Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Come In and Cover Me by Gin Phillips


Thirty-nine-year old Ren is working on a dig in New Mexico, searching for Mimbres pottery that dates back to the 12th-century when she meets Silas, a fellow archaeologist whose methods are radically different that hers. While Silas dates objects by, say, counting the carbon in preserved prehistoric corn, Ren relies on a slightly less scientific method—visitations by tribal ghosts who show her how the bowls and jars were created. Novelist Phillips brings the culture and lives of these ancient people to life, as well as the fascinating details about the art of archaeology—from how a fallen bit of adobe can preserve a parrot feather to why coroners are required to examine bodies that date back 800 years. Interestingly, though, it's the personal details in this book that resonate. Ren's relationship with the past is more than professional: Her brother's death during her childhood has left her unable to connect to others, even Silas who, if things were different, she might be able love. It's this tension—between her belief that "The past was solid, weighable as cement...that it was done and over, and could be wrapped and stored without fear of it ever changing" and her awareness that she must re-examine what really happened 20 years ago in order create some kind of future for herself—that connect you to the book, both due to the subtle, evocative flashbacks and the relief at seeing for once, a woman character who is emotionally unavailable and a man who has to crack her tough shell, instead of the other way around.

Read more: http://www.oprah.com/blogs/Book-of-The-Week-Come-In-And-Cover-Me#ixzz1l58WtvIT

What is The Bat Segundo Show?

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The Bat Segundo Show is a cultural and literary podcast that involves very thorough long-form interviews with contemporary authors and other assorted artists. Standard questions that have been asked of guests over and over are avoided, whenever possible.

The show is updated (ideally) every week and sometimes every two weeks. There are at least five podcasts unveiled to the listening public every month and, more often than not, considerably more.

Event at McNally Jackson with Stewart O'Nan

Stewart O'Nan in conversation with Edward Champion
The great Stewart O'Nan has been on our program before. (And, last year, we ended up in a protracted email interview volley with him.)  But on February 16, 2012, O'Nan will be making a New York City appearance at McNally Jackson to discuss his latest novel, The Odds.  Our Correspondent and O'Nan will discuss vital questions about human togetherness and the allegorical value of celebrity marriages. The event is free!  Don't miss it!

Sunday, January 29, 2012

An Evening with David Sedaris

His newest book, a collection of fables entitled Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk: A Modest Bestiary (with illustrations by Ian Falconer), was released in September 2010 and immediately hit the New York Times bestseller fiction list.

Squirrel Seeks Chipmunk, A Modest Bestiary

Sedaris visits Brooklyn for two nights only, featuring all-new readings of his work and a book signing.
Tickets start at $49

NYC Books Through Bars

Started in 1996, NYC Books Through Bars sends thousands of books to prisoners across the nation each year.  Cleaning out your shelves? Looking to donate your unwanted books to a local organization that sends books to prisoners? Look no further! New York City Books Through Bars does just that!

 BTB logo by Joseph Hernandez, currently at Attica Correctional Facility

How to Write Poetry

Still flowers

10 Cult Literary Traditions for Truly Die-Hard Fans

Hemingway Look-alike Contest

Saturday, January 21, 2012

New York Diaries: 1609-2009

When Simone de Beauvoir, the French existentialist, first tried to smoke marijuana, she, like Bill Clinton, did not inhale.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

New Leonard Cohen Song to Be Streamed by The New Yorker

Leonard-Cohen-Old-Ideas_opt.jpg
New Yorker poetry editor Paul Muldoon, who has been listening to Cohen since 1967, said that he is "thrilled" this will be happening in the magazine, which has recently been acknowledging the great power and achievement of singer-songwriters. ...
See all stories on this topic »

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Tyrant Reading

A New York Tyrant party with readings from Daniel Long, Michael Bible, and Chiara Barzini, followed by Tao Lin and Giancarlo DiTrapano doing a special one-time double-reading of “Andrew: A Dialogue of Texts in the Year of Drugs and Kindness,” from Vice Magazine, a piece that’s been called “incendiary,” and “this year’s best online writing,” and “this is stupid.” 

"Norwegian Wood" is the best selling novel from cult Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami.

Books with Reading Group Guides

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The guides are arranged alphabetically by author's last name.

