Archive for January, 2009

Planes, Trains, and Lanes

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Our peripatetic spies spotted the following books being read by their fellow travelers this week. We decided just for fun to try categorizing the readers by age and gender to see if we could spot any patterns. This is what we came up with. Any comments?

20-Something Women

  • Harper Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird
  • Stephenie Meyer – Eclipse
  • Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons – Watchmen


  • 20-Something Men

  • Joel Garreau – Edge City: Life on the New Frontier
  • Ayn Rand – Atlas Shrugged


  • 30-Something Women

  • Steve Dublanica – Waiter Rant: Thanks for the Tip–Confessions of a Cynical Waiter
  • Sara Gruen – Water for Elephants


  • 30-Something Men

  • Frederick P. Brooks – The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering, Anniversary Edition
  • Michael Lewis – Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game
  • Jim Rogers – Adventure Capitalist: The Ultimate Road Trip
  • Nassim Nicholas Taleb – Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets


  • Middle-Aged Women

  • Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows – The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society


  • Middle-Aged Men

  • John Grisham – The Appeal
  • Bernard Malamud – A New Life
  • Steve Mulder and Ziv Yaar – The User is Always Right: A Practical Guide to Creating and Using Personas for the Web
  • Barack Obama – The Audacity of Hope


  • If you spot a title or two as you travel around, please share and we’ll include them in the column. Just send them to raoblog@lu.com

    Sunday, January 25th, 2009

    The readers’ advisory librarian’s weekly update, from a scan of more than 100 blogs, newsletters, magazines, newspapers and television. This blog is brought to you by the Reader’s Advisor Online, the subscription database based on Libraries Unlimited’s Genreflecting Advisory series. We’d love to hear from you. Feel free to comment on any of our posts, or contact us at rablog@lu.com.

    By Cindy Orr

    This Week In Books
    Hello to everyone in Denver for the ALA Midwinter conference. Safe travels. This week we have a bunch of big books coming out this week—John Grisham’s The Associate, the fourth in Louis McMaster Bujold’s The Sharing Knife series, and new titles by Suzanne Brockmann, Tim Dorsey, Jack Higgins, E. Lynn Harris, and Roger Zelazny among others, as well as a handful of nonfiction. As always, scroll down to the next entry to see the complete list in our New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer list. In Under the Radar this week we’ve featured some well reviewed Medical Thrillers. Look to the righthand column just under our Most Wanted Mashup for that one. And speaking of Most Wanted, the bestseller lists this week have a couple of new entries—Janice Y.K. Lee’s The Piano Teacher and Mounting Fears by Stuart Woods on the fiction side, plus Temple Grandin’s Animals Make Us Human and The Inheritance by David E. Sanger in nonfiction. Happy reading!

    PLA Approves RA Discussion Group
    Speaking of Midwinter, we’ll have some reports from attendees this week, but this interesting tidbit appeared on the PLA Blog. Two new discussion groups were approved—one for Readers Advisory Service, and another for Summer Reading Programs.

    YALSA’s Awards in Real Time
    Beginning at 7:45am Monday, ALA will cover the Youth awards in real time via Twitter. Take a look for the announcements of the Caldecott and Newberry Awards and others.

    Gwyneth Paltrow’s Reading List
    Gwyneth Paltrow has decided that the best way to escape January’s gray skies and cold weather is to curl up with a good book. In her current newsletter, she suggests three personal favorites—Jane Eyre, Crime and Punishment, and The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles. She also asked some of her friends—from Madonna to her Aunt Louise—to list their favorites as well. Madonna’s picks? The Bad Girl by Mario Vargas Llosa, Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts and the Time Traveler’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger.

    Is the Digital Age Reshaping Literature?
    Time Magazine addresses that question in an intriguing article by Lev Grossman this week. Grossman’s thesis is that the novel developed not just because of writers with new ideas, but “it was shaped by the forces of money and technology just as much as by creative genius.” As Grossman puts it, “New industrial printing techniques meant you could print lots of books cheaply; a modern capitalist marketplace had evolved in which you could sell them; and for the first time there was a large, increasingly literate, relatively well-off urban middle class to buy and read them.”

