Sunday, October 30, 2022

Boswell bestsellers, week ending October 29, 2022

The late and latest Boswell bestseller report - week ending October 29, 2022

Hardcover Fiction:
1. The Passenger, by Cormac McCarthy
2. Signal Fires, by Dani Shapiro
3. Demon Copperhead, by Barbara Kingsolver
4. Under a Veiled Moon, by Karen Odden 
5. The Boys from Biloxi, by John Grisham
6. Liberation Day, by George Saunders
7. Lucy by the Sea, by Elizabeth Strout
8. The Lincoln Highway, by Amor Towles
9. Our Missing Hearts, by Celeste Ng
10. The Winners, by Fredrik Backman

No real competition this week for our #1 new release - we've been getting requests for The Passenger for months, the first Cormac McCarthy novel since (could it be?) The Road in 2006. And the companion novel, Stella Maris, releases in December. The critics are all over the place on this one. John Jeremiah Sullivan was "positive" in Book Marks, but sort of lays out why some reviewers might be less so: "The Passenger is far from McCarthy’s finest work, but that’s because he has had the nerve to push himself into new places, at the age of all-but-90. He has tried something in these novels that he’d never done before."

Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Painting Can Save Your Life, by Sara Woster (Register for November 2 in-person event here)
2. Go-To Dinners, by Ina Garten
3. Dinner in One, by Melissa Clark
4. The Stolen Year, by Anya Kam
5. Working Girls, by Trixie Mattel and Katya Zamlodchikova
6. I'm Glad My Mom Died, by Jennette McCurdy
7. And There Was Light, by Jon Meacham
8. Inciting Joy, by Ross Gay
9. Song of the Cell, by Siddhartha Mukherjee
10. Slenderman, by Kathleen Hale

There was a siting of Trixie Mattel in the store this week, which set a couple of hearts aflutter. Stock of Working Girls: Trixie and Katya's Guide to Professional Womanhood were signed; books were sold. All the advance trades were over-the-top positive - Publishers Weekly called the book "hysterical", nothing that "this bawdy manual slays."

Paperback Fiction:
1. It Stars with Us, by Colleen Hoover
2. We Were Never Here, by Andrea Bartz
3. The Sentence, by Louise Erdrich
4. The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches, by Sangu Madanna
5. Once Upon a December, by Amy E. Reichert (Register for November 30 event here)
6. It Ends with Us, by Colleen Hoover
7. Fire and Blood, by George R.R. Martin
8. The Priory of the Orange Tree, by Samantha Shannon
9. People Immortal, by Vasily Grossman
10. Girl One, by Sara Flannery Murphy

Our Books and Beer Book Club is one of our two in-person Boswell-run reading groups, meeting at Cafe Hollander on the third Monday. Their next selection is Girl One, which the publishers position as The Handmaid's Tale (isn't it always?) meets Orphan Black. I was interested to note that when the publisher promoted the hardcover, they used librarian and bookseller reviews, but they only used first name/last initial and not the store, even though we identify both on Indie Bound and Library Reads. Authors got their full name - Kami Garcia wrote "A genre-defying, thought-provoking thriller that is impossible to put down." More on our book clubs here. 

Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Heart Speak, by Sherrill A Knezel
2. A History of Milwaukee Drag, by BJ Daniels and Michail Takach
3. Milwaukee Scavenger, by Jenna Kashou (Register for November 3 event here)
4. Brewtown Tales, by John Gurda (Register for December 6 event by emailing publicity@wisconsinhistory.org)
5. 111 Places in Milwaukee You Must Not Miss, by Michelle Madden
6. Inheritance, by Dani Shapiro
7. Mushrooms of the Upper Midwest, by Teresa Marrone
8. Milwaukee River Greenway, by Eddee Daniel
9. Vegan Cooking for Two, by America's Test Kitchen
10. Invisible Child, by Andrea Elliott

One thing that's been missing from the paperback nonfiction list is the dominance of regional books that we used to see more of in past years. I can't remember last time that Milwaukee-area titles took up half the list, but I know it wasn't uncommon in the past. Both Milwaukee Scavenger and Brewtown Tales are off to good starts.

Books for Kids:
1. Moving to Mars, by Stef Wade, illustrations by Erin Taylor
2. Our World of Dumplings, by Fracie Dekker, illustrations by Sarah Jung
3. A Place for Pluto, by Stef Wade, illustrations by Melanie Demmer
4. The Very Last Leaf, by Stef Wade, illustrations by Jennifer Davidson
5. Diper överlöde V17, by Jeff Kinney
6. There's a Ghost in the House, by Oliver Jeffers
7. What Feelings Do When No One's Looking, by Tina Oziewicz, illustrations by Aleksandra Zajac
8. Pigeon Will Ride the Rollercoaster, by Mo Willems
9. Sea in the Way, by Sophie Gilmore
10. She Persisted: Sally Ride, by Atia Abawi, Chelsea Clinton, and Alexandra Boiger

Sea in the Way, the new book written and illustrated by Sophie Gilmore, is both a Jenny Pick (sales rep) and a Jen pick (our buyer). The latter writes: "Badger misses her friend Bear terribly. What do you do when your best friend lives all the way on the other side of the sea? If you’re Badger, you grumble to the sea that it is in the way. And when the sea finally agrees to let Badger cross, it is on three conditions. What starts out as a quest for Badger to see Bear ends up being something much more. The Sea in the Way is a delightful picture book with charming illustrations about friendships and new experiences."

Monday, October 24, 2022

Five events this week: Michail Takach and BJ Daniels at Boswell, Michael Mehta Webster (virtual with Urban Ecology Center), Karen Odden, Dani Shapiro, and Sherrill Knezel in-person at Boswell

Monday, October 24, 6:30 pm
Michail Takach and BJ Daniels, coauthors of A History of Milwaukee Drag: Seven Generations of Glamour
in-person at Boswell Book Company - click here to register until 5:30 pm. 