The Best of It: New and Selected Poems by Kay Ryan

The Best of It: New and Selected Poems

Convenience by W.S. Merwin | The New York Review of Books

Convenience by W.S. Merwin | The New York Review of Books

Conversation Starters: 2011's Top 5 Book Club Picks by LYNN NEARY

Illustration: Best Book Club Books

A boxed set of postcards, depicting 100 iconic Penguin Classic paperback bookcovers.

postcardsfrompenguin400

This set is the perfect gift for readers, writers and graphic designers.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

CHIARA BARZINI

Calamari Press is pleased to announce the release of a debut collection of short fictions by Chiara Barzini: SISTER STOP BREATHING. 


The book is available now through Small Press Distribution (& soon from Amazon) & also as an Ebook: http://www.calamaripress.com/Sister_Stop_Breathing.htm

Chiara will be in NYC this month doing a number of readings to launch the book: 
• Jan 21 at KGB Bar with Daniel Long, Michael Bible, Tao Lin & Giancarlo DiTrapano
• Jan 23 at Unnameable Books with Kate Schatz & Iris Smyles


Chiara Barzini: Sister Stop Breathing

Uljana Wolf & Deborah Poe at The Poetry Project


Monday, January 23, 2012, 8:00 pm

Submissions Open: Awards for Poetry in Translation


Keith Waldrop will judge this year's$1,000 Harold Morton Landon Translation Award for books of poetry translated from any language into English, published in 2011. Submissions are now open.

Also, The Academy’s $10,000 Raiziss/de Palchi Book Prize is accepting submissions for translations into English of modern Italian poetry. Books may have been published anytime in the past (not necessarily 2011).

The postmark deadline for both awards is January 31, 2012.

A poet you should be reading is...

Galley of the Beloved in Torment was the winner of the 2008 Orphic Prize. His second book, co-written with poet Jeannie Hoag, is a book of epistolary poems entitled Informal Invitation to a Traveler. His work has been featured in Boston Review, Columbia Poetry Journal, Gulf Coast, Third Coast, Volt, and elsewhere. He co-edits iO: A Journal of New American Poetry.

Eat, Drink & Be Literary is presented in partnership with the Brooklyn Academy of Arts.


Russell Banks
Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 6:30pm
Doors open at 6pm
Moderated by Francine Prose
Russell Banks
For more information, visit www.bam.org.

Innovations in Reading Prize, 2012

Each year, the National Book Foundation awards a number of prizes of up to $2,500 each to individuals and institutions—or partnerships between the two—that have developed innovative means of creating and sustaining a lifelong love of reading. Details about the complete application process are available here

Greenlight Bookstore at BAM

Greenlight Bookstore, Fort Greene's much-loved independently owned bookseller, brings a curated selection of books and BAM gifts to BAM lobbies during live performances. For a full selection of merchandise, visit Greenlight Bookstore just a few blocks from BAM (686 Fulton St) or greenlightbookstore.com, where BAM members receive 20% off.

Gift of BAM

A Technology project in Brooklyn, NY by The Booklyn Artists Alliance

Writer's Remedy: Magnetic Poetry

Writer's Remedy: Magnetic Poetry
Packaged in an elegant apothecary glass bottle with stopper, Writer's Remedy sits 3 1/2 inches tall and makes a unique gift for people who like to write.

Jennifer Egan, Dave Eggers and Elizabeth Gilbert

The Moment: Wild, Poignant, Life-Changing Stories from 125 Writers and Artists Famous & Obscure

The Moment
Click here for upcoming events.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Flavorpill’s Most Anticipated Books of 2012 by Emily Temple

Stereotyping You by Your Favorite Book of 2011 by Emily Temple

Books, Booze, and Beds: 10 Legendary Haunts of Artists and Writers by Emily Temple

Falling For Me, Anna David


Like most women, whether they’ve chosen the Fortune 500 career path or have had five kids by 35, Anna David wondered if she’d made the right choices. Then she came upon the book Sex and the Single Girl by Helen Gurley Brown,Cosmopolitan’s fearless leader from the mid-sixties to the late nineties. Immediately connecting with Gurley Brown’s unique message of self-empowerment combined with femininity, Anna vowed to use Sex as a lesson plan, venturing out of her comfort zone in the hope of overcoming the fears and insecurities that had haunted her for years. Embarking on a journey both intensely personal and undeniably universal, she becomes adventurous and spontaneous—reviving her wardrobe and apartment, taking French lessons, dashing off to Seville, and whiling nights away with men she never would have considered before. In the process, she ends up meeting the person really worth changing for: herself.