    Now, he says, the digital world is set to reshape publishing again. The result? The novel is “about to renew itself again, into something cheaper, wilder, trashier, more democratic and more deliriously fertile than ever.” The article is a fairly long one and well worth reading. Do you believe it? Let us know. On a related note, HarperCollins is already trying to tap into the new possibilities, and has recently bought three books from the electronic slushpile.

    The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, the Movie
    As if it hasn’t sold enough copies, The Story of Edgar Sawtelle is set to become a Universal Pictures movie, with Tom Hanks and Oprah Winfrey as producers.

    Subway Map of Publishing Trends
    This is a pretty fun link. The Spanish website SoyBits designed a subway-style map based on the news of publishing trends they reported over the past year. Take a look.

    Vote on Social Networking Sites for Readers
    Here’s your chance to share how you use social networking sites for readers. So far, Good Reads is winning.

    Authors
    Agatha Christie – new website launched
    Joseph Ellis - on why the pen is mightier than the laptop
    Temple Grandin - interview
    Ann Patchett – it’s not so much what you read, but that you read
    Edgar Allan Poe – gets his own stamp
    Salman Rushdie – reflects on the fatwa

    Lists
    Left Coast Crime Dilys Award Nominees

    Lighthearted Link of the Week
    John Stewart and Senior Poetry Analyst, John Oliver, on Rod Blagojevich’s Quotation from Tennyson’s Ulysses

    That’s all for today. See you next week with more news from the RA world.

    New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer

    Sunday, January 25th, 2009

    Readers will see these titles in bookstores for the first time this week.

    Fiction

  • Laurie Albanese and Laura Morowitz – The Miracles of Prato – 1/27/09
  • Kelley Armstrong – Men of the Otherworld – 1/27/09
  • Suzanne Brockmann – Dark of Night – 1/27/09
  • Louis McMaster Bujold – The Sharing Knife, Volume Four: Horizon – 1/27/09
  • Tim Dorsey – Nuclear Jellyfish – 1/27/09
  • Elissa Elliott – Eve: A Novel of the First Woman – 1/27/09
  • Jamie Ford – The Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet – 1/27/09
  • John Grisham – The Associate – 1/27/09
  • E. Lynn Harris – Basketball Jones – 1/27/09
  • Jack Higgins – A Darker Place – 1/27/09
  • Yu Hua – Brothers – 1/27/09
  • Ian Morson – Falconer and the Ritual of Death – 2/1/09
  • Matt Benyon Rees – The Samaritan’s Secret – 2/1/09
  • Chiara Stangalino & Maxim Jakubowski – Rome Noir – 2/1/09
  • Roger Zelazny – The Dead Man’s Brother – 1/27/09


  • Non-Fiction

  • Bryan Burrough – The Big Rich: The Rise and Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Fortunes – 1/27/09
  • Steven Gaines – Fool’s Paradise: Players, Poseurs, and the Culture of Excess in South Beach – 1/27/09
  • Adam Gopnik – Angels and Ages: A Short Book About Darwin, Lincoln, and Modern Life – 1/27/09
  • Harold Holzer & Joshua Wolf Shenk – In Lincoln’s Hand: His Original Manuscripts with Commentary by Distinguished Americans – 1/27/09
  • Jeff Jarvis – What Would Google Do? – 1/27/09
  • Tamara Lowe – Get Motivated!: Overcome Any Obstacle, Achieve Any Goal, and Accelerate Your Success with Motivational DNA – 1/27/09
  • Neil deGrasse Tyson – The Pluto Files – 1/26/09
  • Alison Weir – The Mistress of the Monarchy: The Life of Katherine Swynford, Duchess of Lancaster – 1/27/09
  • Most Wanted Mashup: Hottest Books of the Week

    Sunday, January 25th, 2009

    Under the Radar: Great Medical Thrillers

    Sunday, January 25th, 2009

    Monday, January 19th, 2009

    The readers’ advisory librarian’s weekly update, from a scan of more than 100 blogs, newsletters, magazines, newspapers and television. This blog is brought to you by the Reader’s Advisor Online, the subscription database based on Libraries Unlimited’s Genreflecting Advisory series. We’d love to hear from you. Feel free to comment on any of our posts, or contact us at rablog@lu.com.

