Wednesday, January 28, 6:30 pm, at the North Shore Library, 6800 N Port Washington Road:
Elizabeth Eulberg, author of We Can Work it Out, with Ally Carter, author of Embassy Row, Book 1: All Fall Down, and Liz Czukas, author of Top Ten Clues You’re Clueless, three YA authors with midwestern roots.
Readers return to the world of The Lonely Hearts Club in Wisconsin author Elizabeth Eulberg’s latest, We Can Work it Out, a novel that gets to the heart of how hard relationships can be - and why they’re sometimes worth all the drama and comedy they create. The author of Prom and Prejudice, Take a Bow, and Revenge of the Girl with the Great Personality now lives in New York.
All Fall Down is the first book in the exciting new Embassy Row series from The New York Times bestselling master of intrigue, Ally Carter, who debuts Grace, best described as a daredevil, an Army brat, a rebel, and the only granddaughter of perhaps the most powerful ambassador in the world. Ally Carter is also the author of Heist Society, Uncommon Criminals, and The Gallagher Girls series.
The Breakfast Club meets Empire Records in Milwaukee author Liz Czukas’ latest novel, Top Ten Clues You’re Clueless, which takes readers on an effortlessly hilarious ride through Christmas Eve in the lives of a group of teens trapped together in a health foods store, detained for a crime they didn’t commit. Czulas is a Milwaukee-area freelance writer who is also the author of Ask Again Later.
Wednesday, January 28, 7 pm (reception), 7:30 (talk) at the Lynden Sculpture Garden, 2145 W. Brown Deer Ave:
A ticketed event with Margaret Hawkins, author of Lydia's Party, part of the Women's Speaker Series.
Please join us for the next Women’s Speaker Series ticketed event at the Lynden Sculpture Garden: an evening with Margaret Hawkins, Senior Lecturer at the School of Art Institute of Chicago, who will talk about her latest novel, Lydia’s Party, about six friends who have bonded over two decades and come together for their annual Christmas Party and protagonist Lydia’s surprise announcement.
Margaret Hawkins is a Senior Lecturer at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is the author of two previous novels, A Year of Cats and Dogs and How to Survive a Natural Disaster, and a memoir about her sister, After Schizophrenia: The Story of My Sister’s Reawakening.
Tickets are $22 ($18 for members), include a copy of the book. This event will begin with a reception at 7 pm (wine and refreshments provided by MKELocalicious) with the talk and signing following, and is co-sponsored by MKE Reads and Bronze Optical. A limited number of registrations may still be available. Call (414) 446-8794 for details.
Thursday, January 29, 7 pm, at Boswell:
Barbara Mahany, author of Slowing Time: Seeing the Sacred Outside Your Kitchen Door.
Boswell Book Company is excited to welcome former reporter and Chicago Tribune columnist, Barbara Mahany, as she discusses and signs copies of her latest book, Slowing Time: Seeing the Sacred Outside Your Kitchen Door, a seasonal field guide to wonder and wisdom.
In Slowing Time, Mahany takes readers through the bounty of the calendar, season by season, providing for each “A-Count-Your-Blessings-Calendar,” 14 suggestions for “paying the art of supreme attention,” or “meditative Post-Its to remind us that we abound in holiness.” Each section includes essays pinpointing the divine in ordinary moments; a “Wonderlist” of that season’s glories; field notes on natural phenomena such as moon phases, plant life, bird activity; and a recipe, such as Beef Stew with Pomegranate Seeds Nestled Beside Aromatic Rice, a hearty winter’s night dinner.
Barbara Mahany is a former reporter and columnist for the Chicago Tribune. In her page-two column, she told stories of her family’s life that drew in thousands of readers for decades. She explores the sacred mysteries with a voice recognizable and clear. A sought-after speaker, retreat leader, and writing teacher, she lives with her family in Wilmette, Illinois.
Friday, January 30, 4 pm, at Boswell:
A UWM Urban Studies Author Celebration.
Boswell Book Company and the UWM Urban Studies Department welcome a singular celebration of scholarship in urban studies with nine distinguished authors.
Margo Anderson, Amanda I. Seligman, and Ann M. Graff, editors of Bibliography of Metropolitan Milwaukee, present this gorgeous new volume perfect for anyone looking for a starting point for research on the history of Milwaukee, from biographies, to media, to infrastructure. Ann M. Graf is a PhD student in the School of Information Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; Amanda I. Seligman is Associate Professor of History and Urban Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and co-editor of the Encyclopedia of Milwaukee with Margo Anderson, Distinguished Professor of History and Urban Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Jenna Lloyd, Assistant Professor of Public Health Policy and Administration at the Joseph J. Zilber School of Public Health at University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, will present her latest book that tells the story of of the important place of health in struggles for social change in Los Angeles in the 1960s and 1970s, Health Rights Are Civil Rights: Peace and Justice Activism in Los Angeles, 1963-1978.
Professor of History and affiliated faculty in Women’s Studies and Urban Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Genevieve G. McBride, and just-retired Assistant Professor of Journalism at Marquette University, Stephen R. Byers, will discuss their chronicle of Ione Quinby Griggs, a legendary Midwestern advice columnist titled Dear Mrs. Griggs’: Women Readers Pour Out Their Hearts in the Heartland.
Joseph A. Rodriquez, Associate Professor of History and Urban Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee will talk about his latest, Bootstrap New Urbanism, a critical examination of the urban design and revitalization initiatives undertaken by the government and people of Milwaukee.
Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Arjit Sen, and Associate Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Lisa Silverman, will discuss their new book, Making Place: Space and Embodiment in the City, an examination of how people engage the material and social worlds of the urban environment via the rhythms of everyday life and how bodily responses are implicated in the making and experiencing of place.
Coming next week:
Tuesday, March 3, 6:30 PM, at the Cudahy Family Library:
Mac Barnett and John Jory, authors of The Terrible Two
Thursday (corrected!), February 5, 7 pm, at Boswell:
Scott Blackwood, author of See How Small, with opening reader Michael Larson.
(corrected!)
Addendum: Well, it turns out there were typos.I think we finally have Blackwood's event cleared up. If I wrote these in advance, I could have them proofread. Let's hope for next week.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Sunday, January 25, 2015
What's Selling Around These Parts?: Annotated Boswell Boswell Lists for the Week Ending January 24, 2015.
Hardcover Fiction:
1. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr
2. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins
3. The Big Seven, by Jim Harrison
4. Boston Girl, by Anita Diamant
5. The Goldfinch, by Donna Tartt
6. Etto and Otto and Russell and James, by Emma Hooper
7. Honeydew, by Edith Pearlman
8. The First Bad Man, by Miranda July
9. You Have to F*cking Eat, by Adam Mansbach, illustrated by Owen Bronsman
10. The Invention of Wings, by Sue Monk Kidd
For those who wonder if the magic behind a Gone Girl can be duplicated, Riverhead's The Girl on the Train has left the station and is barreling down towards sustained bestsellerdom. It has a combination of indie enthusiasm and chain/internet support. Read more about it in The Wall Street Journal article from Jennifer Maloney. It has the elusive word of mouth that every breakout book is looking for.
