Monday, March 31, 2008

Jhumpa Lahiri

April 1
7:00 PM
*Come meet Jhumpa Lahiri, author of Unaccustomed Earth at the Barnes & Noble in Union Square.
Summary:
In the stunning title story, Ruma, a young mother in a new city, is visited by her father, who carefully tends the earth of her garden, where he and his grandson form a special bond. But he’s harboring a secret from his daughter, a love affair he’s keeping all to himself. In “A Choice of Accommodations,” a husband’s attempt to turn an old friend’s wedding into a romantic getaway weekend with his wife takes a dark, revealing turn as the party lasts deep into the night. In “Only Goodness,” a sister eager to give her younger brother the perfect childhood she never had is overwhelmed by guilt, anguish, and anger when his alcoholism threatens her family. And in “Hema and Kaushik,” a trio of linked stories—a luminous, intensely compelling elegy of life, death, love, and fate—we follow the lives of a girl and boy who, one winter, share a house in Massachusetts. They travel from innocence to experience on separate, sometimes painful paths, until destiny brings them together again years later in Rome.

Barnes & Noble Booksellers Union Square
Union Square
33 East 17th Street
New York, NY 10003

Mo Willems

Mo Willems, The Pigeon Wants A...
Tuesday, April 1
4:00pm – 6:00pm

Join award-winning author-illustrator Mo Willems as he announces the title of his brand new Pigeon book, The Pigeon Wants ____ at the Bryant Park Reading Room on April 1, 2008, at 4pm. Pigeon's latest demand has been a mystery until now but the wait is over. Mo will read from and sign copies of his latest book. Top secrets will be revealed!


visit this site for more info. www.bryantpark.org/

"Stop Me If You Think That You've Heard This One Before..."

* I read a bunch of reviews this weekend and here are a few of my favorites. Enjoy!

Memory: A Novel by Philippe Grimbert


Born a sickly child in post-WWII Paris, Grimbert's narrator, Philippe Grimbert, develops an obsessive fascination with the lithe, muscular bodies and athletic prowess of his beautiful parents. His fantasy life extends to an imaginary brother who at first offers comfort and protection, but soon becomes a way for the young narrator to vent his frustration with his own weakness and pallor. At 15, a violent altercation with a schoolroom bully over a lesson on Holocaust victims results in the revelation of his origins: Grimbert, the narrator's family's name, was once Grinberg, and the story of his parents' romantic retreat to the country during the war is shattered by a heartbreaking story of betrayal and sacrifice in occupied France.


Resistance: A Novel by Owen Sheers


Poet Sheers takes readers to a small Welsh village during a speculative WWII—featuring a German invasion of Britain—in his auspicious debut novel. It's 1944 and Sarah Lewis and the women in Ochlon valley are left alone after all the local men disappear one night. The women's worlds suddenly shrink to the day-to-day struggles to keep their sheep farms going until the war comes to their doorsteps in the form of Capt. Albrecht Wolfram and his men, who have a murky mission to carry out in the valley. Promising to leave the women alone, the Germans occupy an abandoned house and the two camps keep mostly to themselves until a harsh winter takes hold, and it becomes clear that the locals and the Germans will have to depend on one another to survive.


His Illegal Self by Peter Carey


Raised by his boho-turned-bourgeois grandmother on New York's Upper East Side, Che Selkirk, seven years old in 1972, hasn't seen his Weathermenesque parents since he was a toddler, but when a young woman who calls herself Dial walks into Che's apartment one afternoon, he believes his mother has finally come. Within two hours, Dial and Che are on the lam and heading for Philly as Che's kidnapping hits the news. Unexpected trouble strikes, and soon the boy and Dial, who doesn't know how or if to tell Che that she is only a messenger who was supposed to escort him to meet his mother, land in a hippie commune in the Australian outback.

Manic: A Memoir by Terri Cheney


Cheney, a former L.A. entertainment lawyer, pointedly dispels expectations of a safe ride through this turbulent account of bipolar disorder. With evocative imagery—time-shuffled recollections meant to mirror her disorienting extremes of mood—Cheney conjures life at the mercy of a brain chemistry that yanks her from soul-starving despair to raucous exuberance, impetuous pursuits to paralyzing lethargy. Caught in a riptide of febrile impulse, she caroms from seductions to suicide attempts while flirting recklessly with men, danger and death, only to find more hazards in the drastic side effects of treatment.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Good, Brother

by Peter Markus

Review:
This is the second Peter Markus book that I've read out of Calamari Press and a great choice indeed. Markus's stories are so chaotic, yet they seem to hypnotize you into tranquility. In his book The Singing Fish, I felt his use of the words mud, man, river and boy were so uniquely woven together that there was nowhere an author could go with these images ever again. Alas, in Good, Brother , he has proven my theory wrong. I love the addition of Girl as a major player in this collection and the blossoming of the relationship between boy and girl. I have a suspicion that influences are biblical, especially his familial interpretations. His style is really unique and incredibly Gothic in theme. Overall, this book is a quick, punch in the gut read and if you haven't read anything by Markus, this is a great one to start with.