Coauthors Michail Takach and BJ Daniels appear at Boswell for a conversation about their new book, A History of Milwaukee Drag, which celebrates Milwaukee’s place in the history and impact of drag queen culture.

For over a century, drag has been a force in Milwaukee nightlife. On June 7, 1884, "The Only Leon" brought the fine art of female impersonation to the Grand Opera Hall, launching a proud local legacy that continues today at This Is It, La Cage, Hamburger Mary's, D.I.X. and other venues.

Historians Takach and Daniels recognize that today's LGBTQ liberties were born from the strength, resilience, and resistance of yesterday's gender non-conforming pioneers. This is a long overdue celebration of those stories, including high-rolling hustler of the Fourth Ward "Badlands" Frank Blunt, over-the-top dinner theater drag superstar of the 1950s Adrian Ames, and "It Kid" Jamie Gays, first-ever Miss Gay Milwaukee and Latin community hero.

BJ Daniels has done hair and makeup work on set for film and video, taught the art of hairdressing as a licensed professional, and has covered Fashion Week in New York City. Daniels still works behind the chair, and lens, and performs in drag. Michail Takach is a reporter and communications professional who earned a masters in communications and history at UW-Madison. As the curator of the Wisconsin LGBTQ History Project, Takach produces ongoing articles, documentaries and podcasts about local history.

Tuesday, October 25, 7 pm
Michael Mehta Webster, author of The Rescue Effect: The Key to Saving Life on Earth
in conversation with Meenal Atre for a virtual event - click here to register

Boswell Book Company and the Urban Ecology Center cohost a virtual evening featuring ecology and philanthropy expert Michael Mehta Webster for a conversation about his new book, The Rescue Effect, which reveals how we can use this natural resiliency to help reverse the effects of climate change. In conversation with Meenal Atre of the Urban Ecology Center, our event cohost.

As climate change continues to intensify, the outlook for life on Earth often seems bleak. Yet hope for the future can be found in the “rescue effect,” which is nature’s innate ability to help organisms persist during hard times. Like a thermostat starting the air conditioning when a room gets too warm, the rescue effect automatically kicks in when organisms are stressed or declining. Webster argues that there are good reasons to expect a bright future, because everywhere we look, we can see evidence that nature can rescue many species from extinction; and when nature alone is not up to the task, we can help. Combining rigorous research with gripping storytelling, The Rescue Effect provides the cautious optimism we need to help save life on Earth.

Here’s Boswellian Kay Wosewick’s take on The Rescue Effect: "Webster wants to help save species intelligently. He describes six ‘rescue’ processes, some which often happen on their own, some we can nudge, others we can aggressively employ to save species. Refreshingly, Webster understands we can’t save everything, and we also need to acknowledge that nature is, always has been, and will continue, changing, with or without us."

Michael Mehta Webster’s research interests focus on how organisms and ecosystems adapt to environmental change, how this information can be translated into effective conservation strategies, and the practical and ethical dilemmas that arise along the way. As an executive director of a conservation organization, program officer at a leading environmental foundation, and academic scientist, he has led efforts to connect cutting edge science to the management of species and ecosystems in the wild.

Wednesday, October 26, 6:30 pm
Karen Odden, author of Under a Veiled Moon
in conversation with Erica Ruth Neubauer, in-person at Boswell - click here to register

Karen Odden joins us at Boswell for a conversation about her brand new Victorian-era mystery, in which a fatal disaster on the Thames and a roiling political conflict set the stage in London for Inspector Corravan’s work. In conversation with Milwaukee author Erica Ruth Neubauer, author of the Jane Wunderly mysteries.

September 1878. Pleasure boat Princess Alice collides with the Bywell Castle, a huge iron-hulled collier, on the Thames, and shears apart, throwing all 600 passengers into the river; only 130 survive. It is the worst maritime disaster London has ever seen, and early clues point to sabotage by the Irish Republican Brotherhood. For Scotland Yard Inspector Corravan, the case presents challenges. Irish by birth, his attentions are pulled by accusations of prejudice and his family member’s involvement in an Irish gang. As London threatens to devolve into terror and chaos, Corravan must uncover the harrowing truth, which will shake his faith in his countrymen, the law, and himself.

Kirkus Reviews calls Odden’s latest a hearty dose of "Victorian skulduggery with a heaping side of Irish troubles." And Edgar-winning author Mariah Fredericks says: "Rich in emotion and historical detail, Under a Veiled Moon is a brilliant tale of the dark, thorny places where the personal and the political intertwine."

Karen Odden taught literature at UWM and has contributed essays to numerous books and journals and edited for the journal Victorian Literature and Culture. A member of Mystery Writers of America and Sisters in Crime, she is author of award-winning historical mysteries. Erica Ruth Neubauer is the Agatha Award-winning author of the Jane Wunderly investigations, including the books Murder at the Mena House, Murder at Wedgefield Manor, and Danger on the Atlantic.

Thursday, October 27, 6:30 pm
Dani Shapiro, author of Signal Fires
in conversation with Lauren Fox, in-person at Boswell Book Company - click here to register

Boswell is pleased to host the Milwaukee return of Dani Shapiro, author of books such as Inheritance and Devotion, for her latest work, Signal Fires, a life-affirming novel about a tragedy that connects two families across generations. In conversation with Lauren Fox, the Milwaukee-based author of novels such as Send for Me and Days of Awe. Cohosted by UWM's Sam and Helen Stahl Center for Jewish Studies. Masks required at this event.

Shapiro’s gripping new novel begins on a summer night in 1985 when three teenagers have been drinking. One of them gets behind the wheel of a car, and, in an instant, everything changes. Each of their lives, and that of the young doctor who arrives on the scene, is shattered. For the doctor’s family, the circumstances of that fatal accident will become the deepest kind of secret, one so dangerous it can never be spoken.

Signal Fires is one of 2022’s most anticipated books, as noted by LitHub, BookPage, The Millions, and others. Ruth Ozeki, author of A Tale for the Time Being, says: “Signal Fires is an urgent and compassionate meditation on memory, time, and space. Shapiro has created a world that's as wrenching as it is wondrous.” And from Meg Wolitzer: “A haunting, moving, and propulsive exploration of family secrets.”