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. The Reputation Economy, by Michael Fertik
2. Seventh Generation Earth Ethics, by Patty Loew
3. Everything I Need to Know I Learned from a Little Golden Book, by Diane Muldrow
4. Deep Down Dark, by Hector Tobar
5. The Kindness Diaries, by Leon Logothetis
6. Cam't We Talk About Something More Pleasant?, by Roz Chast
7. Not That Kind of Girl, by Lena Dunham
8. Being Mortal, by Atul Gawande
9. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo
10. The Secret History of Wonder Woman, by Jill Lepore
It's interesting that the three books that were pretty much consistently outselling everything for us at Christmas (All The Light We Cannot See, Being Mortal, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up) are now the three #1s on the hardcover New York Times Bestseller List. Irritatingly enough, Roz Chast is still banished to a rarely printed graphic fiction/nonfiction list, while a book like Humans of New York, which is also all basically graphic, is nonfiction.
Paperback Fiction:
1. The Resurrection of Tess Blessing, by Lesley Kagen
2. The Undertaking of Tess, by Lesley Kagen
3. Me Before You, by Jojo Moyes
4. A Tale for the Time Being, by Ruth Ozeki
5. The Crane Wife, by Patrick Ness
6. The Secret History, by Donna Tartt
7. Neverwhere, by Neil Gaiman
8. The Rosie Project, by Graeme Simsion
9. The Martian, by Andy Weir
10. Burial Rites, by Hannah Kent
The Crane Wife was one of Jen's holiday gift picks in hardcover and her enthusiasm continues for it in paperback. Her rec: "A story about a beautiful, loving crane and a violent, greedy volcano. Or a story about George, the crane he saves and Kumiko, the mysterious woman George falls in love with. Or a story that starts at the beginning of another story's ending. In his storytelling, Patrick Ness has taken a Japanese myth, mixed it with The Decemberists song "The Crane Wife 1 and 2" and created a beautiful tapestry. It’s an ancient story magically woven into a modern setting full of primal human emotions, a story that does not truly end." And the reissue of Monsters of Men, now with a new short story, is on our kids' list this week.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. The New Jim Crow, by Michale Alexander
2. Indian Nations of Wisconsin, by Patty Loew
3. Great Ships on the Great Lakes, by Catherine Green
4. Claudia: Misguided Spirit, by Pamela Hendricks Frauschi
5. Christianity without God, by Daniel Maguire
6. Wild, by Cheryl Strayed
7. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James Brown
8. How to Eat, by Thich Nhat Hanh
9. Zealot, by Reza Aslan
10. The Men Who United the States, by Simon Winchester
Out week selling books for the Wisconsin History tour at the Milwaukee Public Library accounted for a number of bestsellers. The most fascinating pop was for Great Ships of the Great Lakes. Though the talk was on the subject, the book sold was not written by the speaker, but attendees bought it anyway. Patty Loew led the pack, being that she did two talks, one for Indian Nations of Wisconsin at the library, and another for Seventh Generation Earth Ethics at the Urban Ecology Center, but folks bought both books at both events.
Books for Kids:
1. Cris Plata, by Maia Surdam
2. The Boy in the Black Suit (event 4/13 at East Library)
3. All Kinds of Kisses, by Nancy Tafuri
4. Turning 15 on the Road to Freedom, by Lynda Blackmon Lowery
5. Firefight (The Reckoners V2), by Brandon Sanderson
6. The Day the Crayons Quit, by Drew Daywalt, illustrated by Oliver Jeffers
7. The Book with no Pictures, by B.J. Novak
8. Crankenstein Valentine, by Samantha Berger, illustrated by Dan Santat
9. Star Wars Light Saber Thumb Wrestling
10. Monsters of Men (Chaos Walking V3), by Patrick Ness
As we mentioned recently, many successful picture books with a strong character lead to spinoffs focusing on Christmas, Valentine's Day, and Halloween (with optional books about Mom, Dad, Easter, and the first day of school). Since the original Crankenstein was Halloween themed, that leaves Crankenstein Valentine and the likely to come, Crankenstein's Holiday Gift. While these holiday spinoffs don't always get trade reviews, the original had a very nice Kirkus: " Each setting reveals sly comic elements that both kids and their grown-ups will appreciate. Readers will laugh out loud at the monster's seemingly over-the-top reactions and relate to the many tantrum-provoking situations." Read the rest of the review here.
Over at the Journal Sentinel, Mike Fischer reviews Vivid Faces: The Revolutionary Generation in Ireland, 1890-1923, by R.F. Foster, a book about how the Irish people coalesced around a more conservative Catholic bent for a free Ireland after dabbling with such out there concepts such as socialism and feminism. "Everyone could be against the English and for Ireland, without examining too closely what 'Ireland' actually meant. Only after 1916, Foster writes, would 'feminism, socialism, secularism and various forms of pluralism get "discounted,' as Irish society and politics became increasingly Catholic and conservative."
Christi Clancy reviews Melissa Falcon Fields' What Burns Away, a novel about a woman with a pretty good life who reconnects with an old lover on Facebook. "Don't" screams Clancy, but as happens in most stories, she does. Clancy writes: "What Burns Away is that rare mix of well-written literary fiction with the suspense of a spy novel. Falcon Field asks hard questions about aging, innocence, loyalty and the importance of place, while keeping us on the edge of our seat." Fields is coming to Boswell to talk about and read from What Burns Away on Tuesday, March 3, 7 pm.
Reviewed by Jim Higgins is Scott Blackwood's, See How Small, the story (inspired by a true event) of the brutal murder of three teenage girls at an ice cream shop in Austin, Texas, and the haunting aftermath, as lived by many of the folks touched by the incident. Higgins writes: "magine a Tom Waits album, circa Mule Variations, filled with songs about the unsolved murders of three girls haunting and unhinging people in a Texas town, half of them sung by Margo Timmins of the Cowboy Junkies. That would make a fine soundtrack for reading Scott Blackwood's novel See How Small. The murder of four teenagers in an Austin, Texas, yogurt shop in 1991, still unsolved, inspired Blackwood's novel, but this slender book is not In Cold Blood. It also is not The Lovely Bones,"though some trade reviewers have been quick to link the two novels because the spirits of dead girls speak in both books." Blackwood appears at Boswell on Thursday, February 5, 7 pm.
1. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr
2. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins
3. The Big Seven, by Jim Harrison
4. Boston Girl, by Anita Diamant
5. The Goldfinch, by Donna Tartt
6. Etto and Otto and Russell and James, by Emma Hooper
7. Honeydew, by Edith Pearlman
8. The First Bad Man, by Miranda July
9. You Have to F*cking Eat, by Adam Mansbach, illustrated by Owen Bronsman
10. The Invention of Wings, by Sue Monk Kidd
For those who wonder if the magic behind a Gone Girl can be duplicated, Riverhead's The Girl on the Train has left the station and is barreling down towards sustained bestsellerdom. It has a combination of indie enthusiasm and chain/internet support. Read more about it in The Wall Street Journal article from Jennifer Maloney. It has the elusive word of mouth that every breakout book is looking for.
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. The Reputation Economy, by Michael Fertik
2. Seventh Generation Earth Ethics, by Patty Loew
3. Everything I Need to Know I Learned from a Little Golden Book, by Diane Muldrow
4. Deep Down Dark, by Hector Tobar
5. The Kindness Diaries, by Leon Logothetis
6. Cam't We Talk About Something More Pleasant?, by Roz Chast
7. Not That Kind of Girl, by Lena Dunham
8. Being Mortal, by Atul Gawande
9. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo
10. The Secret History of Wonder Woman, by Jill Lepore
It's interesting that the three books that were pretty much consistently outselling everything for us at Christmas (All The Light We Cannot See, Being Mortal, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up) are now the three #1s on the hardcover New York Times Bestseller List. Irritatingly enough, Roz Chast is still banished to a rarely printed graphic fiction/nonfiction list, while a book like Humans of New York, which is also all basically graphic, is nonfiction.
