Olivia is sacrificing college for her sake, she reveals a secret: Olivia’s father, Bernard, isn’t dead, but alive and doing very well for himself in Los Angeles where he lives with a wife and son. When Olivia’s mother succumbs to her ailments, she sees no other choice but to track down the man that might be her father, and confront him about the lifelong deception. Opening up the past, however, is more complicated than Olivia—or Bernard—expected, and the pain of yesterday's sins must be confronted before true healing and a bright tomorrow can begin.
Sunday, July 28, 2013
Sunday Bestseller Post--Fresh Air Boosts David Gilbert and Reza Aslan, Event Wrap Ups With Barbara Shapiro and Maddie, Book Clubs Reading Lauren Binet, Laura Moriarty and More.
Here's how things sold this week at Boswell.
Hardcover Fiction:
1. The Cuckoo's Calling, by R.K. Rowling writing as Robert Galbraith
2. Fin and Lady, by Cathleen Schine
3. The Ocean at the End of the Lane, by Neil Gaiman
4. The Illusion of Separateness, by Simon Van Booy
5. And Sons, by David Gilbert
6. Love Dishonor Marry Die Cherish Perish, by David Rakoff
7. Gone Girl, by Gillian Flnn
8. And the Mountains Echoed, by Khaled Hosseini
9. The English Girl, by Daniel Silva
10. Bad Monkey, by Carl Hiaasen
As you can see, our order for The Cuckoo's Calling came in. I'm not exactly sure what caused the pop in Neil Gaiman, which has been selling well since release nationally but had fallen off with us a bit. But the pop of the week is David Gilbert's And Sons, which had a great interview on Fresh Air earlier in the week. I'm remiss--I was supposed to read it but I wound up giving my copy to my sister Merrill, who, by the way, loved it! It's a novel that spins off a Salinger-esque character's passing Advance reviews were amazing. Booklist wrote "Gilbert's delectably mordant and incisive tragicomedy of fathers, sons, and brothers, privilege and betrayal, celebrity and obscurity, ingeniously and judiciously maps the interface between truth and fiction, life and art."
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Maddie on Things, by Theron Humphrey
2. Kill Anything That Moves, by Nick Turse (event Wednesday, August 8)
3. The Unwinding, by George Packer
4. I Wear the Black Hat, by Chuck Klosterman
5. Start with Why, by Simon Sinek
6. Dad is Fat, by Jim Gaffigan
7. The Guns at Last Night, by Rick Atkinson
8. Zealot, by Reza Aslan
9. Holy Sh*t, by Melissa Mohr
10. Gettysburg, by Allen C. Guelzo
The top sellers are a with a mix of past, present, and upcomiing events (with some non-event seasoning like Packer and Aslan), including signed-copy sales of Chuck Klosterman's latest. Reza Aslan's new book was also kicked off with a strong Fresh Air interview. But the highlight here is Theron Humphrey's visit with Maddie on Tuesday. His strong fan based, solidified online by his blog, came out in full force for Maddie on Things, and Maddie seemed to have a very, very good time.
Paperback Fiction:
1. The Art Forger, by B.A. Shapiro
2. Curtain Calls, by Barbara Mathias-Riegel
3. Beautiful Ruins, by Jess Walter
5. Flight Behavior, by Barbara Kingsolver
6. HHhH, by Laurent Binet
7. The Bat, by Jo Nesbo
8. The Beautiful Mystery, by Louise Penny (event Tuesday, August 27, ticketed)
9. The Chaperone, by Laura Moriarty
10. The Yellow Birds, by Kevin Powers
Nice events with Mathias-Riegel in house and at the Charles Allis Art Museum for Shapiro top the list this week (signed copies of The Art Forger are available), but book clubs are also a factory. Two of our largest clubs that pick their books annually made their decisions, and both HHhH and The Yellow Birds were on their list. I'm currently reading The Chaperone, which we'll be discussing for our in-store lit group on Monday, August 5. I spoke to one of our regular attendees who devoured the book and is very excited about the discussion.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Start with Why, by Simon Sinek
2. The Ghost in General Patton's Army, by Eugene Schulz
3. A Little More Line, by Craig Wilson (event Monday, July 29)
4. Citizens of London, by Lynne Olson
5. Monkey Mind, by Daniel Smith
Simon Sinek was a featured speaker at the Northwestern Mutual's sales conference. His book Start with Why suggests solving business problems based on answering the question why, instead of what or even how (though a sales rep recently told me that they had two books called How and Why, and the former well outsold the latter). Hey, if everyone agreed, we wouldn't have pundits. Sinek made waves with a very popular TED talk.
Books for Kids:
1. Goodnight Moon Board Book, by Margaret Wise Brown
2. The Fault in Our Stars, by John Green
3. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie
4. Catching Fire, by Suzanne Collins
5. Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, by Ransom Riggs
If you thought the release of adult titles slowed down in the summer, that's even more the case for kids' books. That said, Jasper Fforde's The Last Dragonslayer came out in paperback and it placed just below our top five. This is the first book in his acclaimed new book series, and he's coming to Milwaukee for his second tile, The Song of the Quarkbeast. Mr. Fforde will be appearing at the Cudahy Family Library on Wednesday, September 11, 6:30 pm.
In the Journal Sentinel, Jim Higgins talks up Loteria, a novel about Luz, making sense of her grief, who is inspired by the cards in this traditional Mexican game. He notes "they're not instruments of divination like tarot cards, but, like the tarot deck, the simple, traditional design of the LoterĂa cards gives them a touch of the archetypal."
Carole E. Barrowman tackles Stephen Kiernan's The Curiosity, a Frankenstein like novel about a scientist who finds a dead man on an Arctic expedition and successfully reanimates him. "When this 'metabolic mystery' is re-animated successfully, the Lazarus Project quickly moves from a science lab to the world's stage." Barrowman calls this a measured and thought-provoking alternative to summer reading.
Also thanks to Mr. Higgins for reporting on the Man Booker longlist. Right now, the store seems to favor Colum McCann's TransAtlantic, but we'll see if several booksellers get behind some of the titles that are coming out Stateside in the fall.