*Dirty River Town and Mister Higgerson are the key phrases that Amazon.com has listed under the title and author. I love it!
a short movie based on the story:www.5cense.com/Good_Brother_movie.htm

more sites with Good, Brother:
Typo Magazine 3: Good, Brother — Peter Markus
litrag #12

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

The Wrath of Mulgarath

by Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi

"The pale light of the newly risen sun made the dew shimmer on the nearby grass as Jared, Mallory, and Simon trudged along the early..."

Review:
The children return to the Spiderwick Estate only to find their home in shambles, with trash and broken furniture scattered across the lawn and Simon's griffin chasing a "goblin" across the roof. Mom and the Field Guide are both missing and only Mulgarath can be blamed for these heinous crimes. With the help of Thimbletack, Hogsqueal and Byron, the children have to save Arthur Spiderwick from the elves and stop Mulgarath and his goblins. The series ends with a dramatic rescue and the demise of Mulgarath.

The Ironwood Tree

by Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi
Review:
The guide has mysteriously disappeared and the children are scrambling to retrieve it. Hopelessly, someone is running around school pretending to be Jared and Mallory has been abducted. Drama, drama and more drama has unravelled in this fourth book of the series. Shocking events are taking place. There is something foul in the water that is killing off the plants and animals and all clues point to the quarry where dwarves have take over a mine. Also, the twins, Jared and Simon, must solve a riddle to save Mallory from evil dwarves who want to create a world totally out of metal with her as their queen. I look forward to the finale.

Lucinda's Secret

by Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi
Review:
The Grace kids visit their "crazy old" Aunt Lucinda in the third installment of the Spiderwick Chronicles. Things start to heat up between the children and various creatures that come to life from the infamous Field Guide. Goblins, trolls, faeries, a house brownie and even a hidden griffin are amongst the newest characters that the children struggle to make heads and tails out of. A trip to the asylum guided by their mother, the children are hoping that Lucinda might know something about Uncle Arthur's fate or at least have some advice on how to fend off the faeries. Should they turn the guide over to the faeries? You have to read Book Four to find out.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Warning: Awesome Website, Not Book Related!

  • HEMA is a Dutch department store.
  • The first store opened on November 4, 1926, in Amsterdam.
  • Now there are 150 stores all over the Netherlands. HEMA also has stores in Belgium, Luxemburg, and Germany.
  • In June of this year, HEMA was sold to British investment company, Lion Capital.

Take a look at HEMA's product page (http://producten.hema.nl/) . You can't order anything and it's in Dutch but just wait a couple of seconds and watch what happens. This company has a sense of humor and a great computer programmer.

*I received this in a forward from a friend and thought I would post it even though it has nothing to do with books. Turn your volume up, sit back and watch the show.

Life Lines

*I came across this contest and thought it would be a really cool way to celebrate National Poetry Month this April.

Visit Poets.org for more info.

For National Poetry Month 2008, the Academy of American Poets asks you to share the lines of poetry that are the most vital to you, along with notes about the precise situation that summoned them to mind.


All participants will automatically be entered to win a piece of jewelry by San Francisco designer Jeanine Payer. Payer specializes in hand-engraving lines of poetry on earrings, necklaces, and other items.


The winner will have their "life line" hand-engraved on a specially chosen piece.
Entries can be emailed to
npm@poets.org until April 1, 2008.

Page Series

PAGE Series
The National Arts Club
15 Gramercy Park SouthNYC
http://pageseries.wordpress.com/


Readings and literature free and open to the public.
PAGE is directed by Fran Gordon and Wah-Ming Chang.

Used Book Cafe

*Check out Soho's best kept secret!

Housing Works Used Book Cafe

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Johnny Cash

Review:
"Hello, I'm Johnny Cash." These words echoed in my head as I read this biography about the famous "man in black". A fast and short read, but a pleasurable one indeed. Although this book is intended for a younger audience, I still found it was a thorough and true depiction of Cash's struggles with fame, drugs and the law. Cash was a performer all the way to the end and an influence to so many musicians out today. He really changed the face of country music forever. A few years ago, everyone was on the Cash roller coaster when the movie "Walk the Line" came out and received rave reviews and a few Oscars. Like everyone else, I really started to take an interest in Cash and payed more attention to his music. This book fills in the gaps from that film and actually inspired me to check out some of his albums that I have not yet heard. I think the most amazing fact about him is that he is the only musician ever to be inducted into three halls of fame; Country Music, Rock and Roll, and Songwriters. This is a great little read and I recommend it to any music lover.
You have to check out this website for some real good audio and video footage. http://www.johnnycash.com/

Saturday, March 15, 2008

The Seeing Stone

by Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi
"The late bus dropped Jared Grace at the bottom of his street..."
Review:
This is the second book in the fast paced Spiderwick Chronicles series. The story becomes exciting and scary as the children discover the strange world of faeries and creatures hinted at in The Field Guide. There are many secrets being revealed and as the three children begin to learn the rules of this odd and dangerous new world, they have a lot of explaining to do to their mother, who has started to become very curious. The characters are explained more in detail in this second book and new characters are being introduced that I think will play a major role in the series storyline. I can't wait to see what happens in book three.
*You have to check out this blog by Spiderwick co-creators DiTerlizzi and Black.
The Fan Artwork is unbelievable.