Paperback Fiction:
1. The Resurrection of Tess Blessing, by Lesley Kagen
2. The Undertaking of Tess, by Lesley Kagen
3. Me Before You, by Jojo Moyes
4. A Tale for the Time Being, by Ruth Ozeki
5. The Crane Wife, by Patrick Ness
6. The Secret History, by Donna Tartt
7. Neverwhere, by Neil Gaiman
8. The Rosie Project, by Graeme Simsion
9. The Martian, by Andy Weir
10. Burial Rites, by Hannah Kent
The Crane Wife was one of Jen's holiday gift picks in hardcover and her enthusiasm continues for it in paperback. Her rec: "A story about a beautiful, loving crane and a violent, greedy volcano. Or a story about George, the crane he saves and Kumiko, the mysterious woman George falls in love with. Or a story that starts at the beginning of another story's ending. In his storytelling, Patrick Ness has taken a Japanese myth, mixed it with The Decemberists song "The Crane Wife 1 and 2" and created a beautiful tapestry. It’s an ancient story magically woven into a modern setting full of primal human emotions, a story that does not truly end." And the reissue of Monsters of Men, now with a new short story, is on our kids' list this week.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. The New Jim Crow, by Michale Alexander
2. Indian Nations of Wisconsin, by Patty Loew
3. Great Ships on the Great Lakes, by Catherine Green
4. Claudia: Misguided Spirit, by Pamela Hendricks Frauschi
5. Christianity without God, by Daniel Maguire
6. Wild, by Cheryl Strayed
7. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James Brown
8. How to Eat, by Thich Nhat Hanh
9. Zealot, by Reza Aslan
10. The Men Who United the States, by Simon Winchester
Out week selling books for the Wisconsin History tour at the Milwaukee Public Library accounted for a number of bestsellers. The most fascinating pop was for Great Ships of the Great Lakes. Though the talk was on the subject, the book sold was not written by the speaker, but attendees bought it anyway. Patty Loew led the pack, being that she did two talks, one for Indian Nations of Wisconsin at the library, and another for Seventh Generation Earth Ethics at the Urban Ecology Center, but folks bought both books at both events.
Books for Kids:
1. Cris Plata, by Maia Surdam
2. The Boy in the Black Suit (event 4/13 at East Library)
3. All Kinds of Kisses, by Nancy Tafuri
4. Turning 15 on the Road to Freedom, by Lynda Blackmon Lowery
5. Firefight (The Reckoners V2), by Brandon Sanderson
6. The Day the Crayons Quit, by Drew Daywalt, illustrated by Oliver Jeffers
7. The Book with no Pictures, by B.J. Novak
8. Crankenstein Valentine, by Samantha Berger, illustrated by Dan Santat
9. Star Wars Light Saber Thumb Wrestling
10. Monsters of Men (Chaos Walking V3), by Patrick Ness
As we mentioned recently, many successful picture books with a strong character lead to spinoffs focusing on Christmas, Valentine's Day, and Halloween (with optional books about Mom, Dad, Easter, and the first day of school). Since the original Crankenstein was Halloween themed, that leaves Crankenstein Valentine and the likely to come, Crankenstein's Holiday Gift. While these holiday spinoffs don't always get trade reviews, the original had a very nice Kirkus: " Each setting reveals sly comic elements that both kids and their grown-ups will appreciate. Readers will laugh out loud at the monster's seemingly over-the-top reactions and relate to the many tantrum-provoking situations." Read the rest of the review here.
Over at the Journal Sentinel, Mike Fischer reviews Vivid Faces: The Revolutionary Generation in Ireland, 1890-1923, by R.F. Foster, a book about how the Irish people coalesced around a more conservative Catholic bent for a free Ireland after dabbling with such out there concepts such as socialism and feminism. "Everyone could be against the English and for Ireland, without examining too closely what 'Ireland' actually meant. Only after 1916, Foster writes, would 'feminism, socialism, secularism and various forms of pluralism get "discounted,' as Irish society and politics became increasingly Catholic and conservative."
Christi Clancy reviews Melissa Falcon Fields' What Burns Away, a novel about a woman with a pretty good life who reconnects with an old lover on Facebook. "Don't" screams Clancy, but as happens in most stories, she does. Clancy writes: "What Burns Away is that rare mix of well-written literary fiction with the suspense of a spy novel. Falcon Field asks hard questions about aging, innocence, loyalty and the importance of place, while keeping us on the edge of our seat." Fields is coming to Boswell to talk about and read from What Burns Away on Tuesday, March 3, 7 pm.
Reviewed by Jim Higgins is Scott Blackwood's, See How Small, the story (inspired by a true event) of the brutal murder of three teenage girls at an ice cream shop in Austin, Texas, and the haunting aftermath, as lived by many of the folks touched by the incident. Higgins writes: "magine a Tom Waits album, circa Mule Variations, filled with songs about the unsolved murders of three girls haunting and unhinging people in a Texas town, half of them sung by Margo Timmins of the Cowboy Junkies. That would make a fine soundtrack for reading Scott Blackwood's novel See How Small. The murder of four teenagers in an Austin, Texas, yogurt shop in 1991, still unsolved, inspired Blackwood's novel, but this slender book is not In Cold Blood. It also is not The Lovely Bones,"though some trade reviewers have been quick to link the two novels because the spirits of dead girls speak in both books." Blackwood appears at Boswell on Thursday, February 5, 7 pm.
Monday, January 19, 2015
Here's What's Going on at Boswell This Week--Lesley Kagen, Patty Loew, Pamela Hendricks Frautschi, plus The Wisconsin History Tour at MPL.
Monday, January 19, 7 pm, at Boswell:
Our rescheduled event with Lesley Kagen, author of The Resurrection of Tess Blessing
In this poignant novel, 49-year-old Tess sets forth on a mission to complete her final “to-do” list before what she’s sure will be her impending death after she is diagnosed with breast cancer, never thinking that she may have to stick around to deal with her handiwork. Among the things Tess feels she must do before her impending death to cancer are making peace with her estranged sister, saying goodbye to her mother’s long-kept ashes that she keeps in the garage, rescuing her daughter from the grip of an eating disorder, helping her son grow-up, and reigniting the spark in her marriage.
Grace, the story’s narrator, aids Tess on her quest and lends the story its most brilliant elements: subtle magical realism and deep psychological complexity. Is Grace an “imaginary friend,” guardian angel, or a part of Tess who knows better than she? Readers will love this heartwarming, humorous, and slightly magical redemptive story about second chances and realizing what—and who—is really important, before it’s too late.
Restaurateur, actress, voice-over artist and author of several novels, including the bestselling Whistling in the Dark, Lesley Kagen lives in Cedarburg.
Tuesday, January 20, 7 pm, at the Riverside Park Urban Ecology Center, 1500 E. Park Place: A Ticketed Urban Ecology Center Event with Patty Loew, author of Seventh Generation Earth Ethics: Native Voices of Wisconsin Tickets are $10 ($5 for UEC members).
Patty Loew, enrolled member of the Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Ojibwe, chronicles toils and triumphs of caring for the earth from Wisconsin’s Native American Communities, and the philosophy that drives them. Seventh Generation Earth Ethics: Native Voices of Wisconsin profiles a dozen influential members from Wisconsin’s Indian Nations each of whom employ the “Seventh Generation Philosophy” to make environmental decisions based upon how those decisions will impact the land for seven generations to come, some 240 years into the future.