Hardcover Fiction:
1. The Cuckoo's Calling, by R.K. Rowling writing as Robert Galbraith
2. Fin and Lady, by Cathleen Schine
3. The Ocean at the End of the Lane, by Neil Gaiman
4. The Illusion of Separateness, by Simon Van Booy
5. And Sons, by David Gilbert
6. Love Dishonor Marry Die Cherish Perish, by David Rakoff
7. Gone Girl, by Gillian Flnn
8. And the Mountains Echoed, by Khaled Hosseini
9. The English Girl, by Daniel Silva
10. Bad Monkey, by Carl Hiaasen
As you can see, our order for The Cuckoo's Calling came in. I'm not exactly sure what caused the pop in Neil Gaiman, which has been selling well since release nationally but had fallen off with us a bit. But the pop of the week is David Gilbert's And Sons, which had a great interview on Fresh Air earlier in the week. I'm remiss--I was supposed to read it but I wound up giving my copy to my sister Merrill, who, by the way, loved it! It's a novel that spins off a Salinger-esque character's passing Advance reviews were amazing. Booklist wrote "Gilbert's delectably mordant and incisive tragicomedy of fathers, sons, and brothers, privilege and betrayal, celebrity and obscurity, ingeniously and judiciously maps the interface between truth and fiction, life and art."
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Maddie on Things, by Theron Humphrey
2. Kill Anything That Moves, by Nick Turse (event Wednesday, August 8)
3. The Unwinding, by George Packer
4. I Wear the Black Hat, by Chuck Klosterman
5. Start with Why, by Simon Sinek
6. Dad is Fat, by Jim Gaffigan
7. The Guns at Last Night, by Rick Atkinson
8. Zealot, by Reza Aslan
9. Holy Sh*t, by Melissa Mohr
10. Gettysburg, by Allen C. Guelzo
The top sellers are a with a mix of past, present, and upcomiing events (with some non-event seasoning like Packer and Aslan), including signed-copy sales of Chuck Klosterman's latest. Reza Aslan's new book was also kicked off with a strong Fresh Air interview. But the highlight here is Theron Humphrey's visit with Maddie on Tuesday. His strong fan based, solidified online by his blog, came out in full force for Maddie on Things, and Maddie seemed to have a very, very good time.
Paperback Fiction:
1. The Art Forger, by B.A. Shapiro
2. Curtain Calls, by Barbara Mathias-Riegel
3. Beautiful Ruins, by Jess Walter
5. Flight Behavior, by Barbara Kingsolver
6. HHhH, by Laurent Binet
7. The Bat, by Jo Nesbo
8. The Beautiful Mystery, by Louise Penny (event Tuesday, August 27, ticketed)
9. The Chaperone, by Laura Moriarty
10. The Yellow Birds, by Kevin Powers
Nice events with Mathias-Riegel in house and at the Charles Allis Art Museum for Shapiro top the list this week (signed copies of The Art Forger are available), but book clubs are also a factory. Two of our largest clubs that pick their books annually made their decisions, and both HHhH and The Yellow Birds were on their list. I'm currently reading The Chaperone, which we'll be discussing for our in-store lit group on Monday, August 5. I spoke to one of our regular attendees who devoured the book and is very excited about the discussion.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Start with Why, by Simon Sinek
2. The Ghost in General Patton's Army, by Eugene Schulz
3. A Little More Line, by Craig Wilson (event Monday, July 29)
4. Citizens of London, by Lynne Olson
5. Monkey Mind, by Daniel Smith
Simon Sinek was a featured speaker at the Northwestern Mutual's sales conference. His book Start with Why suggests solving business problems based on answering the question why, instead of what or even how (though a sales rep recently told me that they had two books called How and Why, and the former well outsold the latter). Hey, if everyone agreed, we wouldn't have pundits. Sinek made waves with a very popular TED talk.
Books for Kids:
1. Goodnight Moon Board Book, by Margaret Wise Brown
2. The Fault in Our Stars, by John Green
3. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie
4. Catching Fire, by Suzanne Collins
5. Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, by Ransom Riggs
If you thought the release of adult titles slowed down in the summer, that's even more the case for kids' books. That said, Jasper Fforde's The Last Dragonslayer came out in paperback and it placed just below our top five. This is the first book in his acclaimed new book series, and he's coming to Milwaukee for his second tile, The Song of the Quarkbeast. Mr. Fforde will be appearing at the Cudahy Family Library on Wednesday, September 11, 6:30 pm.
In the Journal Sentinel, Jim Higgins talks up Loteria, a novel about Luz, making sense of her grief, who is inspired by the cards in this traditional Mexican game. He notes "they're not instruments of divination like tarot cards, but, like the tarot deck, the simple, traditional design of the LoterĂa cards gives them a touch of the archetypal."
Carole E. Barrowman tackles Stephen Kiernan's The Curiosity, a Frankenstein like novel about a scientist who finds a dead man on an Arctic expedition and successfully reanimates him. "When this 'metabolic mystery' is re-animated successfully, the Lazarus Project quickly moves from a science lab to the world's stage." Barrowman calls this a measured and thought-provoking alternative to summer reading.
Also thanks to Mr. Higgins for reporting on the Man Booker longlist. Right now, the store seems to favor Colum McCann's TransAtlantic, but we'll see if several booksellers get behind some of the titles that are coming out Stateside in the fall.
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Saturday Gift Post--TeNeues Cards, A New Obama Plush, Dinosaur Pens.
It's one week after the gift show and while nothing from the show itself has arrived (I actually placed seven orders there), several shipments did arrive at Boswell.
1. The seasonal TeNeues boxed card order arrived. They have been experimenting a lot with recycled cardboard packaging. It must be working because it seemed like more than half the new releases for boxed cards were in the green notes category.
2. Unemployed Philosophers Guild shipped a President Obama Little Thinker backorder. Nick noticed that the new Obamas have gray hair.
3. We're so sad that Halley is moving in August, but I'm glad to say that we brought in dinosaur pens for her to ooh and ah over while she's still here.
It's a cautionary tale of when dinosaur pens attack.
1. The seasonal TeNeues boxed card order arrived. They have been experimenting a lot with recycled cardboard packaging. It must be working because it seemed like more than half the new releases for boxed cards were in the green notes category.
2. Unemployed Philosophers Guild shipped a President Obama Little Thinker backorder. Nick noticed that the new Obamas have gray hair.
3. We're so sad that Halley is moving in August, but I'm glad to say that we brought in dinosaur pens for her to ooh and ah over while she's still here.
It's a cautionary tale of when dinosaur pens attack.
Friday, July 26, 2013
The August Indie Next Flier is Here--Four Authors are Coming and Another is Recommended by Our Own Nick.
Mel is furiously creating our August Indie Next shelf talkers for our Indie Bound bookcase, while I do the literary equivalent of bedazzling to the fliers that we hand out (meaning we put stickers on them). We've got four authors coming of the twenty featured books in August, plus one of the paperbacks, plus Nick has a quote for yet another book. Stacie offhandedly noted that I wouldn't be happy until I had a month where we were featuring all twenty authors. Hmmm...
