Archive for August, 2007

Newsflash

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

Denise Brown, sister of the murdered Nicole Brown, has backed out of her appearance on Oprah to discuss the upcoming publication of If I Did It by O. J. Simpson.

And in another new development, Publishers Weekly reports that Barnes & Noble has changed its mind about stocking the book when it is released on September 13. The company had initially said it would not carry the title in its bricks and mortar stores because it did not believe there would be strong enough demand among consumers, but online orders changed their minds. As a result, the print run has been increased by Beaufort Books.

Over on FictionL the discussion is whether this book is fiction or nonfiction. What do you think? Is there a lot of demand in your library for the title?

Publisher To Print 125,000 Copies of If I Did It

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

Although Barnes & Noble has announced that it won’t sell If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer by O. J. Simpson in its bricks and mortar stores, the title has become a hot seller on their online site B&N.com–currently (11pm Tuesday evening) it’s at No. 10. Amazon lists it at No. 79. So obviously, even without prepublication reviews, the book is doing well. This may be in part because on September 13 Oprah will bring together Nicole Brown Simpson’s sister Denise, and Ron Goldman’s parents on her show. Denise Brown reportedly objects to the book’s publication by the Goldmans. Borders has decided that it will stock the book, but Wal-Mart and Target will not.

Beaufort Books, the publisher, has announced a 125,000 print run and has said that they have 116,000 preorders already. The book is to be shipped on September 10 or 11. Publishers Weekly has more information here.

RA Run Down

Monday, August 27th, 2007

Hmm. Well, last week we pointed out that Ian Rankin had stirred up a couple of controversies including a rumor that J. K. Rowling was working on a crime novel. He’s since said it was a joke, but at least one person is now wondering if this was a very clever way of getting his name (and picture) into the news. Well, I guess he had to have something to discuss at the book festival since he doesn’t have a new book to talk about.

Okay, I retired from my “real jobâ€? at the beginning of this month, but I have several other things going on including editing this blog, so I haven’t really felt any different about my age. Until now. Now I officially feel old. American Girl has released a new historical doll. Meet Julie is the first book in the series that goes along with the doll. Julie and her friend Ivy live in the 1970s. An official spokesperson from the company says that “Moms flipping through the book will say, ‘Oh, we did that (put their hair up using orange juice cans).’â€? Well, maybe, but not all of us remember the 70s in terms of the Bicentennial, which is their chosen focus—a “return to optimism after the Vietnam War and Watergate.â€? My most vivid memory of the 70s is listening to Alan Ginsberg do a reading during the march on Washington in May, 1970 after the shootings at Kent State. And then there were shootings at Jackson State and there was Watergate and Nixon’s resignation and pardon and lowering the voting age to 18 and getting out of Vietnam and Paul leaving the Beatles, for Pete’s sake. Oh, wait, that’s probably in the book. I don’t really remember a Bicentennial. But that’s just me. Hmm. I’m not only old, but cynical I guess.

Everyone has probably read this story by now, but Di Herald suggested what I think is the best spin on it. How about thinking about it this way: An Associated Press poll released Tuesday revealed that 75% of adults surveyed had read at least one book last year. This compares favorably to a National Endowment for the Arts report titled “Reading at Risk� which found that only 57% of American adults had read a book in 2002. And Publishers Weekly cites an annual study that shows that the time consumers spent reading went up one hour in 2006 compared to 2005, and book purchases were up 3%. Hooray!

Poet and exquisite short story writer Grace Paley passed away this week. She was 84. Paley was not a prolific writer, making a conscious decision to save some time for family and political activism. She called herself a combative pacifist according to the Washington Post. Maud Newton has a lovely tribute to her.

The American Library Association’s Young Adult Library Services Association has posted the nominations for the 2007 Teens’ Top Ten Reads. Teens will vote during Teen Read Week October 14-20,2007.

How does a bestseller happen for an unknown author? Timothy Ferriss, author of The 4-Hour Workweek tells us how he did it.

I love Kimbooktu–the blog of gadgets for booklovers. There are possessed books–walk by them and one of them mysteriously slides out. And how about the book chaise–a chair with storage for your books. Much more.

And let’s end this week with something really fun–take this quiz to see which book you are.

Bestseller Mashup

Sunday, August 26th, 2007
Fiction
  1. Khaled Hosseini – A Thousand Splendid Suns
  2. Sandra Brown – Play Dirty
  3. Stephanie Meyer – Eclipse
  4. Suzanne Brockmann – Force of Nature
  5. Nancy Horan – Loving Frank
  6. James Patterson – The Quickie
  7. Daniel Silva – The Secret Servant
  8. Annie Dillard – The Maytrees
  9. William Gibson – Spook Country
  10. Brian Herbert – Sandworms of Dune