Post-it Note Diaries: 20 Stories of Youthful Abandon, Embarrassing Mishaps, and Everyday Adventure, Arthur Jones

Everyone has time to read a Post-It, right? Based on Arthur Jones’ popular Post-It note reading series, this book collects 20 weird, hilarious and true personal stories from people like John Hodgman, Chuck Klosterman, Kristen Schaal, Mary Roach, and Andrew Bird, and illustrates them all out on Post-It notes. It’s a fun and fresh take on the graphic novel — though, if any of your friends have severe office shell shock this holiday season, we might suggest something that doesn’t involve the little yellow stickies.


Vicky Swanky Is a Beauty by Diane Williams

Vicky Swanky Is a Beauty
"She is one of the very few contemporary prose writers who seem to be doing something independent, energetic, heartfelt."
—Lydia Davis

"The uncanny has met its ideal delivery system: the stories of Diane Williams."
—Ben Marcus

"These stories are the Giacometti walking man, the Cornell box, that extraordinary object born out of a genius for expressing the inner murmur of the mind. Each page is like throwing open the window in an electrical storm—strange sky, air full of voltage, and inside, a square of brave. Diane Williams is hilarious, brilliant, eccentric, powerful, and, luckily, ours."
—Deb Olin Unferth

McMullens Subscription


This subscription will begin with Matt Furie's The Night Riders, and will continue with seven more books sent directly to your door. $80, shipping included. And to catch up on the first four books in the imprint, at more-or-less subscription price, head on over to the McMullens Bundle .

McMullens Subscription

I Found This Funny (paperback) Edited by Judd Apatow

I Found This Funny (paperback)
Table of Contents
 1. Carson McCullers, "The Jockey."
 2. Raymond Carver, "The Elephant."
 3. Ian Frazier, "Coyote v Acme."
 4. James Agee, "A Mothers Tale."
 5. F. Scott Fitzgerald, "Pat Hobby and Orson Welles."
 6. Faye Fiore, "Picture of Elvis and Nixon."
 7. Simon Rich, "If Life Were Like Middle School "Five Greatest Boyfriends", "My Friend's New Girlfriend," "Columbian Tourism", and "Love Coupons."
 8. Paul Simms, "For Immediate Release."
 9. Dan Chaon, "I Demand to Know..."
 10. Jon Stewart, "Lenny Bruce: The Making of a Sitcom."
 11. Judd Apatow, "How I Got Kicked Out of High School."
 12. Michael Chabon , "Ocean Avenue"
 13. David Sedaris, "Go Carolina."
 14. Adam McKay, "Buckwell's Follies."
 15. Adam Sandler, "Canteen Boy"
 16. Paul Feig, "And Now a Word from the Booth"
 17. Philip Roth, "The Conversion of the Jews."
 18. Jonathan Ames, "No Contact, Asshole."
 19. Flannery O'Conner, "Good Country People."
 20. Ernest Hemmingway, "The Killers."
 21. Andre Dubus, "All The Time In The World."
 22. Jonathan Franzen, "Two Ponies."
 23. Poetry of Tony Hoagland
 24. John Lahr, "The Goat Boy Rises."
 25. Rodney Rothman, "Vivian."
 26. Conan O'Brian, "Lookwell." (TV pilot)
 27. Nora Ephron, "What I Wish I'd Known."
 28. Lorrie Moore, Four Calling Birds, "Three French Hens."
 29. Cartoons of Hugleikur Dagsson
 30. Miranda July, "Majesty."
 31. Alice Monroe, "Material."
 32. Steve Martin, "In the Birdcage."
 33. Dave Eggers, "Your Mother and I."
 34. Amy Bloom, "Love Is Not a Pie."
 35. Tobias Wolf, "Hunters In the Snow."

The Keep Your House In Order Planner by Heidi Meredith


A die-cut booklet, small enough to carry around, big enough to plan your life.
Product Code: HM01 
Regular Price: $12.00 Sale Price: $10.00


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