In the Bookroom


A collaborative blog presented by the staff of Library Journal

May 7, 2007

We’ve moved!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Anna Katterjohn @ 3:47 pm

We’re in the process of migrating In the Bookroom to its new home on our recently redesigned web site.  Visit us at http://www.libraryjournal.com/blog/770000077.html for our latest posts.

May 1, 2007

Galley Giveaways at BEA ‘07

Filed under: New Books, Publishing, Public Libraries — Heather McCormack @ 11:10 am

On Thursday, May 31, BookExpo America returns to the Big Apple, and librarians on the hunt for hot galleys won’t be disappointed if my findings are any indication. Using Barbara Hoffert’s Prepub Alert contact list, I compiled a sizable list of must-gets. Without further ado, here they are by publisher:

  • HarperCollins: Life on the Refrigerator Door by Alice Kuipers and Run by Ann Patchett (Truth and Beauty)
  • Simon & Schuster: The Year of Living Biblically: One Man’s Humble Quest To Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible by A.J. Jacobs and The 47th Samurai: A Bob Lee Swagger Novel by Stephen Hunter (Havana)
  • Free Press: Redemption Falls by Joseph O’Conner (Star of the Sea)
  • Crown: The 12-Second Sequence by Jorge Cruise, Look Me in the Eye by John Robinson, Switching Time by Richard Baer, and Witch’s Trinity by Erika Mailman
  • Three Rivers Press: 13 Bullets by David Wellington (Monster Island)
  • Harmony: Last Night I Dreamed of Peace by Dang Thuy Tram
  • Shaye Areheart Books: Mad Dash by Patricia Gaffney (The Saving Graces)
  • Random House: Away by Amy Bloom (A Blind Man Can See How Much I Love You), Identical Strangers by Elyse Schein and Paula Bernstein, Tipperary by Frank Delaney (Ireland), and The Law of Dreams by Peter Behrens (The Law of Dreams)
  • Ballantine: The View from Mount Joy by Lorna Landvik, Loving Frank by Nancy Horan, The Faraday Girls by Monica McInerny, and Midnight Rambler by James Swain (Loaded Dice)
  • Broadway Books: Outside In by Courtney Thorne-Smith and Scream-Free Parenting by Hal Edward Runkel
  • Farrar, Straus & Giroux: Tree of Smoke by Denis Johnson (Jesus’ Son), The Quiet Girl by Peter Hoag, Gomorrah: A Personal Journey into the Violent International Empire of Naples’ Organized Crime System by Roberto Saviano
  • Houghton Mifflin: Exit Ghost by Philip Roth (Everyman), Maynard and Jennica by Rudolph Delson, The Hearts of Horses by Molly Gloss (Wild Life), and Proust Was a Neuroscientist by Jonah Lehrer
  • Clarion: Beanball by Gene Fehler
  • Kingfisher: Tree Shaker: The Story of Nelson Mandela by Bill Keller and Zodiac Girls: Discount Diva by Cathy Hopkins
  • Penguin: The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz, Lottery by Patricia Wood, How Starbucks Saved My Life by Michael Gates Gill, Interred with Their Bones by Jennifer Lee Carrell, and The Russian Concubine by Kate Furnivall
  • Grove/Atlantic: The Art of Political Murder: Who Killed the Bishop? by Francisco Goldman and The Bible: A Biography by Karen Armstrong (The Great Transformation)
  • Harcourt: A Slave No More: The Emancipation of John Washington and Wallace Turnage by David W. Blight and The Spanish Bow by Andromeda Romano-Lox

Xpress Reviews for Week of May 1, 2007

Filed under: New Books, Book Reviewing — Ann Kim @ 11:00 am

It’s May already - how time flies, alas.

Here are the titles reviewed in our web-only, freely accessible Xpress Reviews section.

Xpress Reviews for Week of May 1, 2007
** - means that it is a starred title

FICTION
Conroy, Robert. 1945. Ballantine.