    By Cindy Orr

    This Week In Books
    What an exciting time! In honor of the Inauguration, and because we found a few more titles and authors, we’ve decided to leave our Under the Radar list of Barack Obama’s recent reading and favorite titles for one more week. Look to the right column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for that one, which we’ll update periodically. And speaking of updating, we’re still getting lists of best books of 2008, so keep checking back for our Cumulative Lists of Lists of the Best Books of 2008, which we’ll continue to update for awhile.

    The Most Wanted Mashup has a handful of titles new to the bestseller lists this week, including Janet Evanovich’s Plum Spooky, From Dead to Worse by Charlaine Harris and Richard North Patterson’s Eclipse in the fiction column. There’s only one new bestselling nonfiction title this week: Guilty by Ann Coulter. As always, look in the right hand column for this list.

    Our New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer list (look directly below this post), is a little short again this week as publishing gets geared up toward spring. But there are a handful of noteworthy titles that will hit the new shelves in the upcoming seven days, including new novels by Louise Penny and Bernard Cornwell. In nonfiction there’s Jimmy Carter’s We Can Have Peace in the Holy Land, and Gwen Ifill’s The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama. Look just below this entry for the complete list.

    While the weekly lists may be a little sparse, the amount of news is a bit overwhelming this week. I may have to save some of it for later, but here goes! And while we’re talking about 2009, do we really need eight books on Bernie Madoff?!

    Bestsellers of 2008
    According to The Bookseller, Khaled Hosseini and Ken Follett were the two most popular authors worldwide last year. Data was captured in 9 countries around the world to come up with the authors’ names. Third and fourth were Stieg Larsson and John Grisham.

    In the US in 2008, six houses—Random House, Simon & Schuster, Penguin USA, Hachette, HarperCollins and Macmillan—controlled about 85% of all the slots on the weekly hardcover bestseller lists and 80% of all paperback slots. In fiction, bestsellers tend to hit the top spot in their first week on sale—35 novels did so in 2008. But only a handful had any traction—26 of those stayed at #1 for just a week.

    Stephenie Meyer was the bestselling author in 2008, selling over 15 million books. Meyer’s success helped Hachette US dominate the top 50 with 17 titles from imprints owned by the group.

    In the area of 2008 Religion Bestsellers forty-seven different titles landed on PW’s monthly 2008 hardcover charts but only two of them—Joel Osteen’s Become a Better You (Free Press) and Emerson Eggerichs’ Love & Respect (Thomas Nelson)—enjoyed double-digit monthly runs, 11 times for each. In paperback, The Shack and 90 Minutes in Heaven dominated the number one spot.

    NEA Publishes New Report on Reading
    Dan Gioia of the National Endowment for the Arts announced the release of a new study on reading called “Reading on the Rise.” The report raised some interesting discussion from various sources, as Gioia insisted that it showed a “measurable cultural change in society’s commitment to literary reading” since an earlier report called “Reading at Risk” was published four years ago and an even more pessimistic report called “To Read or Not to Read” was released in 2007. The 2007 report linked a decline in reading test scores to a fall in reading for fun among adolescents. That report also collected data showing that the proportion of adults who read regularly for pleasure had declined.

    Then, only a year later, Gioia reported the proportion of overall literary reading increased among virtually all age groups, ethnic and demographic categories since 2002. It increased most dramatically among 18-to-24-year-olds, who had previously shown the most significant declines. Gioia attributes the gain to programs like the NEA’s Big Read, the Oprah Winfrey Show, Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight series, and good teachers and librarians.