Loew is a professor in the department of life sciences communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and affiliated faculty with the American Indian studies program. Dr. Loew donates 100% of the royalties she would otherwise receive as author of Indian Nations of Wisconsin to the Wisconsin Indian Education Association for scholarships.
Wednesday, January 21, 7 pm, at Boswell:
Milwaukeean Pamela Hendricks Frautschi, author of Claudia: Misguided Spirit
Pamela Hendricks Frautschi, a resident and activist of Milwaukee’s Eastside for fifty years, is currently president of Eastside Milwaukee Community Council (EMCC). The owner of Dance Spectrum in Shorewood for fifteen years, she taught in UWM’s Dance Department, and in public schools in Wauwatosa, Middleton, and Milwaukee.
Her new memoir, Claudia: Misguided Spirit, chronicles the troubled relationship between siblings where one's choice to follow enlightenment created tension for the rest of the family.
And don't forget:
Now on display at Central Library, 814 W. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI through January 29th, the exhibit is located in the 1st floor hallway of Central Library between the Media Room and the main Reading Room.
The Wisconsin History Tour exhibit features:
--Local history photos and stories --Shipwrecks in the deep of Lake Michigan and Lake Superior --History of the Wisconsin Historical Society --National collections of acclaim, right here in Wisconsin --Portraits of the Ho-Chunk Nation --A Civil War soldier’s letters home --Collections that have become Curators’ Favorites --Histories behind Wisconsin Historical Society's historic sites and museums
Here's a list of events. But don't go today; all branches are closed except for the Martin Luther King Library, which has special programming.
Our rescheduled event with Lesley Kagen, author of The Resurrection of Tess Blessing
In this poignant novel, 49-year-old Tess sets forth on a mission to complete her final “to-do” list before what she’s sure will be her impending death after she is diagnosed with breast cancer, never thinking that she may have to stick around to deal with her handiwork. Among the things Tess feels she must do before her impending death to cancer are making peace with her estranged sister, saying goodbye to her mother’s long-kept ashes that she keeps in the garage, rescuing her daughter from the grip of an eating disorder, helping her son grow-up, and reigniting the spark in her marriage.
Grace, the story’s narrator, aids Tess on her quest and lends the story its most brilliant elements: subtle magical realism and deep psychological complexity. Is Grace an “imaginary friend,” guardian angel, or a part of Tess who knows better than she? Readers will love this heartwarming, humorous, and slightly magical redemptive story about second chances and realizing what—and who—is really important, before it’s too late.
Restaurateur, actress, voice-over artist and author of several novels, including the bestselling Whistling in the Dark, Lesley Kagen lives in Cedarburg.
Tuesday, January 20, 7 pm, at the Riverside Park Urban Ecology Center, 1500 E. Park Place: A Ticketed Urban Ecology Center Event with Patty Loew, author of Seventh Generation Earth Ethics: Native Voices of Wisconsin Tickets are $10 ($5 for UEC members).
Patty Loew, enrolled member of the Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Ojibwe, chronicles toils and triumphs of caring for the earth from Wisconsin’s Native American Communities, and the philosophy that drives them. Seventh Generation Earth Ethics: Native Voices of Wisconsin profiles a dozen influential members from Wisconsin’s Indian Nations each of whom employ the “Seventh Generation Philosophy” to make environmental decisions based upon how those decisions will impact the land for seven generations to come, some 240 years into the future.
Loew is a professor in the department of life sciences communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and affiliated faculty with the American Indian studies program. Dr. Loew donates 100% of the royalties she would otherwise receive as author of Indian Nations of Wisconsin to the Wisconsin Indian Education Association for scholarships.
Wednesday, January 21, 7 pm, at Boswell:
Milwaukeean Pamela Hendricks Frautschi, author of Claudia: Misguided Spirit
Pamela Hendricks Frautschi, a resident and activist of Milwaukee’s Eastside for fifty years, is currently president of Eastside Milwaukee Community Council (EMCC). The owner of Dance Spectrum in Shorewood for fifteen years, she taught in UWM’s Dance Department, and in public schools in Wauwatosa, Middleton, and Milwaukee.
Her new memoir, Claudia: Misguided Spirit, chronicles the troubled relationship between siblings where one's choice to follow enlightenment created tension for the rest of the family.
And don't forget:
Now on display at Central Library, 814 W. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI through January 29th, the exhibit is located in the 1st floor hallway of Central Library between the Media Room and the main Reading Room.
The Wisconsin History Tour exhibit features:
--Local history photos and stories --Shipwrecks in the deep of Lake Michigan and Lake Superior --History of the Wisconsin Historical Society --National collections of acclaim, right here in Wisconsin --Portraits of the Ho-Chunk Nation --A Civil War soldier’s letters home --Collections that have become Curators’ Favorites --Histories behind Wisconsin Historical Society's historic sites and museums
Here's a list of events. But don't go today; all branches are closed except for the Martin Luther King Library, which has special programming.
Sunday, January 18, 2015
What's Selling at One Little Corner of Milwuakee? Boswell's Annotated Bestseller Lists for the Week Ending January 17, 2015.
Hardcover Fiction:
1. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr
2. The First Bad Man, by Miranda July
3. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins
4. Lila, by Marilynne Robinson
5. Honeydew, by Edith Pearlman
6. The Goldfinch, by Donna Tartt
7. Lydia's Party, by Margaret Hawkins (event for paperback 1/28)
8. Redeployment, by Phil Klay
9. The Bishop's Wife, by Ivie Mette Harrison
10. Outline, by Rachel Cusk
Hooray for new blood! While Anthony Doerr continues to dominate fiction (he's #1 on The New York Times as well), a bunch of January releases dominate the list, starting with another Scribner release, The First Bad Man, from Miranda July. The actress/filmmaker hasn't had a book since her successful short story collection (which I loved, but that was back when I read a lot) No One Belongs Here More Than You. Read this Portland Oregonian review/profile which says the book celebrates her "Portland stripper days."
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Digital Destiny, by Shawn Dubravac
2. Moving the Needle, by Joe Sweeney
3. The Kindness Diaries, by Leon Logothetis
4. Is There Life After Football, by James Holstein, Richard Jones and George Koonce, Jr.
5. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo
6. Being Mortal, by Atul Gawande
7. Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant, by Roz Chast
8. How to Tie a Scarf, from Potter Style
9. America's Bitter Pill, by Steven Brill
10. The Keillor Reader, by Garrison Keillor
Events dominate the list (with a corporate order for the new Dubravac) with many 2013 favorites taking up the second half of the list. I am fascinated to still see nice movement for The Keillor Reader as I thought our resurgence of signed copies was more of a gift thing (we still have a few left). I am also fascinated by the pop for How to Tie a Scarf on our impulse table, which started at the holidays and continues into January. It's so old-school Crown, the kind of book they would have published way back when they were an independent publisher. Of course I can't remember any examples, but maybe they will come to me later.