**Ignatius, David. Body of Lies. Norton.

**Koontz, Dean. The Good Guy. Bantam.

**Los Angeles Noir. Akashic.

Miner, Valerie. After Eden. Univ. of Oklahoma.

Skloot, Floyd. Patient 002. Rager Media.

NONFICTION
After Sputnik: 50 Years of the Space Age.
Smithsonian: HarperCollins. 2007. 256p. ed. by Martin Collins.

Bego, Mark. Billy Joel: The Biography. Thunder’s Mouth: Avalon, dist. by Publishers Group West.

Carr, Matthew. The Infernal Machine: A History of Terrorism, from the Assassination of Tsar Alexander II to Al-Qaeda. New Pr, dist. by Norton.

Cliff, Nigel. The Shakespeare Riots: Revenge, Drama and Death in Nineteenth-Century America. Random.

Cruise, Jorge. The 3-Hour Diet™ Cookbook: Lose up to 10 Pounds in the First 14 Days. Collins: HarperCollins.

**Gura, Trisha. Lying in Weight: The Hidden Epidemic of Eating Disorders in Adult Women. HarperCollins.

Kolata, Gina. Rethinking Thin: The New Science of Weight Loss—and the Myths and Realities of Dieting. Farrar.

**Morwood, Mike & Penny van Oosterzee. A New Human: The Startling Discovery and Strange Story of the “Hobbits” of Flores, Indonesia. Smithsonian: HarperCollins.

AUDIO
Binchy, Maeve. Whitethorn Woods. Books on Tape.

Roby, Kimberla Lawson. Love & Lies. Sound Library: BBC Audiobooks America.

 

 


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April 27, 2007

Sundance recommends…

Filed under: Book Reviewing — Anna Katterjohn @ 1:52 pm

While book review pages are being cut drastically (see “Save This Endangered Species: Book Reviews“), Sundance catalog is doing its part to promote literature—or to weasel its branding onto everything. The Sundance Reader’s Collection offers eight paperback “staff favorites, guaranteed to inspire lofty dreams and earthly passions” for $98.

Apparently, they are banking on their recommendation alone.  Sure, they can peddle a nice western flowing skirt for $150, But who said they had good taste in literature? The only information offered about the books is title and author, that they are paperbacks, and their page counts—they are fiction, history, memoir, YA, essay collections, anything goes.

The collection includes a YA book that School Library Journal recommends, John Knowles’s A Separate Peace; a “classic of outdoor literature,” Beryl Markham’s West with the Night; a 1998 novel that LJ’s review calls a “bland modern-day fairy tale” and “A marginal purchase for large public libraries,” Murray Bail’s Eucalyptus; and a collection of New Yorker pieces by Adam Gopnik, Paris to the Moon; among others.  

If these odd bundled-buys take off (which I can’t help but doubt), perhaps Sundance can do its part to save book reviews and advertise their collections in book review pages. Or, they could invest in external intellectual property and offer reviews from an established source instead of empty recommendations that almost seem to mock the craft.

An Ugly Award Only A Winner Could Love

Filed under: Mysteries, Awards, Literary Awards, Authors — Wilda Williams @ 12:23 pm

There is the Oscar, a bald naked man holding a sword. And the Emmy, a winged woman holding an atom. And then there’s the Edgar, a ceramic bust of Edgar Allen Poe and probably the ugliest award on the planet.

 edgaraward.gif

I mention this because the statuette’s unattractiveness (not Poe himself) was a major theme at last night’s 61st Annual  Edgar Awards, held at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York City.  It started at Table 44 where I was honored to be sitting with such noted mystery authors as Julia Spencer-Fleming (All Mortal Flesh), Marshall Karp (The Rabbit Factory), and Jonathon King (Eye of Vengence and the forthcoming Acts of Nature, to be reviewed in our May 15 issue). Noting that each seat at the table had an Edgar Allan Poe Noddler or bobblehead, King and I discussed how these were so much more attractive than the real award.

 11470.jpg

And then King told me when he won his Edgar Award in 2003 for The Blue Edge of Midnight, his then-ten-year-old daughter offered to repaint the statuette to make it prettier.