Narrative Nonfiction
  1. Duane Chapman- You Can Run But You Can’t Hide
  2. Tony Dungy – Quiet Strength
  3. Marcus Luttrell – Lone Survivor
  4. Christopher Hitchens – God Is Not Great
  5. Denise Jackson – It’s All About Him
  6. Ishmael Beah – A Long Way Gone
  7. Alan Weisman – The World Without Us
  8. Barbara Kingsolver – Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
  9. Timothy Ferriss – The 4-Hour Workweek
  10. Neil Strauss – The Game
And Keep Your Eye on These:
  • Eric Jerome Dickey – Waking With Enemies
  • Mary Gordon – Circling My Mother
  • Doris Lessing – The Cleft
  • Megan McCafferty – Fourth Comings
  • Matt Ruff – Bad Monkeys
  • Wilfrid Sheed – The House That George Built
  • Dalia Sofer – The Septembers of Shiraz

New This Week

Sunday, August 26th, 2007

    TUESDAY
    Fiction
  • Strip Search by William Bernhardt
  • The Elves of Cintra by Terry Brooks
  • Drop Shot by Harlan Coben
  • Dark Possession by Christine Feehan
  • Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade by Diana Gabaldon
  • The Wheel of Darkness by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child
  • Bones to Ashes by Kathy Reichs



  • Nonfiction
  • Super Crunchers by Ian Ayres
  • Katie: The Real Story by Edward Klein

Subgenre Spotlight: New Perspectives in History

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007

Here’s the thing: the allure of the “expert” is pervasive in our culture. It’s easy to talk ourselves out of providing well-rounded reader’s advisory services, because we feel we have to defer to the experts: the experts in RA theory; the experts in classification; the expert at our own library who reads a mystery a day and knows all Mystery’s subgenres cold. And to a certain extent there’s something to be said for recognizing expertise and making use of it. I make no bones about the fact that I work with a librarian who reads and knows a lot more Science Fiction than I do.

But what do I do the days when I’m on the desk and she’s off? And a Science Fiction reader asks for assistance?

There’s the quandary. As much as we’d all like to be experts, it is simply impossible to read everything (although many of us, in love with books and readers, give it the old college try). So I for one would like to give a shout-out to the generalists among us: the advisors who may well be experts in certain genres, but who also recognize the value (and it does have value, even in our culture of specialization) of knowing a little something about a lot of everything.

Which is all a very long-winded way to introduce a new feature: Subgenre Spotlight. In certain posts we’ll share genre and subgenre definitions from the Reader’s Advisor Online, and provide a short reading list of titles pulled from the database.

Today’s subgenre: a Nonfiction offering. “New Perspectives,” a subgenre of History, is defined as “offering facts and evidence garnered through extensive research, but their authors often interpret those facts in new ways, and seek to expose historical theories or stories that they believe have been hidden or misrepresented. They provide the ‘other side’ of the typically accepted historical stories, with the hope that they may change how history is perceived. Many are written from the points of view of marginalized or minority populations.”

A few representative titles include:

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, by Dee Brown;
Masters of Chaos: The Secret History of the Special Forces, by Linda Robinson;
Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer, by James Swanson;
Rising from the Rails: Pullman Porters and the Making of the Black Middle Class, by Larry Tye; and
The Boys’ Crusade: The American Infantry in Northwestern Europe, 1944-1945, by Paul Fussell.

Happy generalizing! (We’d love it if you’d like to explore the subgenre, its titles, and its read-alikes a bit more, and tell us what you think: please feel free to sign up for a free trial of Reader’s Advisor Online!)

Week of August 20 2007

Sunday, August 19th, 2007

Well, here’s the RA news for this week. We’re getting into the Fall publishing season now, so expect lots more in the coming weeks.

J. K. Rowling was sighted in Edinburgh working on a new book. Ian Rankin, her neighbor, told a reporter at the Edinburgh International Book Festival that his wife had spotted Rowling writing away in a cafe, and that she is working on a crime novel.

Rankin, author of the Inspector Rebus series, also stirred up another controversy at the Festival when he said that many of the writers of the most graphic crime fiction these days are women, and many are lesbians. Val McDermid was spitting mad. Rankin says he was misquoted, and McDermid later said they are still friends, and that she was angry at the media for how they reported the story. Rankin, she said, danced at her wedding (to a woman).

O. J. Simpson’s book will be published after all (in October) by Beaufort Books. An “untraditional” publisher. The rights were obtained by the family of Ronald Goldman, but Nicole Brown, sister of Denise Brown, whose death O. J. Simpson described in the original book called If I Did It, has called for a boycott. More here.

On September 5, Penguin will publish the 50th anniversary edition of On the Road by Jack Kerouac. This edition, with the subtitle “The Original Scroll,” is a word-for-word duplication of the original, with deleted scenes restored, and with the names of the real people instead of the pseudonyms that Kerouac used. While Kerouac reportedly typed his manuscript single-spaced on eight pages of large tracing paper, which he later taped into a scroll, the Penguin edition will be in standard book format, which is good news for library shelvers!

Both Min Jin Lee and A. S. Byatt recently wrote tributes to Middlemarch by George Eliot. Min Jin Lee (author of Free Food for Millionaires) says it is her favorite novel. She likes it because it is “about a community and how its citizens live through their desires and errors.” A. S. Byatt says it is possible to argue that Middlemarch is the greatest English novel.