When Barbara Shapiro was speaking at the Charles Allis Art Museum on Wednesday, she mentioned that it's so hard for writers to break out. At one point on her NYT bestseller run for The Art Forger (signed paperbacks available), she noticed that she was the only author on the list who'd never before hit the list. I mentioned how much indie booksellers try to support new writers, and this list is a clear indication of that. Of the twenty, I can only think of two writers, Michael Paterniti and Philip Caputo, who have had previous bestselling titles.
Caveat--authors who are established stars rarely have a July to early August on sale which would warrant an August Indie Next Pick. As a control, I reached back to April, a month that would be considered a traditionally good new release month for a high profile author. In that case, there are bigger names, but fewer than half of them have had previous titles that could be classified as bestsellers.
First here's Nick's pick:
The Telling Room: A Tale of Love, Betrayal, Revenge, and the World’s Greatest Piece of Cheese, by Michael Paterniti (The Dial Press)
"Paterniti encountered what was then considered the finest cheese in the world — PĂ¡ramo de GuzmĂ¡n. Too poor at the time to buy a taste, Paterniti instead vowed to one day meet this fascinating, magical cheese again. Years later, with family in tow, he made good on his vow by traveling to the rustic Spanish village where the cheese is produced. Enter Ambrosio, the brilliant, salt-of-the-earth cheesemaker with an infectious zest for life and a love for creating something simply and beautifully. Paterniti spent the next decade embedded in the rural village, playing Sancho Panza to Ambrosio’s Don Quixote while piecing together a meandering mĂ©lange of stories about food, flavor, love, loss, betrayal, and revenge. What begins as an investigative journalist’s foodie memoir becomes a culture study, a travelogue, a comedy, and an allegory. I got lost in this book!” —Nick Berg, Boswell Book Company, Milwaukee, WI
Andrea Thalasinos is coming to Boswell, along with Susanna Daniel, on Tuesday, August 20, 7 pm.
Traveling Light: A Novel, by Andrea Thalasinos (Forge)
“In her glorious new novel, Thalasinos has created a modern middle-aged woman living in two different worlds, neither of which is making her happy. Paula Makaikis has been sleeping on a basement couch for most of her 10-year marriage to a hoarder and has hidden this fact from her family and friends. Her job as Director of Immigrant Studies in New York City is equally frustrating, until she is asked to translate the words of a dying Greek elder with a dog named Fotis who only understands commands in the Greek language. Suddenly, Paula takes a leave of absence from her job, adopts Fotis, and begins a journey that eventually will take her to Grand Marais, Minnesota, and a raptor rehab center. Her discovery that humans and animals can relate to each other and heal even the most wounded of either party is what makes this amazing novel so powerful.” —Kathleen Dixon, Islandtime Books and More, Washington Island, WI
Toby Barlow is coming to Boswell on Wednesday, August 21, 7 pm.
Babayaga: A Novel, by Toby Barlow(Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
“Moving from ancient Russia to the dawn of the New World, stretching into an endless future, but mainly rushing madly around postwar Paris, Babayaga covers a lot of ground. Vengeful witches hunt, charm, and wage battle. Evil scientists hatch sinister plans. A dashing spy runs a crew of outcast mercenaries. A good-hearted police inspector stays on his case, even in the form of a flea! And hapless Will, ad man/CIA informant, is caught in the whirlwind, which just might be the best thing that’s ever happened to him. Babayaga crackles with an electric energy driven by its hilariously inventive plot, clever prose, and outrageously eccentric cast of characters.” —Sarah Hinckley, Hudson Booksellers, Marietta, GA
Yes, the airport store group Hudson Booksellers is part of the ABA. One year I went with a bunch of them on a High Line walk at Book Expo in New York. You can't actually visit Sarah and ask for more of her picks, as she works in the offices. Not all their stores are at airports, by the way. They have a store at the train depot at Citicorp Center in Chicago. I've linked to the map.
And on Wednesday, August 28, 7 pm, we have a double bill of Indie Next picks. We had booked Janice Clark for that day, based on a great recommendation from our own Mel, and when Amy Gail Hansen came along, and her rec was positioned right next to Clark's on the flier, and both of the books in a way played off of literary classics (it's not clear on review below, but Hansen's novel has a "madwoman in the attic" theme running through it), it just seemed like a great match.
The Butterfly Sister: A Novel, by Amy Gail Hansen (William Morrow)
“Ruby Rosseau believes that she has gone mad. Her suicide attempt at Tarble, a women’s college, leads to her dropping out and failing to graduate. Ten months later, a suitcase with her name on it arrives at her home via courier, but the suitcase belongs to a former classmate at Tarble who has gone missing. Ruby’s search for her friend leads her back to Tarble to face her past and the ghosts that threaten to destroy her life. It will take a ‘butterfly sister,’ someone who inspires metamorphosis, to save Ruby and her friend. Hansen’s debut tale of madness, mystery, revenge, betrayal, love, and literature will keep you guessing until the surprise ending.” —Karen Briggs, Great Northern Books and Hobbies, Oscoda, MI
The Rathbones: A Novel, by Janice Clark (Doubleday)
“The quest of a young girl and her uncle becomes an odyssey through a century and takes the reader on a literary voyage unlike any in recent memory. The saga of the Rathbone whaling family brings echoes of Melville’s tale of obsession in a novel reminiscent of the great, sprawling moralistic books of the 19th century. This is storytelling at its finest!” —Bill Cusumano, Nicola’s Books, Ann Arbor, MI
Thanks to Kathleen, Sarah, Karen and Bill for those recs. Hope you'll try one of our Indie bookstore approved events in August, and if you like hard copy, we've got plenty of copies of the August flier at Boswell (and if you are reading this outside the Milwaukee area, the fliers are likely at your favorite local indie bookstore too).
When Barbara Shapiro was speaking at the Charles Allis Art Museum on Wednesday, she mentioned that it's so hard for writers to break out. At one point on her NYT bestseller run for The Art Forger (signed paperbacks available), she noticed that she was the only author on the list who'd never before hit the list. I mentioned how much indie booksellers try to support new writers, and this list is a clear indication of that. Of the twenty, I can only think of two writers, Michael Paterniti and Philip Caputo, who have had previous bestselling titles.
Caveat--authors who are established stars rarely have a July to early August on sale which would warrant an August Indie Next Pick. As a control, I reached back to April, a month that would be considered a traditionally good new release month for a high profile author. In that case, there are bigger names, but fewer than half of them have had previous titles that could be classified as bestsellers.