It went downhill from there. One presenter advised winners to enjoy their ugly awards, and then when the winner of the Best First Novel by American Author was about to be announced, one of the statuettes broke in half. Was it due to the malevolent presence of Grand Master Stephen King, as one waggish presenter suggested, or did the Edgar, as another presenter noted, finally realize how ugly he was and broke in two? Whatever the cause, the winner Alex Berenson (The Faithful Spy) good-naturedly clutched both pieces of the Edgar in his hands as he thanked his editors and Random House for booking his hotel in Boston where he met his current girlfriend while on his book tour..

Moderated by Today show weatherman Al Roker, the ceremony moved quickly, ending at a surprisingly early 9:45 pm. The night’s biggest surprise was Jason Goodwin winning the Best Novel Award for The Janissary Tree. Goodwin could not be present to accept his award as his publisher had been too cheap to pay for his airplane ticket to fly over from England, an act publisher Sarah Crichton said she “deeply, deeply regrets” as she accepted the award. Crichton was refreshingly honest as she told the audience that she hadn’t expected Goodwin’s tale of a eunuch detective in 1830s Istanbul to win.

Other winners included Naomi Hirahara (Snakeskin Shamisen) for Best Paperback Original, James L. Swanson (Manhunt; The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer) for Best Fact Crime, and E.J. Wagner (The Science of Sherlock HOlmes) for Best Critical/Biographical. Interestingly, the winners for Best Television Feature/Mini-Series Teleplay were the writers for Season 4 of HBO’s series The Wire, and these included some of the finest crime fiction authors working today: Dennis Lehane, George Pelecanos, and Richard Price.

The highlight of the evening was the recognition of Stephen King as a Mystery Grand Master. After an amusing introduction by Dave Barry and  Ridley Pearson, as well as an inadvertently almost forgotten Donald Westlake,  KIng told the audience that he never called himself a horror writer and that the first three adult books he checked out from the local bookmobile that came through his Maine hometown were crime novels by Richard Stark, Ed McBain, and John D. McDonald. “These books changed my life,” King said, explaining that  they opened up his mind to what he could write about. “The reason why mystery and suspense are the most important genres today,” he said,” is because they mimic life. How we enter and leave life is a mystery.”  King ended his brief defense of genre fiction, stating firmly, “anyone who says this isn’t mainstream fiction is full of bullshit.”

Save Book Review Coverage—Write Xpress Reviews!

Filed under: Current Events, Book Reviewing, Publishing — Heather McCormack @ 10:54 am

It’s hard to be a book. That is to say, it’s hard to be a book and get noticed because there are so many and, as National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) member Scott McLemee pointed out in his April 25th “Critical Mass” column, book review coverage in newspapers is making like the dodo and dying out.

To stop this insanity, the NBCC is launching an awareness campaign throughout the month of May that is calling for people to sign a petition to stop the nixing of The Atlanta Journal Constitution’s book review section. I’m going to echo McLemee and our own Wilda Williams (see her blog Save This Endangered Species: Book Reviews) and say that librarians can and should play their part in this initiative. Without books, many of you wouldn’t have a pay check, much less a rewarding profession. Without book dialogue, you wouldn’t have patrons to browse your stacks.

This is my ninth year in the book review world, and I can’t imagine fitting in anywhere else (except maybe the chocolate-tasting arena, if that even exists). My point: I want to give back, and the best way I can is to expand LJ’s coverage of our pulp friends. Doing so in print is not feasible owing to paper costs, etc. Doing so online via our weekly Xpress Reviews, however, is easy.

Almost two years into our online book review experiment, things are going better than I ever expected. Not only have we increased the number and quality of books covered (Ann Burns now contributes audio books), we’re finding an increasingly appreciative audience. I can’t supply any hard numbers, but I think it’s safe to say that even the die-hardest of print-demanding librarians are beginning to see the perks of online reviews—they’re free; they’re always there; they’re informed, impartial, and to the point (like LJ’s print sisters); and they’re going to multiply like rabbits if I have anything to say about it.