Paperback Fiction:
1. Istanbul Passage, by Joseph Kanon (event 3/11)
2. Doc, by Mary Doria Russell (event 3/5)
3. The Illusion of Separateness, by Simon Van Booy
4. Mount, by Carol Emshwiller
5. The Rosie Project, by Graeme Simsion
6. Gone Girl, by Gillian Flynn
7. The Hollow Land, by Jane Gardam
8. The Resurrection of Tess Blessing, by Lesley Kagen (event 1/19)
9. The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry, by Gabrielle Zevin
10. The Undertaking of Tess, by Lesley Kagen (see above)
Periodically Anne and I will pick upcoming author's books for book club discussion and you can see why, as the books are our top sellers this week. Joseph Kanon is coming for Leaving Berlin; the mystery group discusses Istanbul Passage on 2/23. Mary Doria Russell is coming for Epitaph; the in-store lit group discusses Doc on February 2. Now we just have to get a great science fiction for Jason so his group can discuss a backlist title.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Sundown, by Judith Harway
2. The Boys on the Porch, by June Nilssen Eastvold
3. Riverwest, by Tom Tolan
4. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James Brown
5. Wild, by Cheryl Strayed
6. How to Sit, by Thich Nhat Hanh
7. Danubia, by Simon Winder
8. This is the Story of a Happy Marriage, by Ann Patchett
9. Networking is a Contact Sport, by Joe Sweeney
10. A Little History of Literature, by John Sutherland
Hey, I wasn't even paying attention to John Sutherland's A Little History of Literature, which I read in hardcover. Here's an amusing column from Malcolm Forbes in The Daily Beast, who notes that Sutherland argues that "Luxembourg, Monaco, and even the multi-national European Union would be unable to create epic literature." The United States is also missing its great epic, perhaps having come to the table to late in the age of literature. I read Sutherland's book too long ago to remember his string of reasoning; you'll have to find out for yourself.
Books for Kids:
1. The Hollow Earth, by John and Carole E. Barrowman
2. The Bone Quill, by John and Carole E. Barrowman
3. Looking for Alaska, tenth anniversary edition, by John Green
4. The Boy in the Black Suit, by Jason Reynolds (event 4/13 at East Library)
5. Once Upon an Alphabet, by Oliver Jeffers
6. Before After, by Mathias Arégui and Anne-Margot Ramstein
7. All the Right Places, by Jennifer Niven
8. A Perfectly Messed-up Story, by Patrick McDonnell
9. Cartwheeling in Thunderstorms, by Katherine RUndell
10. Diary of a Wimpy Kid V9: The Long Haul, by Jeff Kinney
Yes, you're probably wondering where is The Book of Beasts, the third volume in the Hollow Earth series, which came out in the UK last summer. I've been told that it's scheduled for this summer. And I should also note that it's another upcoming event book that we are reading for in-store lit group. We've never read a young-adult novel, so we're going with The Boy in the Black Suit for March 2 (7 pm), with the event following on April 13, this time at the new East Library.
In the Journal Sentinel, Jim Higgins reviews the new story collection by Megan Mayhem Bergman. He writes: "The title she chose, Almost Famous Women, correctly describes the Q score of the historical figures in her book. But Bergman fictionalizes their lives — often as seen by a sister, admirer or lover — as too wild and too intense to be forgotten. The stories revolve around such folks as Daisy and Violet Hilton, Butterfly McQueen, and Joe Carstairs.
Speaking of Carole Barrowman (and we were, as her books were on our kids' bestseller list), her new mystery column is out. This month's featured titles:
--The Unquiet Dead, by Ausma Zehana Khan, the first in a series of novels about two Muslim detectives in Canada investigating a war criminal. This is definitely Barrowman's pick for the month. It's "exceptional."
--The Bishop's Wife, by Mette Ivie Harrison, a novel about Sister Wallheim, who is indeed the mother of five and wife of an LDS bishop.
--The Devil You Know, by Elisabeth de Mariaffi, is about a rookie journalist with panic attacks charged with investigating the disappearance of some young girls.
And Chris Foran reviews Driving the King, the new novel from Ravi Howard, the author of Like Trees, Walking. Set in 1945 Birmingham, the story's jumping-off point is when Nat King Cole is attacked by a group of White men onstage and Nat Weary, the man who stops the assault. Foran writes: " In an easygoing style, with Weary as his guide, Howard pokes into under-viewed corners of the fight (for civil rights) while never losing sight of the humanity of both the cause and its effects."
Plus, a piece from the Associated Press about Haruki Murakami's website, Mr. Murakami's Place, where he is taking questions through January 31. Only one caveat: it's in Japanese. Get out your translator app!
1. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr
2. The First Bad Man, by Miranda July
3. The Girl on the Train, by Paula Hawkins
4. Lila, by Marilynne Robinson
5. Honeydew, by Edith Pearlman
6. The Goldfinch, by Donna Tartt
7. Lydia's Party, by Margaret Hawkins (event for paperback 1/28)
8. Redeployment, by Phil Klay
9. The Bishop's Wife, by Ivie Mette Harrison
10. Outline, by Rachel Cusk
Hooray for new blood! While Anthony Doerr continues to dominate fiction (he's #1 on The New York Times as well), a bunch of January releases dominate the list, starting with another Scribner release, The First Bad Man, from Miranda July. The actress/filmmaker hasn't had a book since her successful short story collection (which I loved, but that was back when I read a lot) No One Belongs Here More Than You. Read this Portland Oregonian review/profile which says the book celebrates her "Portland stripper days."
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Digital Destiny, by Shawn Dubravac
2. Moving the Needle, by Joe Sweeney
3. The Kindness Diaries, by Leon Logothetis
4. Is There Life After Football, by James Holstein, Richard Jones and George Koonce, Jr.
5. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo
6. Being Mortal, by Atul Gawande
7. Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant, by Roz Chast
8. How to Tie a Scarf, from Potter Style
9. America's Bitter Pill, by Steven Brill
10. The Keillor Reader, by Garrison Keillor
Events dominate the list (with a corporate order for the new Dubravac) with many 2013 favorites taking up the second half of the list. I am fascinated to still see nice movement for The Keillor Reader as I thought our resurgence of signed copies was more of a gift thing (we still have a few left). I am also fascinated by the pop for How to Tie a Scarf on our impulse table, which started at the holidays and continues into January. It's so old-school Crown, the kind of book they would have published way back when they were an independent publisher. Of course I can't remember any examples, but maybe they will come to me later.
Paperback Fiction:
1. Istanbul Passage, by Joseph Kanon (event 3/11)
2. Doc, by Mary Doria Russell (event 3/5)
3. The Illusion of Separateness, by Simon Van Booy
4. Mount, by Carol Emshwiller
5. The Rosie Project, by Graeme Simsion
6. Gone Girl, by Gillian Flynn
7. The Hollow Land, by Jane Gardam
8. The Resurrection of Tess Blessing, by Lesley Kagen (event 1/19)
9. The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry, by Gabrielle Zevin
10. The Undertaking of Tess, by Lesley Kagen (see above)
Periodically Anne and I will pick upcoming author's books for book club discussion and you can see why, as the books are our top sellers this week. Joseph Kanon is coming for Leaving Berlin; the mystery group discusses Istanbul Passage on 2/23. Mary Doria Russell is coming for Epitaph; the in-store lit group discusses Doc on February 2. Now we just have to get a great science fiction for Jason so his group can discuss a backlist title.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Sundown, by Judith Harway
2. The Boys on the Porch, by June Nilssen Eastvold
3. Riverwest, by Tom Tolan
4. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James Brown
5. Wild, by Cheryl Strayed
6. How to Sit, by Thich Nhat Hanh
7. Danubia, by Simon Winder
8. This is the Story of a Happy Marriage, by Ann Patchett
9. Networking is a Contact Sport, by Joe Sweeney
10. A Little History of Literature, by John Sutherland
Hey, I wasn't even paying attention to John Sutherland's A Little History of Literature, which I read in hardcover. Here's an amusing column from Malcolm Forbes in The Daily Beast, who notes that Sutherland argues that "Luxembourg, Monaco, and even the multi-national European Union would be unable to create epic literature." The United States is also missing its great epic, perhaps having come to the table to late in the age of literature. I read Sutherland's book too long ago to remember his string of reasoning; you'll have to find out for yourself.