Dani Shapiro is a best-selling novelist and memoirist and host of the podcast Family Secrets. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Time. She has taught at Columbia and New York University and is the co-founder of the Sirenland Writers Conference.

Friday, October 28, 6:30 pm
Sherrill Knezel, illustrator of Heart Speak: A Visual Interpretation of Let Your Life Speak
in-person at Boswell - click here to register

Wauwatosa illustrator Sherrill Knezel visits for an evening featuring her latest work, an authorized visual representation of Parker J Palmer's classic book Let Your Life Speak. More than seventy heartfelt images accompany excerpts from Palmer, inviting reading to explore and embrace both their own limits and their own potential as they listen to their inner voice and courageously follow its lead. Please note, Palmer will not be present at this event.

Whether the words of Let Your Life Speak are familiar signposts on the roads you have traveled or they are new to you, Knezel’s work offers an opportunity for reflection and discernment in regard to your life, community, and calling. From the introduction Palmer wrote for the book: "I'm very excited about the way Sherrill has used her gifts of art and insight to interpret and express some of the key ideas in Let Your Life Speak."

From Pardeep Singh Kaleka, coauthor of The Gifts of Our Wounds: "Heart Speak is a beautiful participatory journey into the depth of self and the soul of society. Palmer's words combined with Knezel's illustrations carefully explore unconscious behaviors, patterns, relationships, and thoughts of everyday existence. This book provides a real road map for clinicians, help groups, parents, families, and friends to contemplate and engage in conversations that lead to movement, growth, and healing. But experience this book for yourself first. It's a true gift!"

Sherrill Knezel is a graphic recorder, illustrator, and art educator who specializes in visual literacy. She is the founder of Meaningful Marks LLC, a graphic recording/illustration firm that focuses on using the power of visuals to support nonprofits, educators, and corporate sector clients. She is a contributing author to Stories in EDU and Social Action Stories, and won the Excellence in Visual Journalism Award for her work in the Milwaukee Independent.

Photo credits
Erica Ruth Neubauer by Rachel Neubauer
Dani Shapiro by Beowulf Sheehan

Sunday, October 23, 2022

Boswell bestsellers for the week ending October 22, 2022

Boswell bestsellers for the week ending October 22, 2022

Hardcover Fiction:
1. Signal Fires, by Dani Shapiro (Register for October 27 event here)
2. Demon Copperhead, by Barbara Kingsolver
3. Liberation Day, by George Saunders
4. Lucy by the Sea, by Elizabeth Strout
5. The Last Chairlift, by John Irving
6. Our Missing Hearts, by Celeste Ng
7. Babel, by RF Kuang
8. Ithaca, by Claire North
9. The Rabbit Hutch, by Tess Gunty
10. Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow, by Gabrielle Zevin

In any other parallel universe, I would have expected Demon Copperhead to be our #1 debut for the week, but I should note that George Saunders's Liberation Day was at Barbara Kingsolver's heels. But in this universe, we had a very nice first week pop for one of my favorite books of 2022, Signal Fires, even though Dani Shapiro's event is not until next week. There are some amazing events coming up (John Green, Jamie Lee Curtis are two of the conversation partners)- visit Shapiro's website for details.

Demon Copperhead is a retelling of David Copperfield and I guess that I am taken aback that the consumer reviews are more mixed than the trade - that could account for the debut that was a bit less than my expectations. Molly Young writes in The New York Times: "Of course Barbara Kingsolver would retell Dickens. He has always been her ancestor. Like Dickens, she is unblushingly political and works on a sprawling scale, animating her pages with the presence of seemingly every creeping thing that has ever crept upon the earth." 

Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Bad Vibes Only, by Nora McInerny (signed copies available)
2. Sondheim and Me, by Paul Salsini
3. And There Was Light, by Jon Meacham
4. Slenderman, by Kathleen Hale
5. Confidence Man, by Maggie Haberman
6. How We Live Is How We Die, by Pema Chödrön
7. The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Man, by Paul Newman, edited by David Rosenthal
8. I'm Glad My Mom Died, by Jennette McCurdy
9. A Path Lit by Lightning, by David Maraniss
10. Life Is Hard, by Kieran Setiya

Jon Meacham returns with And There Was Light: Abraham Lincoln and the American Struggle. Why no Book Marks for this one? Does the publisher have to pay for this? So confusing. All four advance reviews are raves  (that is, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, Kirkus, and Booklist) with Kirkus writing: "While there are countless books on Lincoln, one of the most studied and written-about figures in history, Meacham's latest will undoubtedly become one of the most widely read and consulted. An essential, eminently readable volume for anyone interested in Lincoln and his era." 

Paperback Fiction:
1. It Starts with Us, by Colleen Hoover
2. The Book of Extraordinary Tragedies, by Joe Meno (signed paperbacks and hardcovers)
3. Once Upon a December, by Amy E Reichert (Register for November 30 event here)
4. It Ends with Us, by Colleen Hoover
5. The Sentence, by Louise Erdrich
6. The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo, by Taylor Jenkins Reid
7. Verity, by Colleen Hoover
8. Crossroads, by Jonathan Franzen
9. A Court of Thorns and Roses, by Sarah J Maas
10. The Witch's Heart, by Genevieve Gornichec 

 Colleen Hoover broke records (from Publishers Weekly)  with It Starts with Us, the most pre-ordered book in Simon and Schuster history. Why should you be surprised? She has completely dominated paperback fiction bestseller lists for the past year. Reviews were certainly not needed for this one, but the Kirkus critic wrote: "Hoover beautifully captures the heartbreak and joy of starting over."