    Nora Rawlinson over at EarlyWord points out that Michael Cader of Publishers Lunch believes that while Gioia is trying to use the data to show that his programs at the NEA were successful (he’s stepping down now), the change is more likely due to the fact that the most recent study includes online reading.

    Ann Patchett in the Wall Street Journal says it only makes sense that young people are reading more. After all, they were raised in the days of Harry Potter book parties and pretending to be sick so they could stay home and read the latest installment. And even though some people tried to ban the Harry books, Patchett says that made them all the more attractive to kids. But even if readers choose bad books, she says “I’m all for reading bad books because I consider them to be a gateway drug. People who read bad books now may or may not read better books in the future. People who read nothing now will read nothing in the future.”

    So was reading really in crisis and is it better now? David Ulin in the LA Times has another good point: “The answer depends on where you stand in the cultural landscape; how you think about reading itself. I’m not so sure reading really was in crisis — any more than it ever has been.” And “The NEA’s terms are not particularly useful. The key phrase in ‘Reading on the Rise’ is ‘literary reading,’ which the endowment defines as ‘novels and short stories, plays or poems.’ In 2008, for the first time, the NEA included online reading habits in its survey; as in previous years, nonfiction was left out of the loop.” What? You can’t count Team of Rivals or David McCullough or even Barack Obama’s books as literary reading? That’s just wrong.

    In a letter to Harper’s, literary critic Wyatt Mason argued that “Like playing competitive tennis at a world-class level or composing polyphonic music in one’s mind, reading a book is…a special way of being alive.” William Deresiewicz believes this attitude is held by too many academics who could be encouraging reading, but instead they are largely oblivious. “The existence of a reading public, a large mass of adults who read because they want to, simply never crosses anyone’s mind. If it did, it would be profoundly disturbing, because it would mean that people are reading without professional supervision, and that can’t be any good. As far as the academy is concerned, the literary transaction consists of a teacher, a student and a book, preferably an old one.” Sounds like a great way to kill off interest in reading.

    So what do you think? Is reading up or is reading down? And if it’s up, is the Big Read the reason?

    Researchers Believe Victorian Novels Not Only Reflected Society’s Morals, But Helped Shape Them
    A group of evolutionary psychologists studied Victorian novels and found that leading characters fell into “groups that mirrored the cooperative nature of a hunter-gatherer society, where individual urges for power and wealth were suppressed for the good of the community.” The effect of such moralistic literature was to uphold and instil a sense of fairness and altruism in society at large, according to the researchers.

    What If the New York Times Went Out of Business in, Say, May?
    According to Michael Hirschorn of The Atlantic, if that happened, it would be a sentimental moment, but not a disaster. There would be a culling of the journalistic herd, but the best would survive.

    All the President’s Literature
    The Wall Street Journal takes a look at the writing strengths of our Presidents.

    A Year of New Yorker Fiction
    In case you don’t read the New Yorker, you’re missing some great short fiction. The Millions has compiled a blog listing of all the short fiction published in 2008. It includes links to pieces by E. J. Doctorow, Alice Munro, John Updike, Salman Rushdie, Richard Ford, Ha Jin, Roddy Doyle and many others. Take a look here.

    Who Says the Book Business Is Dead?
    Peter Osnos in the Daily Beast argues that the eBook has arrived and so has the print-on-demand machine. Using these two new digital products can provide a way for the book business to pull itself out of the doldrums. The article includes statistics from OverDrive, which provides digital downloads to libraries. OverDrive’s over 8500 libraries downloaded over 10 million items in 2008, and its users increased by 45%. Osnos questions why bookstores are still skeptical about digital books.

    Simon and Schuster Launches New Website
    S & S has launched a spiffy new version of its website.