Books for Kids:
1. The Hollow Earth, by John and Carole E. Barrowman
2. The Bone Quill, by John and Carole E. Barrowman
3. Looking for Alaska, tenth anniversary edition, by John Green
4. The Boy in the Black Suit, by Jason Reynolds (event 4/13 at East Library)
5. Once Upon an Alphabet, by Oliver Jeffers
6. Before After, by Mathias Arégui and Anne-Margot Ramstein
7. All the Right Places, by Jennifer Niven
8. A Perfectly Messed-up Story, by Patrick McDonnell
9. Cartwheeling in Thunderstorms, by Katherine RUndell
10. Diary of a Wimpy Kid V9: The Long Haul, by Jeff Kinney
Yes, you're probably wondering where is The Book of Beasts, the third volume in the Hollow Earth series, which came out in the UK last summer. I've been told that it's scheduled for this summer. And I should also note that it's another upcoming event book that we are reading for in-store lit group. We've never read a young-adult novel, so we're going with The Boy in the Black Suit for March 2 (7 pm), with the event following on April 13, this time at the new East Library.
In the Journal Sentinel, Jim Higgins reviews the new story collection by Megan Mayhem Bergman. He writes: "The title she chose, Almost Famous Women, correctly describes the Q score of the historical figures in her book. But Bergman fictionalizes their lives — often as seen by a sister, admirer or lover — as too wild and too intense to be forgotten. The stories revolve around such folks as Daisy and Violet Hilton, Butterfly McQueen, and Joe Carstairs.
Speaking of Carole Barrowman (and we were, as her books were on our kids' bestseller list), her new mystery column is out. This month's featured titles:
--The Unquiet Dead, by Ausma Zehana Khan, the first in a series of novels about two Muslim detectives in Canada investigating a war criminal. This is definitely Barrowman's pick for the month. It's "exceptional."
--The Bishop's Wife, by Mette Ivie Harrison, a novel about Sister Wallheim, who is indeed the mother of five and wife of an LDS bishop.
--The Devil You Know, by Elisabeth de Mariaffi, is about a rookie journalist with panic attacks charged with investigating the disappearance of some young girls.
And Chris Foran reviews Driving the King, the new novel from Ravi Howard, the author of Like Trees, Walking. Set in 1945 Birmingham, the story's jumping-off point is when Nat King Cole is attacked by a group of White men onstage and Nat Weary, the man who stops the assault. Foran writes: " In an easygoing style, with Weary as his guide, Howard pokes into under-viewed corners of the fight (for civil rights) while never losing sight of the humanity of both the cause and its effects."
Plus, a piece from the Associated Press about Haruki Murakami's website, Mr. Murakami's Place, where he is taking questions through January 31. Only one caveat: it's in Japanese. Get out your translator app!
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
How the Holiday Giftwrapping Works at Boswell and How Your Organization Can be Part of It in 2015.
For the last several years, we've been having nonprofits do the giftwrapping for us between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Folks can donate to the organization in lieu of a fee; it's completely voluntary. I'm not taking credit for this; we did this at several Schwartz stores and it's also common practice at Barnes and Noble.
Here is Jane's report on the "state of the wrappers."
This year we had volunteer gift wrappers,representing seven organizations
the opportunities
--to do some great fundraising: all volunteers appreciated customer's generosity;
--to showcase their mission's importance to the Milwaukee area community;
...to contribute to the success of Boswell Book Company.
Organizations involved:
--Eastside Senior Services
--Dominican Center for Women
--Cream City Review
--St. Ann Center
--MGVA (Milwaukee Gay Volleyball Association)
--Alice's Garden
--Authors Visit for Milwaukee School Funds
2015:
--all of the volunteers loved being in the bookshop during the holidays and hope to be asked again.
--hope to expand the opportunity to more groups
Do you think your nonprofit would be interested in getting giftwrap ships for the 2015 holiday season? If so, contact Jane at Boswell.
Here is Jane's report on the "state of the wrappers."
This year we had volunteer gift wrappers,representing seven organizations
the opportunities
--to do some great fundraising: all volunteers appreciated customer's generosity;
--to showcase their mission's importance to the Milwaukee area community;
...to contribute to the success of Boswell Book Company.
Organizations involved:
--Eastside Senior Services
--Dominican Center for Women
--Cream City Review
--St. Ann Center
--MGVA (Milwaukee Gay Volleyball Association)
--Alice's Garden
--Authors Visit for Milwaukee School Funds
2015:
--all of the volunteers loved being in the bookshop during the holidays and hope to be asked again.
--hope to expand the opportunity to more groups
Do you think your nonprofit would be interested in getting giftwrap ships for the 2015 holiday season? If so, contact Jane at Boswell.
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Daniel Outreaches to Jewish Organizations with Three Upcoming Events with Boris Fishman, Joseph Kanon, and Judith Claire Mitchell.
Many of you are wondering why I am not blogging as much this January. There's always a lot on our plate after Christmas, but this year it just seems like I am completely booked doing other stuff from morning to night. I'd like to blame the computer issues, and sure, I spent several hours yesterday reconfiguring my backup software, for example, but it still seems like a cheap excuse.
One thing I've been doing is getting the word out on upcoming events. For example, we have these three upcoming events that have appeal to Jewish audiences. And hey, while I'm doing that, I might as well also turn it into a blog.
On Thursday, February 26, UWM Sam and Helen Stahl Center for Jewish Studies presents an appearance by Boris Fishman, author of the acclaimed first novel, A Replacement Life. This novel, written by a Russian immigrant, is about Slava Gelman, a journalist who wants to be “a writer”, who is roped into a scheme to forge documents so that his relatives and their friends can apply for Holocaust restitution.
Of A Replacement Life, Joyce Carol Oates offered this praise: “A Replacement Life is a memorable debut by a wonderfully gifted young writer. In tracing the adventures of a ’curator of suffering’ who forges Holocaust restitution claims for his grandfather and his grandfather’s Russian immigrant neighbors in South Brooklyn, Boris Fishman has written a beautifully nuanced, tender, and often very funny novel about conscience and familial loyalty that will linger long in the memory.” Fishman was featured on the front-page New York Times Book Review, where Patricia T. O’Connor wrote “Is there room in American fiction for another brilliant young émigré writer? There had better be, because here he is. Boris Fishman’s first novel, A Replacement Life, is bold, ambitious and wickedly smart.” .
On Wednesday, March 11, we present acclaimed novelist Joseph Kanon, whose latest book is Leaving Berlin. Kanon, a former publishing executive, whose most famous novel, The Good German, was made into a feature film, returns to that nether land that is Berlin after World War II. The city has been divided into zones, and a blockade has left much of the city struggling. Arriving back after 15 years in the United States is Alex Meier, a noted writer, half-Jewish, with socialist leanings, who fled when the Nazis rose to power but left America when the rise of communist witch hunts started pointing at him and the government asked him to name names.