Paperback Nonfiction:
1. To Be a Water Protector, by Winona LaDuke
2. Owning Grief, by Gael Garbarino Cullen (Register for November 11 event here)
3. All Our Relations by Winona LaDuke
4. A History of Milwaukee Drag, by BJ Daniels and Michil Takach (Register for October 24 event here)
5. The Milwaukeean (Klassik), by Joey Grihalva
6. Recovering the Sacred, by Winona LaDuke
7. Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
8. Empire of Pain, by Patrick Radden Keefe
9. The Book of Delights, by Ross Gay
10. It's Okay to Laugh, by Nora McInerny

Both Winona LaDuke and Nora McInerny were in town on Thursday (McInerny at Boswell, LaDuke at UWM); both authors came to town last in 2019. From the publisher: "To Be a Water Protector explores issues that have been central to her activism for many years - sacred Mother Earth, our despoiling of Earth and the activism at Standing Rock and opposing Line 3." We have a few signed copies.

Books for Kids:
1. The Truth About Mrs. Claus, by Meena Harris
2. Last Night at the Telegraph Club, by Malinda Lo
3. Our World of Dumplings, by Francie Dekker, illustrations by Sarah Jung
4. A Rover's Story, by Jasmine Warga
5. Everywhere with You, by Carlie Sorosiak, illustrations by Devon Holzwarth
6. This Is Not About a Kitten, by Randall de Sève, illustrations by Carson Ellis
7. The Three Billy Goats Gruff, by Mac Barnett, illustrations by Jon Klassen
8. Ghosts Are People Too, by Peter Ricq
9. The Official Heartstopper Coloring Book, by Alice Oseman
10. They Both Die at the End, by Adam Silvera

Everywhere with You is a picture book that came out in May, but it's been gathering steam since - this was its best week for sales since publication. From the starred Booklist: "The narrative flows well and tells a moving story. One magical aspect of the book is that although the dog doesn't understand the girl's language, after she reads or tells him imaginative tales, he has vibrant dreams in which the two friends share adventures. With warm colors, curving lines, and rhythmic repetition of forms, the mixed-media illustrations beautifully portray the setting as well as the main characters and their growing friendship, while the richly detailed dream scenes have a more otherworldly quality. A heartening picture book."

Sunday, October 16, 2022

Boswell bestsellers for the week ending October 15, 2022

Here are the Boswell bestsellers for the week of October 15, 2022.

Hardcover Fiction:
1. Our Missing Hearts, by Celeste Ng
2. Under a Veiled Moon, by Karen Odden (Register for October 26 in-person event here)
3. Lucy by the Sea, by Elizabeth Strout
4. Babel, by RF Kuang
5. Illuminations, by Alan Moore
6. Shrines of Gaiety, by Kate Atkinson
7. The Whalebone Theatre, by Joanna Quinn
8. The Winners, by Fredrik Backman
9. The Golden Enclaves, by Naomi Novik
10. The Bullet That Missed, by Richard Oman

Our top debut this week is Illuminations, the first-ever story collection from Alan Moore, the acclaimed comic book writer of V for Vendetta and The League of Extraordinary Gentleman. Needless to say, Bloomsbury keeps the Neil Gaiman quote up front, which includes this turn of phrase: "Both mind-expanding and cosmic while utterly rooted in our urban reality, written in language that coruscates, concatenates and glitters." I had to look up coruscate, but I think I know what concatenate means from using the function on Excel.

Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. The Book of Boundaries, by Melissa Urban
2. Bad Vibes Only, by Nora McInerny (we're just about at capacity, but as of now, there are a couple of spots left for October 20 event)
3. Slenderman, by Kathleen Hale
4. The Brain-Friendly Workplace, by Friederike Fabritius
5. Crossing the DMZ, by Dennis Darmek (signed copies available)
6. I'm Glad My Mom Died, by Jennette McCurdy
7. Confidence Man, by Maggie Haberman
8. American Midnight, by Adam Hochschild
9. Sondheim and Me, by Paul Salini (Register for October 18 in person event here)
10. Painting Can Save Your Life, by Sara Woster (Register for November 2 in person event here)

It's a very event-driven list this week with three upcoming and three just-occurred events out of ten slots. For the rest, it's the second week of top 10 sales for Adam Hochschild's American Midnight: The Great War, a Violent Peace, and Democracy's Forgotten Crisis, which looks at the violence and harassment perpetuated on immigrants, labor organizers, and people of color. . Five raves and a positive on Book Marks - this from Thomas Meaney in The New York Times: "At a time when professional doom-mongering about democracy has become one of the more inflationary sectors of the American economy, it is tonic to be reminded by Adam Hochschild’s masterly new book, American Midnight, that there are other contenders than the period beginning in 2016 for the distinction of Darkest Years of the Republic. By some measures - and certainly in many quarters of the American left - the years 1917-21 have a special place in infamy."

Paperback Fiction:
1. The Bronze Drum, by Phong Nguyen (signed copies available)
2. Project Hail Mary, by Andy Weir
3. For Whom the Bell Tolls, by Ernest Hemingway
4. Once Upon a December, by Amy E Reichert (Register for November 30 in-person event here)
5. A Court of Thorns and Roses, by Sarah J Maas
6. Bunny, by Mona Awad
7. Lord of the Flies, by William Golding
8. The Personal Librarian, by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray
9. Still Life, by Sarah Winman (Join a Boswell book club - we're discussing Still Life in December).
10. Klara and the Sun, by Kazuo Ishiguro (Tomorrow! - Books & Beer Book Club)

Being that our sales on Mona Awad's Bunny are so strong, and noting that it has a rec card, but is not specifically on someone's rec shelf, I took a look on Edelweiss inventory sharing site. We're doing well, but nine stores have sales in the triple digits for the past 12 months. With momentum like that, and being the kind of book it is (the critics have compared it to Carrie, Mean Girls, Heathers, The Secret History), how is this not in streamer development? But wait, it did score a deal, back in 2019 - more on Deadline. We'll see if it makes its way to a finished product.