With this blog, I hereby invite the closeted book reviewers of the world to bust out of their moth-balled existences and join my online-only roster. Whatever your subject area, I need you to make this venture a success. Submit an application today, save book reviews, and maybe even save the world.

April 25, 2007

Colbert Promotes Poetry His Way

Filed under: Current Events, Public Libraries, Poetry — Heather McCormack @ 5:21 pm

Thanks to the efforts of my media-obsessed little sister, last week I had the opportunity to sit in the studio audience of The Colbert Report, Comedy Central’s often gut-busting spoof on the conservative political pundit show. The guest: actor Sean Penn. His affront to the Reagan-looking Colbert: writing (and reading) a poem condemning President Bush for our involvement in Iraq.

What twisted the TV host’s tighty whites most of all was the actor’s metaphor for Bush’s sins: “soiled and blood-soaked underwear.” To settle the score, Colbert challenged Penn to a “Meta-Free-Phor-All” moderated by former U.S. poet laureate Robert Pinksy. Watching this all being filmed wasn’t nearly as exciting as its implications. Colbert & Co. looked like wooden actors from my seat, I was dying of thirst (no water allowed), hungry, and needing to use the ladies’ room.

But as I tried to point out to my screaming sibling, they were promoting poetry during National Poetry Month. Colbert actually quoted Pinksy, who even took a silly swipe at Robert Frost. This had to be good for what often seems like a dying genre, though I couldn’t find any evidence of sales spikes for Pinky’s The Inferno of Dante. LJ’s Barbara Hoffert, a great supporter and writer of poetry herself, would have been proud. For her take on the best poetry of 2006, click here—and keep poetry promotion going all year long.

April 24, 2007

Xpress Reviews for Week of Apr. 24, 2007

Filed under: New Books, Graphic Novels, Book Reviewing — Ann Kim @ 11:41 am

Hullo!

Here are the titles reviewed in this week’s web-only, freely-accessible Library Journal Xpress Reviews section. (Remember, there’s that handy-dandy RSS feed!). Also, we always welcome suggestions, comments, praise, criticisms, kittens, rainbows, and flowers.

Xpress Reviews for Week of Apr. 24, 2007
** - means that it is a starred title

FICTION
Abani, Chris. The Virgin of Flames. Penguin.

Hall, Oakley. Love and War in California. Thomas Dunne Bks: St. Martin’s.

Leonard, Elmore. Up in Honey’s Room. Morrow.

Pradhan, Monica. The Hindi-Bindi Club. Bantam.

NONFICTION
Axelrod, Alan. Blooding at Great Meadows: Young George Washington and the Battle That Shaped the Man. Running Pr.

Ford, Anne with John-Richard Thompson. On Their Own: Creating an Independent Future for Your Adult Child with Learning Disabilities and ADHD. Newmarket.

Sarig, Roni. Third Coast: Outkast, Timbaland, and How Hip-Hop Became a Southern Thing. Da Capo.

GRAPHIC NOVELS
Bagge, Peter. Buddy Does Jersey: The Complete Buddy Bradley Stories from “Hate” Comics. Vol. 3 (1994–98). Fantagraphics.

Bendis, Brian Michael (text) & Steve McNiven & Mike Deodato. The New Avengers. Vol. 4: The Collective. Marvel.

The Duchess of Northumberland (text) & Colin Simpson (illus.). The Poison Diaries. Abrams.

Kisaragi, Hirotaka. Innocent Bird. Vol. 1. BLU: Tokyopop.

Kuwabara, Yuko. Alcohol, Shirt & Kiss. Juné: Digital Manga.

Lapham, David. Silverfish. Vertigo: DC Comics.

Lien-Cooper, Barb & Park Cooper (text) & Jimmy Bott (illus.). Half Dead. Dabel Brothers: Marvel.

Sakuishi, Harold. Beck: Mongolian Chop Squad. Vol. 7. Tokyopop.