He’s been invited back by the Socialist Germans to be an artist in residence, but what they don’t know is that he’s been recruited by Americans to funnel information, in return for amnesty. What the Germans also don’t know is that the Russians have their own intelligence system and their not sharing information, nor have they made clear that German POWs are being used as slave labor in uranium mines. Things get more complicated when Alex hooks up with Irene, an old flame, now an actress, who is also having an affair with a Russian bigwig. He’s also asked to rat out his publisher, Aaron Stein, when the Russians have him arrested for treason? Oh, and did we mention that Irene’s brother shows up, having escaped from the slave camp, dying of radiation poisoning? Alex Meier finds being a spy is a bit more difficult than he hoped. Great intellectual espionage for Alan Furst fans. And I should note that while Joseph Kanon is not Jewish, his wife is. More in this article.
On Wednesday, April 1, UW-Madison professor Judith Claire Mitchell comes to Boswell for her new novel, A Reunion of Ghosts. Set in the late 1990s (and going back a century), three sisters in their forties have made a suicide pact, a family tradition that goes back to their great grandmother, wife of the Jewish Nobel prize winning scientist who developed the poisonous gas that was used first in World War I and then in the Nazi death chambers. Judith Claire Mitchell talks about how her tendency to infuse dark and serious subjects with humor might be in part due to her Jewish heritage in this profile.
Now you wouldn’t think that a novel like this would win the hearts of so many readers, but it has, starting with our own Jen Steele. She writes: “"The sins of the fathers are visited upon the children to the third and fourth generations." These are the words that the Alter sisters live by. It has become their motto and this conviction becomes part of the reason they have chosen to die at their own hands on December 31st, 1999. Lady, Vee and Delph Alter have written a suicide note together, which is more than a "goodbye, world" note; it's also a family history. You see, the Alter sisters are descendants of Lenz Otto Alter and Iris Emanuel Alter. Lenz was a chemist and the creator of the poison gas that was first used in WWI. Iris was the first woman to earn a PhD in chemistry and the first in the family to commit suicide. A Reunion of Ghosts is a captivating chronicle of a family and the weight of consequences, which grows heavier with time. It's the quirky, dark comedy, family saga you'll want to read.”
I a happy to note that none of which are on a Friday evening, which sometimes confounds my plans of cultural outreach (like, for example, Steven Pinker last fall or David Treuer (his father was a Holocaust survivor) on February 20. But don't worry, I'm doing Native American outreach for his new novel, Prudence (see another post).
Oh, and congratulations to former David Bezmozgis and Stuart Rojstaczer, both winners of a National Jewish Book Award (for fiction and debut fiction, respectively), both of whom appeared at Boswell for events co-sponsored by the Stahl Center in 2014.
One thing I've been doing is getting the word out on upcoming events. For example, we have these three upcoming events that have appeal to Jewish audiences. And hey, while I'm doing that, I might as well also turn it into a blog.
On Thursday, February 26, UWM Sam and Helen Stahl Center for Jewish Studies presents an appearance by Boris Fishman, author of the acclaimed first novel, A Replacement Life. This novel, written by a Russian immigrant, is about Slava Gelman, a journalist who wants to be “a writer”, who is roped into a scheme to forge documents so that his relatives and their friends can apply for Holocaust restitution.
Of A Replacement Life, Joyce Carol Oates offered this praise: “A Replacement Life is a memorable debut by a wonderfully gifted young writer. In tracing the adventures of a ’curator of suffering’ who forges Holocaust restitution claims for his grandfather and his grandfather’s Russian immigrant neighbors in South Brooklyn, Boris Fishman has written a beautifully nuanced, tender, and often very funny novel about conscience and familial loyalty that will linger long in the memory.” Fishman was featured on the front-page New York Times Book Review, where Patricia T. O’Connor wrote “Is there room in American fiction for another brilliant young émigré writer? There had better be, because here he is. Boris Fishman’s first novel, A Replacement Life, is bold, ambitious and wickedly smart.” .
On Wednesday, March 11, we present acclaimed novelist Joseph Kanon, whose latest book is Leaving Berlin. Kanon, a former publishing executive, whose most famous novel, The Good German, was made into a feature film, returns to that nether land that is Berlin after World War II. The city has been divided into zones, and a blockade has left much of the city struggling. Arriving back after 15 years in the United States is Alex Meier, a noted writer, half-Jewish, with socialist leanings, who fled when the Nazis rose to power but left America when the rise of communist witch hunts started pointing at him and the government asked him to name names.
He’s been invited back by the Socialist Germans to be an artist in residence, but what they don’t know is that he’s been recruited by Americans to funnel information, in return for amnesty. What the Germans also don’t know is that the Russians have their own intelligence system and their not sharing information, nor have they made clear that German POWs are being used as slave labor in uranium mines. Things get more complicated when Alex hooks up with Irene, an old flame, now an actress, who is also having an affair with a Russian bigwig. He’s also asked to rat out his publisher, Aaron Stein, when the Russians have him arrested for treason? Oh, and did we mention that Irene’s brother shows up, having escaped from the slave camp, dying of radiation poisoning? Alex Meier finds being a spy is a bit more difficult than he hoped. Great intellectual espionage for Alan Furst fans. And I should note that while Joseph Kanon is not Jewish, his wife is. More in this article.
On Wednesday, April 1, UW-Madison professor Judith Claire Mitchell comes to Boswell for her new novel, A Reunion of Ghosts. Set in the late 1990s (and going back a century), three sisters in their forties have made a suicide pact, a family tradition that goes back to their great grandmother, wife of the Jewish Nobel prize winning scientist who developed the poisonous gas that was used first in World War I and then in the Nazi death chambers. Judith Claire Mitchell talks about how her tendency to infuse dark and serious subjects with humor might be in part due to her Jewish heritage in this profile.
Now you wouldn’t think that a novel like this would win the hearts of so many readers, but it has, starting with our own Jen Steele. She writes: “"The sins of the fathers are visited upon the children to the third and fourth generations." These are the words that the Alter sisters live by. It has become their motto and this conviction becomes part of the reason they have chosen to die at their own hands on December 31st, 1999. Lady, Vee and Delph Alter have written a suicide note together, which is more than a "goodbye, world" note; it's also a family history. You see, the Alter sisters are descendants of Lenz Otto Alter and Iris Emanuel Alter. Lenz was a chemist and the creator of the poison gas that was first used in WWI. Iris was the first woman to earn a PhD in chemistry and the first in the family to commit suicide. A Reunion of Ghosts is a captivating chronicle of a family and the weight of consequences, which grows heavier with time. It's the quirky, dark comedy, family saga you'll want to read.”
I a happy to note that none of which are on a Friday evening, which sometimes confounds my plans of cultural outreach (like, for example, Steven Pinker last fall or David Treuer (his father was a Holocaust survivor) on February 20. But don't worry, I'm doing Native American outreach for his new novel, Prudence (see another post).
Oh, and congratulations to former David Bezmozgis and Stuart Rojstaczer, both winners of a National Jewish Book Award (for fiction and debut fiction, respectively), both of whom appeared at Boswell for events co-sponsored by the Stahl Center in 2014.
Sunday, January 11, 2015
Boswell Bestsellers for the Week Ending January 10, 2015
Yes, I've been on blog hiatus, but it's one of those things where the only way I could clean up my close to 1000 email backlog was by taking it on full throttle. It's a little better now, but still not where I want it to be. Someday, someday.