Paperback Nonfiction:
1. There Is No Backstage, by Linda Stephens (signed copies available)
2. Memorable Milwaukee, by Darlene Wesenberg Rzezotarski
3. A History of Milwaukee Drag, by BJ Daniels and Michail Takach (Register for October 24 in-person event here)
4. Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
5. Getting Lost, by Annie Ernaux
6. Mushrooms of the Upper Midwest, by Teresa Marrone
7. Sand County Almanac, by Aldo Leopold
8. The Complete Mushroom Hunter Revised, by Gary Lincoff
9. 111 Places in Milwaukee That You Must Not Miss, by Michelle Madden
10. The Birdman of Koshkonong, by Martha Bergland

That mushroom table's time is nearing its end as holiday ornaments, boxed cards, and themed books call dibs on display tables. It's had a good run - two books in our top ten again this week - Mushrooms of the Upper Midwest and The Complete Mushroom Hunter. If you live in Milwaukee or Chicago areas and shop for mushrooms, you probably shop at the farmers market stands of River Valley Ranch. I am a regular at the one at South Shore Park. I hope to visit their store in Burlington on the off season. And if you missed the Wall Street Journal article about mushrooms that featured Boswell, here it is. I think you'll see the shout out before the pay wall kicks in.

Books for Kids:
1. Our World of Dumplings, by Francie Dekker/Sarah Jung
2. Moving to Mars, by Stef Wade/Erin Taylor
3. A Place for Pluto, by Stef Wade/Melanie Demmer
4. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, by JK Rowling/Jim Kay
5. The School for Good and Evil, by Soman Chainani
6. Two Roads, by Joseph Bruchac
7. My Brother Sam is Dead, by James Collier
8. Our Shadows Have Claws, by Yamile Saied Mendez
9. The Birthday of the World, by Rachel Naomi Remen/Rachell Sumpter
10. A Rover's Story, by Jasmine Warga

Soman Chainani visited area schools, Boswell, and an area library over more than one visit. Now his book series, The School for Good and Evil, has become a Netflix series. 106 reviews on Google rate it a 4.9 out of 5. I'd post a review but it actually hasn't opened yet (October 19 is the date), which calls those reviews into question, doesn't it? Here's a preview in Bloody Disgusting, which I'm sure you guessed is a horror fan site.

Up next - Boswell weekly event blog

Monday, October 10, 2022

A cavalcade of events this week: Linda Stephens, Joanna Quinn, Nick Marx, Kathleen Hale, Melissa Urban, Phong Nguyen, Dennis Darmek, Kieran Setiya, Andrea Bartz

Monday, October 10, 6:30 pm
Linda Stephens, author of There Is No Backstage: An Actor’s Life
in conversation with Mike Fischer, in-person at Boswell - click here to register.

Boswell hosts an evening with actor Linda Stephens for a conversation about her memoir, There Is No Backstage, a chronicle of a life lived in the theatre. In conversation with Mike Fischer, former drama and book critic for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. Masks required for this event.

Linda Stephens recounts her remarkable five decades in the theatre with her new memoir. Stephen’s book offers a journey of openness, humility and depth through her award-winning career until the book's poignant finale. Stephens weaves a narrative of family, love, aging, hard work and hard-earned life lessons to offer an open-hearted, honest look at what it means to dedicate a life to a profession that demands so much and can give back so little. Yet when it does give back, it can change lives forever.

Stephens offers the an unflinching look at her personal journey on the professional stage, from dinner theatre to regional theatre to Broadway, revealing the struggles, triumphs, losses, and above all, the ultimate grace found in a life in the theatre.

Linda Stephens has been acting on stages for fifty years and has been awarded for her work in New York, Chicago, Atlanta, Miami and DC. She's appeared on Broadway and Off, in dozens of regional theatres across the country, and has worked with Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller, and Stephen Sondheim. Stephens lives in Milwaukee.

Tuesday, October 11, 2 pm
Joanna Quinn, author of The Whalebone Theatre
in conversation with Daniel Goldin and Lisa Baudoin for a virtual event - click here to register.

Readings from Oconomowaukee presents its October edition featuring Joanna Quinn, who joins us virtually from the UK for a conversation about The Whalebone Theatre. Her irresistible debut novel takes its heroine from the gargantuan cavity of a beached whale into undercover operations during World War II and tells a story of love, bravery, lost innocence, and self-transformation. The Whalebone Theatre is the current Read with Jenna Today Show Book Club selection.

One blustery night in 1928, a whale washes up on the shores of the English Channel. By law, it belongs to the King, but twelve-year-old orphan Cristabel Seagrave has other plans. She and the rest of the household - her sister Flossie, her brother Digby (the long-awaited heir to Chilcombe manor), kitchen maid Maudie Kitcat, and visiting artist Taras - build a theatre from the beast’s skeletal rib cage. Within the Whalebone Theatre, Cristabel can escape her feckless stepparents and brisk governesses, and her imagination comes to life. As Cristabel grows into a headstrong young woman and World War II rears its head, she and Digby become British secret agents in Nazi-occupied France - a more dangerous kind of playacting, it turns out, and one that threatens to tear the family apart.

Early praise from Sarah Winman, author of Still Life: "The Whalebone Theatre has all the makings of a classic. And Cristabel Seagrave is the most gratifying hero. The war scenes often left me breathless: they are as good as you will ever read. A wonderful debut. Actually, a tour de force." And from Rebecca Stott, author of Ghostwalk: "Magnificent. As capacious, surprising and magical as the whale that lends its bones to Cristabel’s theatre: a tale of intertwined lives and braided fates as deftly managed and heartbreaking as a Dickens novel."

Joanna Quinn was born in London and grew up in Dorset, in the southwest of England, where The Whalebone Theatre, is set. She has worked in journalism and the charity sector. Her writing has been published by The White Review and Comma Press, among others. She teaches creative writing.

Wednesday, October 12, 6:30 pm

Boswell hosts Nick Marx, Associate Professor at CSU, for an event featuring That’s Not Funny, the new book that he’s coauthored which focuses on the emergence of right-wing comedy and the political power of humor. Vulture calls it one of the Best Comedy Books of 2022.