**Slott, Dan (text) & Will Conrad & others (illus.). She-Hulk. Vol. 4: Laws of Attraction. Marvel.

**TenNapel, Doug. Gear. Image Comics.

Williams III, J.H. & Dan Curtis Johnson (text) & Seth Fisher (illus.). Batman: Snow. DC Comics.

Yamada, Futaro (text) & Masaki Segawa (text & illus.). Basilisk. Vol. 4. Del Rey: Ballantine.

AUDIO
**Clinch, Jon. Finn. Recorded Bks.

Parker, Robert B. High Profile. Books on Tape.

Steel, Danielle. Sisters. Books on Tape.

Subway Sighting: Le Philibert de Marilou

Filed under: Graphic Novels, Publishing, Public Libraries, Reader's Advisory — Heather McCormack @ 10:30 am

I’m only human in New York City, which means I often get sick of looking at human faces. In fact, I’m supposed to avoid looking at them because you never know—a tired glance could be taken as a murderous glare, a smile for an invitation to run all the bases.

But I digress. What I’m trying to say is that I love cartoons. Give me a vulnerable, gorgeous French cartoon girl like the one pictured on the cover of Capucine and Olivier Ka’s Le Philibert de Marilou, and I’m all eyes. That sounds bad, but all I mean is it’s interesting as hell to look at an artist’s rendering of humanity. 

To boot, I’m glad to blog about my first foreign-language sighting because America is a country of multiple tongues, duh. Plenty of libraries order French materials, and given the popularity of graphic novels, they should know about this notable title by Capucine and Ka. Not much information in English exists on either author, or their creation for that matter.

With the help of Google’s not-exactly-dead-on translation mechanism and my college French, however, I’ve deduced that the graphic novel tells the story of a lonely, beautiful, celibate 30-something (Marilou) whose clinical neuroses take the form of a terrific monster (Philibert) that prevents her from being happy—and cultivating a romantic relationship with a man.

The kids and critics alike seem to dig this dark story—several French teens and twentysomethings mention it on their MySpace profiles, and it appears Ka, a Lebanese-born Frenchman known for his children’s books and comics, has a reputation for intense stories. His latest graphic novel, Pourquoi j’ai tué Pierre (Why I Killed Pierre), a winner at this year’s International Comic Book Festival in Angoulême, recounts the sexual abuse Ka suffered at the hands of a priest at a summer camp when he was 12.

LJ, unfortunately, does not get in many French translations of graphic novels, a pity considering the seemingly smokin’ talent. French speakers in America, you’re one lucky piece of the library demographic. 

 

April 23, 2007

Save This Endangered Species: Book Reviews

Filed under: Uncategorized, New Books, Book Reviewing, Publishing — Wilda Williams @ 5:40 pm

Thanks to pressure from corporate owners and shareholders eager to turn a quick profit, newspapers in recent years have been cutting back or eliminating their book review coverage. Their main excuse: not enough advertising from publishers to support the reviews. But manufacturers of sporting equipment don’t advertise either, and I see little cutback in the sports pages.

Just last week the Los Angeles Times folded its book review section into an opinion section , although editor David Ulin argued in his editor’s note that these were  changes “to forge a synthesis between print and online content that will allow us not only to maintain our commitment to engaged reviews and criticism but also to expand the very nature of our books coverage.”

Also last week the Atlanta Journal-Constitution eliminated its book reviewer position but did “generously” permit its reviewer, Teresa Weaver, to apply for another position at the newspaper. Fed up with the increasing erosion of book coverage, the National Book Critics Circle has launched a campaign to save book reviews, including a petition to save AJC’s well-regarded book review section, and a new series on the NBCC’s blog Critical Mass that will feature posts by concerned writers, interviews with book editors, and more.

 nbcc.jpg

So put down that book you are reading, get off your couch, and turn on that computer. Join the over 1000 authors (including Ian Rankin, Richard Powers, and Michael Connolly), editors, librarians, and booklovers in signing this petition. Save the Book Review!

 

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