The second thing I wanted to note is that we are scheduled for inventory tonight at 5 pm, so Boswell is closing early. We're open 10 am to 5 pm instead of our normal 6 pm closing time. It's great that we'll probably have the best weather of the week, but a little unfortunate that it comes during the Packers-Cowboys game, when most of you will be staying home or will be riveted to a bar stool. But life can be like that. We're still grateful for a warm, dry December.
Hardcover Fiction:
1. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr
2. The Paying Guests, by Sarah Waters
3. Reployment, by Phil Klay
4. Honeydew, by Edith Pearlman
5. Station Eleven, by Emily St. John Mandel
A new exciting book to sell! Edith Pearlman's first book of stories published by a "major" was featured on the front page of The New York Times Book Review. Laura Van Der Berg calls Honeydew "a majestic, fleet-footed new collection."
And did you hear that Redeployment's Phil Klay will be one of the last guests on The Colbert Report?
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant?, by Roz Chast
2. Seventh Generation Earth Ethics, by Patty Loew (appearing at the Riverside Park Urban Ecology Center January 20)
3. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo
4. This Changes Everything, by Naomi Klein
5. The Secret History of Wonder Woman, by Jill Lepore
Both have far surpassed what we've sold of Jill Lepore in the past, but this week The Secret History of Wonder Woman edged passed sales of The Book of Ages, Lepore's previous book about Ben Franklin's sister. As Audrew Bilger said in her San Francisco Chronicle review, "Suffering Sappho!
Paperback Fiction:
1. Oedipius at Colonus, by Sophocles, translated by David Mulroy
2. The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry, Gabrielle Zevin
3. The Resurrection of Tess Blessing, by Lesley Kagen (rescheduled at Boswell for January 19)
4. Doc, by Mary Doria Russell
5. Badlands, by Thomas Biel
We're gearing up for our visit with Mary Doria Russell for Epitaph by trying to get folks to read Doc beforehand. We've got two aggressive hand-sellers in the store in Jason and Anne, plus the in-store book club reading Doc on February 2.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand
2. The New Jim Crow, by Michelle Alexander
3. What We See When We Read, by Peter Mendelsund
4. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James Brown
5. Worth Fighting For, by Rory Fanning
Dwight Garner wrote in The New York Times that "like a TED talk or a lesser Alain de Botton book, Peter Mendelsund’s What We See When We Read is friendly and shyly philosophical, filled with news you can almost use" by which he seemed to mean that he didn't really like the book until page 200, when he started to get into it.
Books for Kids:
1. The Giving Tree, by Shel Silverstein
2. Sisters, by Raina Telgemeier
3. Goodnight Moon board book, by Margaret Wise Brown
4. Squirrels on Skis, by J. Hamilton Ray, with illustrations by Pascal Lemaitre
5. Love Monster board book, by Rachel Bright
The Love Monster is a slightly hairy creature trying to fit in with the other residents of Cutesville. If this book exploded beyond Valentine's Day, maybe we'd get to 100 copies, something that Goodnight Moon does most years at Boswell. And Love Monster shows that for most books, the path is from hardcover picture book to board book, not paperback. And then you spin off to a Christmas book, Love Monster: The Perfect Present? There will likely be a paperback, but that will likely be an early chapter book. And then a Halloween book. And then a first-day-at-school book. But we'll always love the original Love Monster the best.
This week in the Journal Sentinel, the print edition has Chris Vognar's review of Fire Shut Up in My Bones and a profile of Patton Oswalt's Silver Screen Fiend, both already enjoying recommendations from Boswellians. Jim Higgins reviews The Galaxy Game by Karen Lord. "Lord has created a complex universe here. Her opening chapter fills in some background for people who haven't read The Best of All Possible Worlds" but Higgins seems to really think you need to read that book first.
The second thing I wanted to note is that we are scheduled for inventory tonight at 5 pm, so Boswell is closing early. We're open 10 am to 5 pm instead of our normal 6 pm closing time. It's great that we'll probably have the best weather of the week, but a little unfortunate that it comes during the Packers-Cowboys game, when most of you will be staying home or will be riveted to a bar stool. But life can be like that. We're still grateful for a warm, dry December.
Hardcover Fiction:
1. All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr
2. The Paying Guests, by Sarah Waters
3. Reployment, by Phil Klay
4. Honeydew, by Edith Pearlman
5. Station Eleven, by Emily St. John Mandel
A new exciting book to sell! Edith Pearlman's first book of stories published by a "major" was featured on the front page of The New York Times Book Review. Laura Van Der Berg calls Honeydew "a majestic, fleet-footed new collection."
And did you hear that Redeployment's Phil Klay will be one of the last guests on The Colbert Report?
Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant?, by Roz Chast
2. Seventh Generation Earth Ethics, by Patty Loew (appearing at the Riverside Park Urban Ecology Center January 20)
3. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, by Marie Kondo
4. This Changes Everything, by Naomi Klein
5. The Secret History of Wonder Woman, by Jill Lepore
Both have far surpassed what we've sold of Jill Lepore in the past, but this week The Secret History of Wonder Woman edged passed sales of The Book of Ages, Lepore's previous book about Ben Franklin's sister. As Audrew Bilger said in her San Francisco Chronicle review, "Suffering Sappho!
Paperback Fiction:
1. Oedipius at Colonus, by Sophocles, translated by David Mulroy
2. The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry, Gabrielle Zevin
3. The Resurrection of Tess Blessing, by Lesley Kagen (rescheduled at Boswell for January 19)
4. Doc, by Mary Doria Russell
5. Badlands, by Thomas Biel
We're gearing up for our visit with Mary Doria Russell for Epitaph by trying to get folks to read Doc beforehand. We've got two aggressive hand-sellers in the store in Jason and Anne, plus the in-store book club reading Doc on February 2.
Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Unbroken, by Laura Hillenbrand
2. The New Jim Crow, by Michelle Alexander
3. What We See When We Read, by Peter Mendelsund
4. The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James Brown
5. Worth Fighting For, by Rory Fanning
Dwight Garner wrote in The New York Times that "like a TED talk or a lesser Alain de Botton book, Peter Mendelsund’s What We See When We Read is friendly and shyly philosophical, filled with news you can almost use" by which he seemed to mean that he didn't really like the book until page 200, when he started to get into it.
Books for Kids:
1. The Giving Tree, by Shel Silverstein
2. Sisters, by Raina Telgemeier
3. Goodnight Moon board book, by Margaret Wise Brown
4. Squirrels on Skis, by J. Hamilton Ray, with illustrations by Pascal Lemaitre
5. Love Monster board book, by Rachel Bright
The Love Monster is a slightly hairy creature trying to fit in with the other residents of Cutesville. If this book exploded beyond Valentine's Day, maybe we'd get to 100 copies, something that Goodnight Moon does most years at Boswell. And Love Monster shows that for most books, the path is from hardcover picture book to board book, not paperback. And then you spin off to a Christmas book, Love Monster: The Perfect Present? There will likely be a paperback, but that will likely be an early chapter book. And then a Halloween book. And then a first-day-at-school book. But we'll always love the original Love Monster the best.
This week in the Journal Sentinel, the print edition has Chris Vognar's review of Fire Shut Up in My Bones and a profile of Patton Oswalt's Silver Screen Fiend, both already enjoying recommendations from Boswellians. Jim Higgins reviews The Galaxy Game by Karen Lord. "Lord has created a complex universe here. Her opening chapter fills in some background for people who haven't read The Best of All Possible Worlds" but Higgins seems to really think you need to read that book first.
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