First here's Nick's pick:
The Telling Room: A Tale of Love, Betrayal, Revenge, and the World’s Greatest Piece of Cheese, by Michael Paterniti (The Dial Press)
"Paterniti encountered what was then considered the finest cheese in the world — PĂ¡ramo de GuzmĂ¡n. Too poor at the time to buy a taste, Paterniti instead vowed to one day meet this fascinating, magical cheese again. Years later, with family in tow, he made good on his vow by traveling to the rustic Spanish village where the cheese is produced. Enter Ambrosio, the brilliant, salt-of-the-earth cheesemaker with an infectious zest for life and a love for creating something simply and beautifully. Paterniti spent the next decade embedded in the rural village, playing Sancho Panza to Ambrosio’s Don Quixote while piecing together a meandering mĂ©lange of stories about food, flavor, love, loss, betrayal, and revenge. What begins as an investigative journalist’s foodie memoir becomes a culture study, a travelogue, a comedy, and an allegory. I got lost in this book!” —Nick Berg, Boswell Book Company, Milwaukee, WI
Andrea Thalasinos is coming to Boswell, along with Susanna Daniel, on Tuesday, August 20, 7 pm.
Traveling Light: A Novel, by Andrea Thalasinos (Forge)
“In her glorious new novel, Thalasinos has created a modern middle-aged woman living in two different worlds, neither of which is making her happy. Paula Makaikis has been sleeping on a basement couch for most of her 10-year marriage to a hoarder and has hidden this fact from her family and friends. Her job as Director of Immigrant Studies in New York City is equally frustrating, until she is asked to translate the words of a dying Greek elder with a dog named Fotis who only understands commands in the Greek language. Suddenly, Paula takes a leave of absence from her job, adopts Fotis, and begins a journey that eventually will take her to Grand Marais, Minnesota, and a raptor rehab center. Her discovery that humans and animals can relate to each other and heal even the most wounded of either party is what makes this amazing novel so powerful.” —Kathleen Dixon, Islandtime Books and More, Washington Island, WI
Toby Barlow is coming to Boswell on Wednesday, August 21, 7 pm.
Babayaga: A Novel, by Toby Barlow(Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
“Moving from ancient Russia to the dawn of the New World, stretching into an endless future, but mainly rushing madly around postwar Paris, Babayaga covers a lot of ground. Vengeful witches hunt, charm, and wage battle. Evil scientists hatch sinister plans. A dashing spy runs a crew of outcast mercenaries. A good-hearted police inspector stays on his case, even in the form of a flea! And hapless Will, ad man/CIA informant, is caught in the whirlwind, which just might be the best thing that’s ever happened to him. Babayaga crackles with an electric energy driven by its hilariously inventive plot, clever prose, and outrageously eccentric cast of characters.” —Sarah Hinckley, Hudson Booksellers, Marietta, GA
Yes, the airport store group Hudson Booksellers is part of the ABA. One year I went with a bunch of them on a High Line walk at Book Expo in New York. You can't actually visit Sarah and ask for more of her picks, as she works in the offices. Not all their stores are at airports, by the way. They have a store at the train depot at Citicorp Center in Chicago. I've linked to the map.
And on Wednesday, August 28, 7 pm, we have a double bill of Indie Next picks. We had booked Janice Clark for that day, based on a great recommendation from our own Mel, and when Amy Gail Hansen came along, and her rec was positioned right next to Clark's on the flier, and both of the books in a way played off of literary classics (it's not clear on review below, but Hansen's novel has a "madwoman in the attic" theme running through it), it just seemed like a great match.
The Butterfly Sister: A Novel, by Amy Gail Hansen (William Morrow)
“Ruby Rosseau believes that she has gone mad. Her suicide attempt at Tarble, a women’s college, leads to her dropping out and failing to graduate. Ten months later, a suitcase with her name on it arrives at her home via courier, but the suitcase belongs to a former classmate at Tarble who has gone missing. Ruby’s search for her friend leads her back to Tarble to face her past and the ghosts that threaten to destroy her life. It will take a ‘butterfly sister,’ someone who inspires metamorphosis, to save Ruby and her friend. Hansen’s debut tale of madness, mystery, revenge, betrayal, love, and literature will keep you guessing until the surprise ending.” —Karen Briggs, Great Northern Books and Hobbies, Oscoda, MI
The Rathbones: A Novel, by Janice Clark (Doubleday)
“The quest of a young girl and her uncle becomes an odyssey through a century and takes the reader on a literary voyage unlike any in recent memory. The saga of the Rathbone whaling family brings echoes of Melville’s tale of obsession in a novel reminiscent of the great, sprawling moralistic books of the 19th century. This is storytelling at its finest!” —Bill Cusumano, Nicola’s Books, Ann Arbor, MI
Thanks to Kathleen, Sarah, Karen and Bill for those recs. Hope you'll try one of our Indie bookstore approved events in August, and if you like hard copy, we've got plenty of copies of the August flier at Boswell (and if you are reading this outside the Milwaukee area, the fliers are likely at your favorite local indie bookstore too).
Thursday, July 25, 2013
The Boswell Detective Hour--Investigating Another J.K. Rowling Mystery.
In all the hubbub about The Cuckoo's Calling, there's been an interesting detail that hasn't been talked about very much.And why is nobody talking about it? Well, honestly I think it's because nobody really cares. That said, we at Boswell find it fascinating.
The paperback edition of The Casual Vacancy, while sporting a different cover, is most likely a paperback rebind of the hardcover edition.
While once a frequent occurrence (at least one of my old time reps used to point these out to me as I bought the frontlist), I think nowadays this is a rarer thing. Even in books with a lot of hardcovers left over, the hardcovers are remaindered or pulped, and a completely new paperback is created.
Here are some hints as to why we think Rowling's book is a rebind.
1. There's an endpaper in the same rust color as the hardcover.
2. The Library of Congress page does not list the paperback edition. We looked at several other titles and they all had updated copyright or printing info.
3. The typeface is the same size. More on that later.
There's really only one actual downside to this. The inner margin is a little small. I think regarding every other factor, this is a complete win for paperback readers. And regarding the margin, I've seen smaller margins on originals from time to time.
The bonuses:
1. The typeface is the same size. Most of the time the paperback typeface, even for trade titles (as opposed to rack sized mass markets) are smaller.
2. The paper quality is almost undoubtedly better
3. I'm not expert, but I suspect that it is ecologically better to rebind than to pulp and recreate.
I guess there's one psychological downside. It implies that the sales were disappointing enough that copies were left over.
So in one sense, I feel a bit guilty for calling this out, but in another, I think it's a really great revival of an old practice. Or maybe it's a policy that never went away amongst large publishers and I wasn't aware of it. Have you discovered paperback rebinds? Let us know about them in the comments area.
The paperback edition of The Casual Vacancy, while sporting a different cover, is most likely a paperback rebind of the hardcover edition.
While once a frequent occurrence (at least one of my old time reps used to point these out to me as I bought the frontlist), I think nowadays this is a rarer thing. Even in books with a lot of hardcovers left over, the hardcovers are remaindered or pulped, and a completely new paperback is created.