The Field Guide

by Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi
"If someone had asked Jared Grace what jobs his brother and sister would have when they grew up, he would have had no trouble replying..."
Review:
This is the first book in a series of five that introduces us to the Grace children. Mallory is a 13 year old with twin 9 year old siblings Jared and Simon, who move with their mother into the dilapidated Spiderwick Estate. They soon find their great- great uncle Spiderwick's secret library and Field Guide, which sends imaginations running wild and a new adventure begins to unfold. I don't usually read fantasy, but since this series was recently released as a movie, I thought it might be worth a try. I actually became interested in the books because of the horrible reviews that the movie received. It seems that whenever this happens the book is much better than the film. So, this week I read the first two books in this series and loved them both. Since the movie, the books are hard to find in the library. I ran over to the library today and put my name on the waiting list for the third book. I plan on reading the whole series, so look for more reviews in the next few weeks.
series website: http://www.spiderwick.com/


Wednesday, March 12, 2008

The Pull of the Ocean



by Jean-Claude Mourlevat

I try to convince myself that this is all there was to his look back, but I know now that his eyes were telling me something else. Were shouting something else. And what they were shouting was Help me!

Review:
This is a really refreshing Young Adult novel often compared to The Adventures of Tom Thumb by Charles Perrault. It starts off somewhere in France with an oddly small boy and a social worker. On a stormy night, Yann Doutreleau gathers his three sets of twin brothers together to flee their dismal home after he hears their father's plans to kill them the next day. Malnourished and poorly clothed, the seven boys head out towards the ocean. The story unravels through the eyes of all the people that the boys interact with and each chapter lends itself to a different persons account. The end seems so neat and clear, but after careful thought, one realizes the truth behind Yann's plan. A very satisfying read for anyone who loves being on the edge of their seat.

Friday, March 7, 2008

Rick Moody

NPR: The Joy and Enthusiasm of Reading
I came across this audio from NPR with Rick Moody sharing his beliefs in a series called This I Believe. Moody is a novelist, short story writer, essayist and composer. This is a great 4 1/2 minute essay and will speak to all lovers of books. Enjoy!

What is This I Believe?
This I Believe is an international project engaging people in writing, sharing, and discussing the core values that guide their daily lives. These short statements of belief, written by people from all walks of life, are archived here and featured on public radio in the United States and Canada, as well as in regular broadcasts on NPR. The project is based on the popular 1950s radio series of the same name hosted by Edward R. Murrow.

Black Dogs

by Ian McEwan
"I am uncertain whether our civilization at this turn of the millennium is cursed by too much or too little belief, whether people like Bernard and June cause the trouble, or people like me."

Review:
The novel travels back in time to Europe after World War II and is set against the fall of the Berlin Wall. McEwan uses the mock memoir form to tell this story. Whose story is this? June and Bernard's? Or Jeremy's? It is very confusing and intriguing at the same time. The conflict between emotion and rationality is divided by gender with a woman on one side and a man on another. June and Bernard are two young Communist Party members who meet in London in 1946. They fall deeply and quickly in love and marry. On their honeymoon in France, June has a life-altering experience, discovers religion, and ultimately renounces her allegiance to the party. Five years later, June and Bernard Tremaine separate, but they never divorce, and never become romantically involved with others. They meet again some forty years later when their son-in-law, Jeremy, spends time with both June and Bernard as he interviews each of them for June's memoir. This is again another brilliant piece by McEwan and definitely worth the read.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Poem In Your Pocket Day, April 17th

Celebrate the first national Poem In Your Pocket Day in NYC or anywhere!
The idea is simple: select a poem you love during National Poetry Month then carry it with you to share with co-workers, family, and friends on April 17.
check out this link for more details: http://www.poets.org


Where can I find poems?
Sneak a peek at www.poets.org/mobile
Poetry.org also has a ton.
Want to receive a free poem-a-day?

The New Yorker Online Only

The New Yorker has a really cool Online Only section at their website that I think is definitely worth a look. It has some really great literary audios and literary blog information. I surfed it for at least a half hour and was not bored at all. Enjoy!

BookCrossing

What is BookCrossing?
  • A place where 648,169 people in over 130 countries come to share their passion for books with the world. At BookCrossing, you can register any book you have on the site, and then set the book free to travel the world and find new readers.
  • Leave it on a park bench, at a coffee shop, at a hotel on vacation. Share it with a friend or tuck it onto a bookshelf at the gym -- anywhere it might find a new reader! What happens next is up to fate, and we never know where our books might travel next. Track the book's journey around the world as it is passed on from person to person.