Why is there no right-wing Jon Stewart? Questions like this launch a million tweets, a thousand op-eds, and more than a few scholarly analyses. That's Not Funny argues that it is both an intellectual and politically strategic mistake to assume that comedy has a liberal bias. Right-wing comedy has been hiding in plain sight, finding its way into mainstream conservative media through figures ranging from Fox News's Greg Gutfeld to libertarian podcasters like Joe Rogan.

That's Not Funny taps interviews with conservative comedians and observations of them in action to guide readers through media history, text, and technique. You may find many of these comedians appalling, some very funny, and others just plain weird. They are all, however, culturally and politically relevant as the American right attempts to seize spaces of comedy and irony previously held firmly by the left. Like this brand of humor or not, you can't ignore it.

Nick Marx is Associate Professor of Film and Media Studies in the Department of Communication Studies at Colorado State University.

Thursday, October 13, 6:30 pm

Journalist and Wisconsin native Kathleen Hale visits Boswell for a presentation about her new book, Slenderman, the first full and authoritative account of the 2014 Slenderman stabbing in Waukesha. This true crime narrative offers a full picture of the tragic event and the influences of mental illness, the American judicial system, the trials of adolescence, and the power of the internet.

On May 31, 2014 in Waukesha, two twelve-year-old girls attempted to stab their classmate to death. Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weier’s violence was extreme, but what seemed even more frightening was that they committed their crime under the influence of a figure born by the internet: the so-called 'Slenderman.' Yet the even more urgent aspect of the story, that the children involved suffered from undiagnosed mental illnesses, often went overlooked in coverage of the case. For the first time, Hale tells the full story for the first time in deeply researched detail, using court transcripts, police reports, individual reporting, and exclusive interviews.

Early praise from Boswellians has arrived. From Chris Lee: "Slenderman is a perfect example of true crime writing at its best. It’s a horrible incident, yes, but native Wisconsinite Hale, with a sensitive and fact-oriented eye, cuts through the slogans attached to the case (Internet Evil! Adult Crime, Adult Time!) to understand the ties between mental illness, Midwestern stoicism, violence, and reactionary impulses." And from Parker Jensen: "Because the true facts of the case were blurred, fumbled, and outright ignored, the idea of two 12-year-old girls committing such a violent crime all in the name of an internet boogeyman is confusing and downright disconcerting. But that was never the full story. Hale's telling is extremely comprehensive, well researched, and compellingly written. Told with facts and not sensationalism in mind, Slenderman is the best true crime book I've read in years."

Kathleen Hale is author of the essay collection Kathleen Hale Is a Crazy Stalker as well as two young adult novels. She has written for the Guardian, Hazlitt, and Vice, and is a writer and producer for Outer Banks on Netflix. She was born in Wisconsin and lives in Los Angeles.

Thursday, October 13, 7 pm
Melissa Urban, author of The Book of Boundaries: Set the Limits That Will Set You Free
in conversation with Gretchen Rubin for a ticketed virtual event - click here to purchase a ticket.

Boswell teams up with a number of independent bookstores in the country to present a Random House Studio Sessions event featuring bestselling author an Whole30 creator Melissa Urban, who will chat about her latest project, The Book of Boundaries, with Gretchen Rubin, author of The Happiness Project.

Tickets for this virtual event cost $29.54 plus ticket fee and include access to this virtual event plus a copy of The Book of Boundaries, available for pickup at Boswell beginning Tuesday, October 11. You can also upgrade to have your book shipped to you via USPS Media Mail for $5 more to US addresses - this includes Alaska and Hawaii, but it could take forever.

Set the limits that will set you free. Urban’s latest work is a straightforward and compassionate guide to setting the boundaries that will revolutionize your relationships. How often do you tell yourself to just 'let it go' when you want to do anything but? Do you say "it’s fine' when it’s really anything but? Do you feel resentful, depleted, or overwhelmed? If you answered yes to any of these questions, you need to establish some boundaries.

Lifestyle influencer praise is rolling in for this one! From Lori Gottlieb, author of Maybe You Should Talk To Someone: "I always tell my therapy patients that boundaries create trust, comfort, and safety in a relationship, but many people struggle with how to effectively communicate what they need. In The Book of Boundaries, Melissa Urban helps you identify your boundary needs, offers actionable scripts on what to say, and shares proven tips based on a decade of experience helping people live more freely by holding their limits with confidence." And from The 5 Second Rule author Mel Robbins: "The Book of Boundaries is funny, direct, and smart, bringing you actionable tools and science-backed strategies for setting boundaries using language that feels kind, natural, and empowering. Melissa’s straightforward scripts and practical tips makes it easy to identify your limits and communicate them with confidence, so you can start putting yourself first and create a life that feels bigger, freer, and more authentically YOU."

Melissa Urban is CEO of the Whole30, a New York Times bestselling author, and has been featured by Good Morning America, The New York Times, and CNBC.

Thursday, October 13, 7 pm
Phong Nguyen, author of Bronze Drum
In-Person at UWM Curtin Hall Room 175, 3243 N Downer Ave - click here for more info

UWM’s Creative Writing Program Visiting Writers Series presents a program featuring Phong Nguyen, a UWM PhD graduate and author of Bronze Drum, a gripping historical adventure set in ancient Vietnam based on the true story of two warrior sisters who raised an army of women to overthrow the Han Chinese and rule as kings over a united people, for readers of Circe and The Night Tiger.

This event will also be broadcast virtually, and you can register for that broadcast on the UWM website, too. Be sure to order a copy of Bronze Drum, as well. Boswell will be on hand at the 7 pm event to sell copies.

Vivid, lyrical, and filled with adventure, Bronze Drum is a true story of standing up for one's people, culture, and country that has been passed down through generations of Vietnamese families through oral tradition. Phong Nguyen's breathtaking novel takes these real women out of legends and celebrates their loves, losses, and resilience in this inspirational story of women's strength and power even in the face of the greatest obstacles.