Here are some hints as to why we think Rowling's book is a rebind.
1. There's an endpaper in the same rust color as the hardcover.
2. The Library of Congress page does not list the paperback edition. We looked at several other titles and they all had updated copyright or printing info.
3. The typeface is the same size. More on that later.
There's really only one actual downside to this. The inner margin is a little small. I think regarding every other factor, this is a complete win for paperback readers. And regarding the margin, I've seen smaller margins on originals from time to time.
The bonuses:
1. The typeface is the same size. Most of the time the paperback typeface, even for trade titles (as opposed to rack sized mass markets) are smaller.
2. The paper quality is almost undoubtedly better
3. I'm not expert, but I suspect that it is ecologically better to rebind than to pulp and recreate.
I guess there's one psychological downside. It implies that the sales were disappointing enough that copies were left over.
So in one sense, I feel a bit guilty for calling this out, but in another, I think it's a really great revival of an old practice. Or maybe it's a policy that never went away amongst large publishers and I wasn't aware of it. Have you discovered paperback rebinds? Let us know about them in the comments area.
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
One Rec for Something that's Been Around For A While, Another for A Book So New They Barely Sold it To Us Yet, Plus Some Book Club Selections.
Last week I wrote about trying to find new in paperback African American fiction for our book club brochure. This quest actually led to two displays, as not only did I come up with two recommendations, but I decided to play off the Milwaukee Art Museum's 30 Americans (now through September 8) with a table display of 30 American Writers. I tried to keep to the parameters of the exhibit and only feature writers from the last thirty years, and tried to focus a bit on less well known names.
In addition, we found two interesting books for our book club brochure. Stacie suggested Marie NDiaye's Three Strong Women, and while the author was not American, it piqued my interest enough to add it to the book club table and select it as our October in-store lit group selection. We'll be meeting to discuss this Prix Goncourt winner on Monday, October 7, 7 pm.
As an aside, Anne just told me that the mystery group will be reading George Peleacanos as their September selection. The title they chose is Down by the River Where the Dead Men Go, one of his Nick Stefanos novels. They meet on Monday, September 23 and they welcome all Pelecanos fans or fan wannabes to their meeting. Our event with George Pelecanos is Thursday, October 17.
Back to the book club. I said I wound up reading Martha Southgate's The Taste of Salt,but I don't think I included my staff rec, beyond the one sentence taste in Friday's list of book club picks.
The Taste of Salt, a novel by Martha Southgate (Algonquin)
"Josie (as in Josephine Baker) Henderson is a marine biologist at the facility on the coast of Massachusetts. She’s left her family behind in Cleveland—a hardworking mom, a long-time alcoholic father in recovery, and a little brother, Tick (as in Edmund Spenser, long story) who’s following in his father’s footsteps. She’s long estranged from her father, but when her brother needs her to pick her up in recovery, her carefully wound life, including a marriage to her white husband Daniel, begins to spiral downward, especially when a fellow Black scientist arrives at the clinic. Southgate tells the story from several perspectives, but there’s never any question that this is Josie’s story, a meaty tale that ponders just how much we can learn from the mistakes of ourselves and our families."
--Daniel
So no sooner was I done with this project than Mel sent me this wonderful rec for a new African American memoir. The book was in the fall PGW catalog so we had to move it to a backlist order, as it's already available.
What the River Washed Away, by Muriel Mharie Macleod (One World) "What the River Washed Away is the coming-of-age story of a poor, Black girl in the Deep South at the turn of the twentieth century. Arletta is determined to find some way out of the shack she grew up in, despite her youth, poverty, and the daily assaults she endures. She doesn't have a friend in the world, but she does have a solid educational foundation, and a few spirits keeping watch and whispering affirmations to her. A cross between The Color Purple and Mama Day, Macleod's debut novel illustrates the strained relationships between mothers and daughters, men and women, Blacks and Whites, rich and poor, heathen and Christian, the learned and the uneducated, in the lynching hotbed of Louisiana. This novel will transport you back in time while bringing to mind the challenges we still face in this country--so many miles covered so far, and so very many more to go." Mel Morrow
In addition, we found two interesting books for our book club brochure. Stacie suggested Marie NDiaye's Three Strong Women, and while the author was not American, it piqued my interest enough to add it to the book club table and select it as our October in-store lit group selection. We'll be meeting to discuss this Prix Goncourt winner on Monday, October 7, 7 pm.
As an aside, Anne just told me that the mystery group will be reading George Peleacanos as their September selection. The title they chose is Down by the River Where the Dead Men Go, one of his Nick Stefanos novels. They meet on Monday, September 23 and they welcome all Pelecanos fans or fan wannabes to their meeting. Our event with George Pelecanos is Thursday, October 17.
Back to the book club. I said I wound up reading Martha Southgate's The Taste of Salt,but I don't think I included my staff rec, beyond the one sentence taste in Friday's list of book club picks.
The Taste of Salt, a novel by Martha Southgate (Algonquin)
"Josie (as in Josephine Baker) Henderson is a marine biologist at the facility on the coast of Massachusetts. She’s left her family behind in Cleveland—a hardworking mom, a long-time alcoholic father in recovery, and a little brother, Tick (as in Edmund Spenser, long story) who’s following in his father’s footsteps. She’s long estranged from her father, but when her brother needs her to pick her up in recovery, her carefully wound life, including a marriage to her white husband Daniel, begins to spiral downward, especially when a fellow Black scientist arrives at the clinic. Southgate tells the story from several perspectives, but there’s never any question that this is Josie’s story, a meaty tale that ponders just how much we can learn from the mistakes of ourselves and our families."
--Daniel
So no sooner was I done with this project than Mel sent me this wonderful rec for a new African American memoir. The book was in the fall PGW catalog so we had to move it to a backlist order, as it's already available.
What the River Washed Away, by Muriel Mharie Macleod (One World) "What the River Washed Away is the coming-of-age story of a poor, Black girl in the Deep South at the turn of the twentieth century. Arletta is determined to find some way out of the shack she grew up in, despite her youth, poverty, and the daily assaults she endures. She doesn't have a friend in the world, but she does have a solid educational foundation, and a few spirits keeping watch and whispering affirmations to her. A cross between The Color Purple and Mama Day, Macleod's debut novel illustrates the strained relationships between mothers and daughters, men and women, Blacks and Whites, rich and poor, heathen and Christian, the learned and the uneducated, in the lynching hotbed of Louisiana. This novel will transport you back in time while bringing to mind the challenges we still face in this country--so many miles covered so far, and so very many more to go." Mel Morrow
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Five New Novels About China (and One About Singapore, Which I Just Learned on Wikipedia is 74% Ethnic Chinese).
