
Monday, January 27, 7 pm: Greg Kot at Boswell:
Six things to know about our event with Greg Kot, author of I'll Take You There: Mavis Staples, The Staple Singers, and the March up Freedom's Highway.
2. Here's Jon Gilbertson's piece about I'll Take You There in the Journal Sentinel
3. Here's me yapping about the book at length on another blog post.
4. Here's NPR West's Arun Rath talking to Greg Kot on All Things Considered. Does anyone else understand why they differentiate between the DC and west coast studios?

6. Oh, and Mavis Staples is singing with the Robert Cray Band at Potawatomi's Northern Lights Theater on Monday, February 10. Here's the link for tickets.

You may have tried to buy a ticket in the last few days, only to see that we were sold out. We have just opened another block of tickets, but don't delay, there are only 100 more. There will be no walk up tickets for this event, as we will most definitely be sold out. Visit Brown Paper Tickets for purchase.
There are also some tickets reserved for UWM students, faculty, and staff at the UWM Bookstore. ID is required and it's one ticket per ID. Call (414) 229-4201 for more information.
After the event, we may have signed copies of David and Goliath available.
+Debbie+Smyth+114+-+small.jpg)
Patrick Ness, author of his new novel, The Crane Wife, as well as A Monster Calls, More than This, and The Knife of Never Letting Go (photo credit Debbie Smith).
Last fall we were lucky enough to have a drop in stock signing for Patrick Ness, in between school visits for his new book for kids, More than This. We have some huge Patrick Ness fans on staff, and we also invited several area librarians. We had a great time, and hoped that someday we'd be able to host Ness for a public event.
That day came. Penguin Press was touring Ness for his adult novel, The Crane Wife, and Milwaukee was lucky enough to make the cut.
One night he wakes up to find a crane in his yard, with her wing pierced by an arrow. Somehow he is able to break the arrow and free the crane. Coincidentally, the next day, a woman named Kumiko comes into the store to make a print of her own collage, this one made of feathers. They somehow realize that the two pieces of art actually fit together to form a beautiful image
And of course George falls in love.

But of course the novel is more than the legend. George, his daughter Amanda, and her coworker Rachel (who turns out to be more involved than we first know) all struggle with possession, much like the Japanese husband of the folktale.
The story is a wonderful blend of contemporary storytelling with Japanese esthetic and is an interesting meditation on creativity and self-worth. Ness's writing reminded me a bit of Mark Haddon (the last two novels more than Curious Incident), graceful and sympathetic, but sometimes a bit cheeky. In regards to the Japanese influence, I was reminded a bit of reading The Elegance of the Hedgehog or perhaps Yoko Ogawa's The Housekeeper and the Professor.

Here's Patrick Ness interviewed in The (UK) Telegraph for The Crane Wife. I'm having a little problem with the link, so I'm also including Patrick Ness interviewed in The Scotsman for A Monster Calls.
James Bradley writes in the Sydney Review of Books, "The Crane Wife manages the considerable feat not just of giving voice to this longing, but of understanding it, not as an emptiness or a failing, but as a necessary part of life."
Here's Colin Meloy singing their version of The Crane Wife.
Hope you can make our talk with Patrick Ness. It should be slightly warmer by Wednesday.
No comments:
Post a Comment