From Wisconsin author Christina Clancy: "Girl Power’ may have originated with the Trung sisters who fought for Vietnamese independence in 40 CE. Phong Nguyen enlivens this historical moment in Bronze Drum, a sweeping and imaginative account of their efforts to form an army of women to fight for and preserve their freedom. This fast-paced novel features palace intrigue, sex, deception, scholarship, bravery, love, honor, magic and power. Nguyen has the rare ability to render events that happened long ago in a way that fells contemporary and even timely. I'm in awe of his storytelling powers and was captivated from the first page to the last."

Phong Nguyen is author of Roundabout: An Improvisational Fiction, The Adventures of Joe Harper, and Pages from the Textbook of Alternate History. He is the Miller Family Endowed Chair in Literature and Writing at the University of Missouri.

Friday, October 14, 6:30 pm
Dennis Darmek, author of Crossing the DMZ
In-Person at Boswell - click here to register.

Boswell hosts an evening with photographer and documentarian Dennis Darmek for his new book, Crossing the DMZ, which attempts to use art to measure the immeasurable tragedy of the war in Vietnam, which affected the lives of millions of people both here in the US and throughout Southeast Asia.

In his new book, Crossing the DMZ, Dennis Darmek focuses on a small group of US Marines, mostly teenagers, who volunteered to fight and ended up with their names on the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington, DC. In a collaboration between past and present, Vietnamese who live where the battles were fought pose with photos of those Marines. Darmek’s work merges new photos with military archives, stories, and the emotional terrain of our Vietnam memories.

Photographer Larry Schwarm praises Darmek’s work thusly: "Crossing the DMZ falls in that interesting area between art and journalism - it’s both. It is beautiful and heartbreaking." And from artist Suzanne Rose: "Utterly poetic… a path past pain to beauty."

Dennis Darmek is a photographer, video artist, and documentarian, and his work has been featured on PBS and European television as well as in museums and galleries around the world, including the Milwaukee Art Museum, The Minneapolis Institute of the Arts, and the Museum of Wisconsin Art.

Monday, October 17, 6 pm
Kieran Setiya, author of Life Is Hard: How Philosophy Can Help Us Find Our Way
in Conversation with Sally Haldorson for a virtual event - click here to register

Boswell Book Company teams up again with Porchlight Book Company to present a virtual event featuring MIT Professor of Philosophy and author Kieran Setiya for a conversation about his philosophical new guide to facing life's inevitable hardships. In conversation with Sally Haldorson, Porchlight’s Managing Director.

There is no cure for the human condition: life is hard. But Kieran Setiya believes philosophy can help. He offers us a map for navigating rough terrain, from personal trauma to the injustice and absurdity of the world. Drawing on ancient and modern philosophy as well as fiction, history, memoir, film, comedy, social science, and stories from Setiya’s own experience, Life Is Hard is a book for this moment, a work of solace and compassion.

Setiya’s book is great for fans of Atomic Habits. Daniel H Pink, author of Drive, says: "Kieran Setiya has produced the ultimate handbook of hardship. He shows why adversity is inevitable - and why facing up to that reality, rather than insisting on simple-minded notions of happiness, offers the only path to living well." And from Louis Menand, author of The Metaphysical Club: "Finding wisdom in Aristotle, Wittgenstein, and Simone Weil, and also in Dostoevsky, Emily Dickinson, and Groundhog Day, this book offers guidance on how to make the most of the hand we have all been dealt."

Kieran Setiya is Professor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and author Midlife: A Philosophical Guide. His writing has appeared in the Los Angeles Review of Books, The New York Times, and The Yale Review.

Monday, October 17, 7 pm
Andrea Bartz, author of We Were Never Here
in conversation with Noah Weckwerth, in-person at Elm Grove Public Library, 13600 Juneau Blvd - click here to register

Elm Grove Public Library hosts an evening of conversation with Milwaukee-area native Andrea Bartz, author of the Reese’s Book Club pick We Were Never Here, in which a backpacking trip leads to deadly consequences across three continents as the story traverses Cambodia, Chile, and Wisconsin. In conversation with Noah Weckwerth of Elm Grove Public Library and cosponsored by Boswell Book Company.

Emily is having the time of her life in the mountains of Chile with her best friend, Kristen, on their annual reunion trip. But on the last night of the trip, Emily enters their hotel suite to find blood and broken glass on the floor. Kristen says the cute backpacker she brought back to the room attacked her, and she had no choice but to kill him in self-defense. Even more shocking: The scene is horrifyingly similar to last year's trip, when another backpacker wound up dead. Emily can't believe it's happened again - can lightning really strike twice? Emily returns home to Wisconsin, dives head-first into a new relationship, and throws herself into work. But when Kristen shows up for a surprise visit, Emily is forced to confront their violent past.

From Sarah Weinman, writing for The New York Times Book Review: "A book that skillfully examines toxic friendship at its most extreme... When the reckoning arrives, it shows that sometimes, we should fear our friends a lot more than strangers." And from NPR: "Beneath the thrilling cliffhangers and impeccably paced plot lies a very sharp portrait of female friendship and how magical and intense it can be."

Andrea Bartz is the bestselling author of the thrillers The Lost Night and The Herd. Her writing has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Vogue, and Elle, and she has held editorial positions at Glamour, Psychology Today, and Self, among other publications.

Photo credits
Joanna Quinn by Nancy Turner
Kathleen Hale by Melissa Schaefers
Melissa Urban by Brandon Talbot
Gretchen Rubin by Elena Seibert
Kieran Setiya by Caspar Hare
Andrea Bartz by Bill Wadman

Sunday, October 9, 2022

Boswell bestsellers for the week ending October 8, 2022

Boswell bestsellers for the week ending October 8, 2022

Hardcover Fiction:
1. Our Missing Hearts, by Celeste Ng
2. Lark Ascending, by Silas House (signed copies available)
3. The Winners, by Fredrik Backman
4. Lucy by the Sea, by Elizabeth Strout
5. Lessons in Chemistry, by Bonnie Garmus
6. Shrines of Gaiety, by Kate Atkinson
7. Beyond Belief, by John Koethe
8. The Bullet That Missed V3, by Richard Osman
9. Mad Honey, by Jodi Picoult and Jennifer Finney Boylan
10. Less Is Lost, by Andrew Sean Greer (signed copies avaiable)

This week's top new release is Celeste Ng's Our Missing Hearts, which is the Reese Book Club pick as well as the #1 Indie Next pick for October. Per Book Marks, it has 15 raves, two positive, and two mixed reviews. Stephen King is a fan, per his review in The New York Times: "I won’t give away the splendid conclusion of Ng’s book; suffice it to say, the climax deals with the power of words, the power of stories and the persistence of memory."