This morning I went to Jason and said, "It's Tuesday. What's new this week?" and he replied, "Pretty much nothing." It's the dregs of summer and August*has one of the smallest release schedule of the year. I went up to our front cases and browsed both the Boswell's Best and New and Noteworthy hardcover case and saw that there were a good number of books by Chinese authors.
I've already written up Crazy Rich Asians on the blog, and since then, I've met a couple of folks who've read and enjoyed it. Just to get a feel for what we're talking about, Plum Sykes called it a "Chinese Dallas meets Pride and Prejudice." Kwan is from Singapore, and since the majority of Singapore residents are ethnic Chinese, I am guessing that he qualifies. Here's an interesting interview with Kwan from the blog Read it Forward, where he discusses his design background and consumerist culture. It's about a Chinese American girl who travels to Singapore to meet her new boyfriend's family, only to find out they are wealthy beyond all get out.
Tash Aw's Five Star Billionaire is said to be a contemporary novel that captures the vibrancy of China today, particularly Shanghai. The author is originally from Taiwan, was brought up in Malaysia, and now lives in London. The story focuses on a factory girl, a country boy turned pop star, a real estate developer, and a leftist turned businesswoman, and the billionaire himself, pulling the strings on the characters with his various schemes and secrets. The novelist Aminatta Forna review the novel for the Guardian, and says "Aw is a master storyteller and Five Star Billionaire can be read as The Way We Live Now for our times, for with the global triumph of capitalism, New York and London pale in comparison with the financial behemoth of Shanghai."
Moving away from big city riches, Ma Jian's The Dark Road, this novel is about a peasant family who decide to have a second child when their first child is a daughter. On the run from the law, they decide to sail down the Yangtze River in a rickety houseboat. The Dark Road wears its politics on its sleeve--the jacket copy talks about the women he met to research the book, said to undergo abortions and forced sterlization in the name of the one child policy. Ma Jian is another Londoner, who lives with his translator, Flora Drew. In the Washington Post, Carolyn See notes that "As an argument against the one-child policy and the horrific conditions it has spawned, The Dark Road is very effective. But that polemical animus also works against its success as a novel."
Columbia University Press has a new book out called The Matchmaker, The Apprentice, and The Football Fan, written by Zhu Wen and translatted by Julia Lovell. Like Ma Jian's work, it's political in nature. Kirkus Reviews notes "at odds with the Chinese regime's reigning ideology of the late '80s and the '90s, which appears determined to crush its citizens' individuality." The (Minneapolis) Star Tibune's Tom Zelman calls the collection "funny, complex, fantastic and true." I think the book is one of the more attractive packages I've seen of late--a decent paper weight, colored endpapers, a nice design on the jacket, but I'm not a fan of the tiny type and very tight letter spacing. Definitely a paper-saving move.
Moving on to mysteries, there's a new Inspector Chen novel by St. Louis's Qui Xiaolong called Enigma of China. Back in the day, we did quite well with the author's first few mysteries, including Death of a Red Heroine and A Loyal Character Dancer. The newest features Inspector Chen (a poet by training, a police inspector in Shanghai by occupation) investigating the death of Zhou Keng, the son of a major party member who himself was ousted from a plum position after corruption was exposed. His death has been ruled a suicide but it doesn't add up. The Wall Street Journal's unnamed reviewer (how unusual!) thought the new book was excellent. As it is written, "Inspector Chen, the poetry-writing detective featured in Qiu Xiaolong's outstanding series of procedural novels set in contemporary Shanghai, knows not to take people, or cases, at face value: What seems simple on the surface may soon reveal subtle, even fatal aspects."
According to my sister, the book to read is The Hour of the Rat, by Lisa Brackmann. Claudia, as you know, teaches Chinese at Holy Cross, is the former president of the Chinese Language Teacher's Association, and has written a number of bestselling Chinese textbooks, as well as probably the bestselling and best reviewed Chinese grammar book out there. Do I sound biased? I tend to share some of my advance copies with her, as she is an enthusiastic reader who shares good feedback, and boy, did she love this book. It follows an army vet turned art dealer, Ellie McEnroe, who is the agent for an Ai Weiwei-style dissident artist. The police (one of whom is an old boyfriend) are on her trail for her connection to the dissident. And her other case, trying to help an army vet trace his brother, seems to be angering a lot of folks as well. The more she disgs, the more trouble she gets into, but McEnroe is dogged in her pursuit of justice. And why not? The alternative is hanging out with her mom.
I asked Claudia why she loved the book so much and she had two reasons. First of all, this book is very unusual in that its very fair to China and really delves into the complexities of modern life there. It's neither an attack on nor a love affair with the culture. It's neither wonderful nor terrible, just a really interesting place where almost anything can happen. And Ellie McEnroe is a really great protagonist--funny and smart and open, without being obnoxious or pretentious. Lisa Brackmann (pictured) has won at least one China specialist's heart,and based on how many other folks my sister talks to in the field, more fans are likely to come.
*I don't know what "August is July" meant either. I think I was trying to say that new titles releasing in July have been rare since the days of the Scribners, Putnams, and Doubledays vacationing at their summer retreats.
I've already written up Crazy Rich Asians on the blog, and since then, I've met a couple of folks who've read and enjoyed it. Just to get a feel for what we're talking about, Plum Sykes called it a "Chinese Dallas meets Pride and Prejudice." Kwan is from Singapore, and since the majority of Singapore residents are ethnic Chinese, I am guessing that he qualifies. Here's an interesting interview with Kwan from the blog Read it Forward, where he discusses his design background and consumerist culture. It's about a Chinese American girl who travels to Singapore to meet her new boyfriend's family, only to find out they are wealthy beyond all get out.
Tash Aw's Five Star Billionaire is said to be a contemporary novel that captures the vibrancy of China today, particularly Shanghai. The author is originally from Taiwan, was brought up in Malaysia, and now lives in London. The story focuses on a factory girl, a country boy turned pop star, a real estate developer, and a leftist turned businesswoman, and the billionaire himself, pulling the strings on the characters with his various schemes and secrets. The novelist Aminatta Forna review the novel for the Guardian, and says "Aw is a master storyteller and Five Star Billionaire can be read as The Way We Live Now for our times, for with the global triumph of capitalism, New York and London pale in comparison with the financial behemoth of Shanghai."