Jennifer Weiner has some amazing examples of paperback publishers trivializing some serious women’s books by giving them chick lit covers. I mean Allegra Goodman’s Intuition? Carolyn Parkhurst’s Lost and Found?

And speaking of chick lit, Anna David, author of Party Girl, didn’t think there was anything wrong with this label. She was so happy to get her book published that she didn’t think it mattered. But now she says she gets it: The term “chick lit” is never a compliment. “I wrote a book about the most important and profound experience I’d ever had—getting and staying sober—and it’s being categorized among books about wearing Manolo Blahniks while trying to land a guy?”

With Karl Rove’s resignation from the White House comes the inevitable speculation about whether he’ll shop a book. Jonathan Karp, publisher of the Twelve imprint from Hachette, sums it up this way: “Any publisher would be concerned that this would be a partisan, boilerplate, self-serving book,” Karp says, “and that’s a risk with any book from a former administration official. The question is whether he’ll write a candid, forthcoming, interesting book. And if he does, he’s very well-suited to write a useful first-draft of history.”

Speaking of first-drafts of history, someone once said that journalism is the first rough draft of history. But Jack Shafer in the New York Times in his review of Robert Novak’s The Prince of Darkness, says that Novak’s work was the first rough draft of journalism. Some interesting revelations in the book, though: Novak admits that he had a drinking problem, as well as a gambling problem, and that he often gave politicians the choice of being either a target or a source. He admits that he knowingly voted twice for Eisenhower, and that he was “used” by Richard Nixon and Jeb Magruder tricked him into publishing a story to their own ends. He’s surprised this didn’t happen more often. Huh. Maybe it did. Valerie Plame anyone?

Wuthering Heights was picked as the top romantic novel in a recent poll. Here are the top 20.

Oh…and here’s a must-buy. You can never have enough baby name books: Sci-Fi Baby Names: 500 Out-of-This-World Baby Names from Anakin to Zardoz by Robert Schnakenberg.

More next week!

Bestseller Mashup

Sunday, August 19th, 2007
Fiction
  1. Khaled Hosseini – A Thousand Splendid Suns
  2. Sherrilyn Kenyon – Devil May Cry
  3. Stephanie Meyer – Eclipse
  4. James Patterson – The Quickie
  5. William Gibson – Spook Country
  6. Daniel Silva – The Secret Servant
  7. Brian Herbert – Sandworms of Dune
  8. James Lee Burke – The Tin Roof Blowdown
  9. Nora Roberts – High Noon
  10. Annie Dillard – The Maytrees
Narrative Nonfiction
  1. Conn Iggulden – The Dangerous Book for Boys
  2. Duane Chapman- You Can Run But You Can’t Hide
  3. Tony Dungy – Quiet Strength
  4. Marcus Luttrell – Lone Survivor
  5. Christopher Hitchens – God Is Not Great
  6. Denise Jackson – It’s All About Him
  7. Ishmael Beah – A Long Way Gone
  8. Alan Weisman – The World Without Us
  9. Barbara Kingsolver – Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
  10. Tim Weiner – Legacy of Ashes
And Keep Your Eye on These:
    Eric Jerome Dickey – Waking With Enemies Mary Gordon – Circling My Mother Nancy Horan – Loving Frank Doris Lessing – The Cleft Megan McCafferty – Fourth Comings Wilfrid Sheed – The House That George Built Dalia Sofer – The Septembers of Shiraz

New This Week

Sunday, August 19th, 2007

    TUESDAY
    Fiction
  • Seeing Redd (The Looking Glass Wars) by Frank Beddor
  • Away by Amy Bloom
  • Agnes and the Hitman by Jennifer Crusie
  • The Water Cure by Percival Everett
  • The Sanctuary by Raymond Khoury

  • Nonfiction
  • Ike: An American Hero by Michael Korda
  • Letters to a Young Teacher by Jonathan Kozol
  • Knit Together: Discover God’s Pattern for Your Life by Debbie Macomber

  • THURSDAY
    Fiction
  • Still Summer by Jacquelyn Mitchard

New Micro-Histories

Sunday, August 19th, 2007

Ever have a hard time keeping your go-to list of nonfiction micro-histories up-to-date? Me too…it seems like publishers are now churning out these nonfiction crowd-pleasers faster than I can keep up with them. Here’s just a few of the newer ones I’ve found:

IQ: A Smart History of a Failed Idea, by Stephen Murdoch;
Brainwash: The Secret History of Mind Control, by Dominic Streatfeild;
The Cloudspotter’s Guide: The Science, History, and Culture of Clouds, by Gavin Pretor-Pinney;
Sunday: A History of the First Day from Babylonia to the Super Bowl, by Craig Harline;
and
Impotence: A Cultural History, by Angus McLaren.

Read any great micro-histories lately that you don’t see on this list? Let us know; we’d love to keep offering updated lists like this, as well as including them in Reader’s Advisor Online!

Sarah Statz Cords is the author of The Real Story: A Guide to Nonfiction Reading Interests, which has a section on microhistories that are included in the Reader’s Advisor Online as well.