    Authors
    Hortense Calisher – obituary
    Inger Christensen – obituary
    Nelson DeMille – interview
    Temple Grandin - interview
    Christopher Hibbert – obituary
    Ravi Howard – wins Ernest Gaines Award
    John Mortimer – obituary
    Meg O’Brien – obituary
    Thomas Perry – video interview
    W. D. Snodgrass – obituary

    Lists
    8 Bernie Madoff Books in the Pipeline
    13 Jane Austen Variations
    AbeBooks Most Expensive Sales of 2008
    Borders Original Voices Winners
    Edgar Award Nominees
    Independent Mystery Booksellers December Bestsellers
    National Jewish Book Award Winners
    LJ’s Best Audiobooks of the Year
    LJ’s The Word on Street Lit
    LJ’s YA Nonfiction for Adults
    LJ’s Books for Dudes
    LJ’s June PrePub
    LJ’s June PrePub Mysteries
    PW’s Christian Marketplace Bestsellers January 2009
    Romantic Novel of the Year Shortlist
    Romantic Times Choice Award Nominees 2008
    Seattle Public Library’s New Year’s Resolutions for Readers by David Wright
    Story Prize Finalists
    2009 Tournament of Books Candidates
    Ten of the Best Butlers
    USA Today’s Calendar of Winter Books
    The Return of the Storytellers: Books of 2009
    Financial Times Books to Look Out for in 2009
    The Independent Highlights of 2009: Books
    The Guardian: Treats in Store for 2009
    100 Novels Everyone Should Read
    1000 Novels Everyone Must Read

    Lighthearted Link of the Week
    Dear Oprah

    Most Wanted Mashup: Hottest Books of the Week

    Sunday, January 18th, 2009

    Sunday, January 18th, 2009

    Readers will see these titles in bookstores for the first time this week.

    Fiction

  • Erica Bauermeister – The School of Essential Ingredients – 1/22/09
  • Bernard Cornwell – Agincourt – 1/20/09
  • Louise Penny – A Rule Against Murder – 1/20/09
  • Erica Spindler – Breakneck - 1/20/09
  • Lauren Willig – The Temptation of the Night Jasmine – 1/22/09


  • Non-Fiction

  • Peter Ackroyd – Poe: A Life Cut Short – 1/20/09
  • Jimmy Carter – We Can Have Peace in the Holy Land: A Plan That Will Work – 1/20/09
  • Helen Fisher – Why Him? Why Her?: Finding Real Love By Understanding Your Personality Type – 1/20/09
  • Hannah Holmes – The Well-Dressed Ape: A Natural History of Myself – 1/20/09
  • Gwen Ifill – The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama – 1/20/09
  • Robert G. Kaiser – So Much Damn Money: The Triumph of Lobbying and the Corrosion of American Government – 1/20/09
  • Penelope Leach – Child Care Today: Getting It Right for Everyone – 1/20/09
  • P.W. Singer – Wired for War: The Robotics Revolution and Conflict in the 21st Century – 1/22/09
  • David Whyte – The Three Marriages: Reimagining Work, Self, and Relationship – 1/22/09
  • Under the Radar: the Obama Book Club: What Is the President Reading?

    Sunday, January 18th, 2009

    Planes, Trains, and Lanes

    Friday, January 16th, 2009

    Our peripatetic spies spotted the following books being read by their fellow travelers this week. We decided just for fun to try categorizing the readers by age and gender to see if we could spot any patterns. This is what we came up with. Any comments?

    20-Something Women
    Erik Larson – The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America
    Joyce Meyer – Battlefield of the Mind: Winning the Battle in Your Mind
    Stef Penney – The Tenderness of Wolves
    Nicholas Sparks – The Lucky One

    30-Something Women
    Roberto Bolano – Last Evenings on Earth
    Bernard Goldberg – Bias: A CBS Insider Exposes How the Media Distort the News
    Stephenie Meyer – Breaking Dawn

    30-Something Men
    Aidan Hartley – The Zanzibar Chest

    Middle-Aged Women
    Kathy Reichs – Deja Dead

    Middle-Aged Men
    Vince Flynn – Extreme Measures
    James Patterson – Double Cross

    If you spot a title or two as you travel around, please share and we’ll include them in the column. Just send them to raoblog@lu.com