Moving away from big city riches, Ma Jian's The Dark Road, this novel is about a peasant family who decide to have a second child when their first child is a daughter. On the run from the law, they decide to sail down the Yangtze River in a rickety houseboat. The Dark Road wears its politics on its sleeve--the jacket copy talks about the women he met to research the book, said to undergo abortions and forced sterlization in the name of the one child policy. Ma Jian is another Londoner, who lives with his translator, Flora Drew. In the Washington Post, Carolyn See notes that "As an argument against the one-child policy and the horrific conditions it has spawned, The Dark Road is very effective. But that polemical animus also works against its success as a novel."
Columbia University Press has a new book out called The Matchmaker, The Apprentice, and The Football Fan, written by Zhu Wen and translatted by Julia Lovell. Like Ma Jian's work, it's political in nature. Kirkus Reviews notes "at odds with the Chinese regime's reigning ideology of the late '80s and the '90s, which appears determined to crush its citizens' individuality." The (Minneapolis) Star Tibune's Tom Zelman calls the collection "funny, complex, fantastic and true." I think the book is one of the more attractive packages I've seen of late--a decent paper weight, colored endpapers, a nice design on the jacket, but I'm not a fan of the tiny type and very tight letter spacing. Definitely a paper-saving move.
Moving on to mysteries, there's a new Inspector Chen novel by St. Louis's Qui Xiaolong called Enigma of China. Back in the day, we did quite well with the author's first few mysteries, including Death of a Red Heroine and A Loyal Character Dancer. The newest features Inspector Chen (a poet by training, a police inspector in Shanghai by occupation) investigating the death of Zhou Keng, the son of a major party member who himself was ousted from a plum position after corruption was exposed. His death has been ruled a suicide but it doesn't add up. The Wall Street Journal's unnamed reviewer (how unusual!) thought the new book was excellent. As it is written, "Inspector Chen, the poetry-writing detective featured in Qiu Xiaolong's outstanding series of procedural novels set in contemporary Shanghai, knows not to take people, or cases, at face value: What seems simple on the surface may soon reveal subtle, even fatal aspects."
According to my sister, the book to read is The Hour of the Rat, by Lisa Brackmann. Claudia, as you know, teaches Chinese at Holy Cross, is the former president of the Chinese Language Teacher's Association, and has written a number of bestselling Chinese textbooks, as well as probably the bestselling and best reviewed Chinese grammar book out there. Do I sound biased? I tend to share some of my advance copies with her, as she is an enthusiastic reader who shares good feedback, and boy, did she love this book. It follows an army vet turned art dealer, Ellie McEnroe, who is the agent for an Ai Weiwei-style dissident artist. The police (one of whom is an old boyfriend) are on her trail for her connection to the dissident. And her other case, trying to help an army vet trace his brother, seems to be angering a lot of folks as well. The more she disgs, the more trouble she gets into, but McEnroe is dogged in her pursuit of justice. And why not? The alternative is hanging out with her mom.
I asked Claudia why she loved the book so much and she had two reasons. First of all, this book is very unusual in that its very fair to China and really delves into the complexities of modern life there. It's neither an attack on nor a love affair with the culture. It's neither wonderful nor terrible, just a really interesting place where almost anything can happen. And Ellie McEnroe is a really great protagonist--funny and smart and open, without being obnoxious or pretentious. Lisa Brackmann (pictured) has won at least one China specialist's heart,and based on how many other folks my sister talks to in the field, more fans are likely to come.
*I don't know what "August is July" meant either. I think I was trying to say that new titles releasing in July have been rare since the days of the Scribners, Putnams, and Doubledays vacationing at their summer retreats.
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Sunday Bestsellers for Week Ending July 21, 2013: Lutz, Klosterman, Walter, Rakoff, Plus Journal Sentinel Review of Rowling and Nilsson Bio.
Hardcover Fiction:
1. The Last Word, by Lisa Lutz
2. Love Dishonor Marry Die Cherish Perish, by David Rakoff
3. And the Mountains Echoed, by Khaled Hosseini
4. The Illusion of Separateness, by Simon Van Booy
5. The English Girl, by Daniel Silva
There's talk that friends of David Rakoff are going on tour for him, but aside from Sarah Vowell talking about it on the Daily Show with John Oliver, I don't have info. Nice sales pop though!
We did have a great time with Lisa Lutz (signed copies available) on Friday. One of my goals is to increase our attendance each time we host and author, and we were pleased to go from 25 last time to 30. Rumor is that something different is planned for the next book. I'm not giving anything away. I do have a new handle though. After Lutz overhearing me recommend Where'd You Go, Bernadette to a mother and daughter who love Lutz, and having her exclaim "I love that book", I realized that I could flip this and recommend Lutz to folks who like Maria Semple. I'll let you know how that goes, but I think it's a good match.
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. I Wear the Black Hat, by Chuck Klosterman
2. Facing Ted Williams, by Dave Heller
3. The Guns at Last Night, by Rick Atkinson
4. Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand
5. Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls, by David Sedaris
Speaking of recaps, we had a great baseball event with Dave Heller and friends (see below) on Monday and Chuck Klosterman (signed copies available) on Thursday. We had about 100 more people than our last visit in 2009 but there were four good reason for this: 1) Klosterman's nonfiction appears to be more popular than his fiction 2) hardcover tours tend to bring out more people than paperback, unless, like with Jess Walter, the book absolutely explodes in paperback 3) we'd only been open for 3 months so our marketing footprint was smaller 4) oh yes, last time he came during Summerfest.
Paperback Fiction:
1. Beautiful Ruins, by Jess Walter
2. Sweet Tooth, by Ian McEwan
3. The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
4. The Art Forger, by B.A. Shapiro (event this Wednesday, July 24 at the Charles Allis)
5. The Dog Stars, by Peter Heller
Lots of folks have been asking about our event with Barbara Shapiro this Wednesday. It's got a start time of 6:30 pm because the museum closes at 8, and there's a $5 admission to the event, which goes straight to the Charles Allis. One customer came in this week absolutely ecstatic about the book, and that's been the case for lots of folks. The book's had a good-sized run on the New York Times bestseller list. Here's Shapiro listed along with Dennis Lehane and Laura Lippman as one of the best crime books of 2012 in the Boston Globe.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Crossing the Healing Zone, by Ashok Bedi
2. 100 Things Brewers Fans Should Know and Do Before They Die, by Tom Haudricourt
3 Worse Than the Devil, by Dean Strang
4. Fenway Fanatics, by Greg Pearson
5. Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs, by Chuck Klosterman
Now this one is all event memories. Pearson and Haudricourt were two participants in our baseball night on Monday, Strang spoke at the federal courthouse on Thursday at Noon, and Klosterman was at night. Interesting that Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs continues to strongly outperform his other tiles at events. We sold more than twice of this early collection than we did any of his other books. And Ashok Bedi had a great evening as well. It's our first event with Dr. Bedi, and everyone had a great time. Crossing the Healing Zone was recently featured on Lake Effect, and I've had several folks come in talking about that appearance with Stephanie Lecci.