Hardcover Nonfiction:
1. Confidence Man, by Maggie Haberman
2. I'm Glad My Mom Died, by Jennette McCurdy
3. Slenderman, by Kathleen Hale (Register for October 13 event here)
4. How We Live Is How We Die, by Pema Chödrön
5. Life Is Hard, by Kieran Setiya (Register for October 17 virtual event here)
6. Life on the Mississippi, by Rinker Buck
7. What If 2, by Randall Munroe
8. Gateau, by Aleksandra Crapanzano
9. Grace, by Cody Keenan
10. Dinner with Ruth, by Nina Totenberg

It is a rare thing when the same imprint has the top fiction and nonfiction hardcover, but that's the case for Penguin Press and Maggie Haberman's Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America. The media has been packed with various revelations for the book. Some of the key ones are on this BBC piece from Nadine Yousef.

Paperback Fiction:
1. Double Exposure, by Jeannée Sacken (signed copies available)
2. The Art of the Break, by Mary Wimmer (signed copies available)
3. Cloud Cuckoo Land, by Anthony Doerr
4. The Sentence, by Louise Erdrich
5. Once Upon a December, by Amy E Reichert (Register for November 30 event here)
6. The Personal Librarian, by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray
7. The Book Lovers, by Emily Henry
8. Love in the Time of Serial Killers, by Alicia Thompson
9. Big Chicas Don't Cry, by Annette Chavez Macias
10. The Court of Thorn and Roses, by Sarah J Maas

There was a time when books like The Sentence and Cloud Cuckoo Land would have hit The New York Times bestseller list in paperback, but that time is not now. In a way, the Times did this to themself by eliminating the mass market list. There was a time when at least some the trade paperback top 15 would have been published rack size. It doesn't matter to me, but I've always gotten the feeling it does matter to The New York Times - why else would you have an "advice, how-to, and miscellaneous" list separated out from nonfiction? Why would you come up with a rule about series on the kids side?

Another thing about Cloud Cuckoo Land is that it has a traditional one-year publication schedule - not eight months, to rush it for summer reading, but also not a not-until-2023 pub date, unlike so many big sellers. One of our publishers had a display promotion for fall and so many of their focus titles were for 2021 books! I have nothing more to say about Doerr's novel except that a bunch of us liked it, and it turns out "cloud cuckoo land" is a popular turn of phrase for critics writing about things that have nothing to do with this novel.

Paperback Nonfiction:
1. Life in Short, by Dasha Kelly Hamilton
2. Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
3. The Icepick Surgeon, by Sam Kean (In-Store Lit Group November 7 - more here)
4. There Is No Backstage, by Linda Stephens (Register for October 10 event here)
5. Owning Grief, by Gael Garbarino Cullen (Register for November 11 event here)
6. History of Milwaukee Drag, by BJ Daniels and Michail Takach (Register for October 24 event here)
7. Entangled Life, by Merlin Sheldrake
8. Solutions and Other Problems, by Allie Brosh
9. The Body Keeps the Score, by Bessel van der Kolk
10. Getting Lost, by Annie Ernaux, translated by Alison L Strayer

It's a rare thing when the Nobel Prize for Literature is announced within a week of an author's new publication, but that's the case for Annie Ernaux, whose new book, Getting Lost published October 4. Dwight Garner was one of the enthusiastic critics. From his New York Times review: "The almost primitive directness of her voice is bracing. It’s as if she’s carving each sentence onto the surface of a table with a knife. She is, in her writing, definitely not the sort of girl whose bicycle has a basket."

Books for Kids:
1. A Rover's Story, by Jasmine Warga (signed copies available)
2. Stuntboy: In the Meantime, by Jason Reynolds and Raul the Third
3. Our World of Dumplings, by Francie Dekker and Sarah Jung
4. Blackout, by Dhonielle Clayton
5. The Weight of Blood, by Tiffany Jackson
5. Wildoak, by CC Harrington
6. Violet and Jobie in the Wild, by Lynne Rae Perkins
7. Tumble, by Celia C Perez
8. The Marvellers, by Dhonielle Clayton
9. Hummingbird, by Natalie Lloyd
10. A Day in the Life of a Caveman, by Mike Barfield

Wildoak
is a September/October Indie Next Pick for kids and a staff rec from Jen Steeele, who writes: "Set in early 60s Cornwall, Maggie, a young girl with a stutter is sent to stay with her grandfather for a few weeks. Maggie spends most of her days in Wildoak, a beautiful forest near her grandfather’s place that’s under threat of destruction. It is in Wildoak that Maggie discovers Rumpus, a lost snow leopard who needs her help. CC Harrington delivers an engaging novel about what connects us all. I was absolutely charmed by these characters, and I know you will be too!" Like several of the books on this list - great for school libraries.

I also have to give a shout to Dhonielle Clayton who has two books in this week's top 10. Both Blackout and The Marvellers were part of school orders, but to different schools. The Marvellers was part of an educator talk that we gave earlier this fall. It's Clayton's take on the magic boarding school trope and per the publisher, it's already a #1 bestseller. Clayton has written for Hyperion/Disney but this book is from Holt. I'm sort of surprised a series called The Marvellers doesn't have some sort of Disney connection, considering how often they push the boundaries of trademark. Perhaps we'll see a streaming adaptation on Disney+ eventually, which will explain a lot.

Up tomorrow - Boswell events for the week.