Books for Kids:
1. Boom! Boom! Boom!, by Jamie Swenson
2. The Testing, by Joelle Charbonneau
3. I Am a Bunny, by Ole Risom with illustrations by Peter Scarry
4. Chester's Way, by Kevin Henkes
5. The School for Good and Evil, Soman Chainani
If I haven't mentioned before what a dynamic librarian Heather is at the Cudahy Family Library, may I do so now? She got out 90 people for Jamie Swenson's first picture book, Boom! Boom! Boom! and though I wasn't there (it was Jannis's first solo offsite), I can tell from the sales numbers that it wasn't a family and friends launch. That's one of the reasons we placed Jasper Fforde there for his upcoming appearance on September 11 for his new kids' book, Song of the Quarkbeast. We'll have more infomation soon, but maybe you should mark your caledar now.
In the Journal Sentinel, Jim Higgins reviews Nilsson: The Life of a Singer-Songwriter, by Alyn Shipton. As one of his wives noted, "There was something tragic in his soul," which alas, tends to make for an interesting story.
Crime reporter Gina Barton reviews The Good Nurse, by Charles Graeber. She reports "The Good Nurse is as suspenseful as any crime novel, even though the case was extensively covered in the media from the time of Cullen's arrest through his sentencing in 2007. Those reports told us what he did. Graeber's book tells us why he did it and how he got away with it for so long."
And Carole E. Barrowman's Paging Through Mysteries column features her take on J.K. Rowling's newest, noting "I couldn't stop myself from thoroughly enjoying The Cuckoo's Calling." Other titles she covers:
-Visitation Street, by Ivy Pochoda
-Let it Burn, by Steve Hamilton
-Nearer Home, by Joy Castro.
1. The Last Word, by Lisa Lutz
2. Love Dishonor Marry Die Cherish Perish, by David Rakoff
3. And the Mountains Echoed, by Khaled Hosseini
4. The Illusion of Separateness, by Simon Van Booy
5. The English Girl, by Daniel Silva
There's talk that friends of David Rakoff are going on tour for him, but aside from Sarah Vowell talking about it on the Daily Show with John Oliver, I don't have info. Nice sales pop though!
We did have a great time with Lisa Lutz (signed copies available) on Friday. One of my goals is to increase our attendance each time we host and author, and we were pleased to go from 25 last time to 30. Rumor is that something different is planned for the next book. I'm not giving anything away. I do have a new handle though. After Lutz overhearing me recommend Where'd You Go, Bernadette to a mother and daughter who love Lutz, and having her exclaim "I love that book", I realized that I could flip this and recommend Lutz to folks who like Maria Semple. I'll let you know how that goes, but I think it's a good match.
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. I Wear the Black Hat, by Chuck Klosterman
2. Facing Ted Williams, by Dave Heller
3. The Guns at Last Night, by Rick Atkinson
4. Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand
5. Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls, by David Sedaris
Speaking of recaps, we had a great baseball event with Dave Heller and friends (see below) on Monday and Chuck Klosterman (signed copies available) on Thursday. We had about 100 more people than our last visit in 2009 but there were four good reason for this: 1) Klosterman's nonfiction appears to be more popular than his fiction 2) hardcover tours tend to bring out more people than paperback, unless, like with Jess Walter, the book absolutely explodes in paperback 3) we'd only been open for 3 months so our marketing footprint was smaller 4) oh yes, last time he came during Summerfest.
1. Beautiful Ruins, by Jess Walter
2. Sweet Tooth, by Ian McEwan
3. The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
4. The Art Forger, by B.A. Shapiro (event this Wednesday, July 24 at the Charles Allis)
5. The Dog Stars, by Peter Heller
Lots of folks have been asking about our event with Barbara Shapiro this Wednesday. It's got a start time of 6:30 pm because the museum closes at 8, and there's a $5 admission to the event, which goes straight to the Charles Allis. One customer came in this week absolutely ecstatic about the book, and that's been the case for lots of folks. The book's had a good-sized run on the New York Times bestseller list. Here's Shapiro listed along with Dennis Lehane and Laura Lippman as one of the best crime books of 2012 in the Boston Globe.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Crossing the Healing Zone, by Ashok Bedi
2. 100 Things Brewers Fans Should Know and Do Before They Die, by Tom Haudricourt
3 Worse Than the Devil, by Dean Strang
4. Fenway Fanatics, by Greg Pearson
5. Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs, by Chuck Klosterman
Now this one is all event memories. Pearson and Haudricourt were two participants in our baseball night on Monday, Strang spoke at the federal courthouse on Thursday at Noon, and Klosterman was at night. Interesting that Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs continues to strongly outperform his other tiles at events. We sold more than twice of this early collection than we did any of his other books. And Ashok Bedi had a great evening as well. It's our first event with Dr. Bedi, and everyone had a great time. Crossing the Healing Zone was recently featured on Lake Effect, and I've had several folks come in talking about that appearance with Stephanie Lecci.
Books for Kids:
1. Boom! Boom! Boom!, by Jamie Swenson
2. The Testing, by Joelle Charbonneau
3. I Am a Bunny, by Ole Risom with illustrations by Peter Scarry
4. Chester's Way, by Kevin Henkes
5. The School for Good and Evil, Soman Chainani
If I haven't mentioned before what a dynamic librarian Heather is at the Cudahy Family Library, may I do so now? She got out 90 people for Jamie Swenson's first picture book, Boom! Boom! Boom! and though I wasn't there (it was Jannis's first solo offsite), I can tell from the sales numbers that it wasn't a family and friends launch. That's one of the reasons we placed Jasper Fforde there for his upcoming appearance on September 11 for his new kids' book, Song of the Quarkbeast. We'll have more infomation soon, but maybe you should mark your caledar now.
In the Journal Sentinel, Jim Higgins reviews Nilsson: The Life of a Singer-Songwriter, by Alyn Shipton. As one of his wives noted, "There was something tragic in his soul," which alas, tends to make for an interesting story.
Crime reporter Gina Barton reviews The Good Nurse, by Charles Graeber. She reports "The Good Nurse is as suspenseful as any crime novel, even though the case was extensively covered in the media from the time of Cullen's arrest through his sentencing in 2007. Those reports told us what he did. Graeber's book tells us why he did it and how he got away with it for so long."
And Carole E. Barrowman's Paging Through Mysteries column features her take on J.K. Rowling's newest, noting "I couldn't stop myself from thoroughly enjoying The Cuckoo's Calling." Other titles she covers:
-Visitation Street, by Ivy Pochoda
-Let it Burn, by Steve Hamilton
-Nearer Home, by Joy Castro.
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