Archive for May, 2009

New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

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

Fiction

  • Tessa Barclay – Diamonds in Disguise – 6/1/09
  • Chuck Barris – Who Killed Art Deco? – 6/2/09
  • Connie Briscoe – Sisters and Husbands – 6/2/09
  • Tess Callahan – April and Oliver – 6/3/09
  • John Connolly – The Lovers – 6/2/09
  • Clive Cussler & Paul Kemprecos – Medusa – 6/2/09
  • MaryJanice Davidson – Undead and Unwelcome – 6/2/09
  • Anna Davis – The Jewel Box – 6/2/09
  • Guillermo Del Toro & Chuck Hogan – The Strain – 6/2/09
  • Paula Froelich – Mercury in Retrograde – 6/2/09
  • Tom Gilling – Seven Mile Beach – 6/3/09
  • Tarquin Hall – The Case of the Missing Servant – 6/2/09
  • Laurell K. Hamilton – Skin Trade – 6/2/09
  • Alice Hoffman – The Story Sisters – 6/2/09
  • Scott MacKay – The Angel of the Glade – 6/1/09
  • Tim Maleeny – Jump – 6/5/09
  • Phillip Margolin – Fugitive – 6/2/09
  • Eliot Pattison – The Lord of Death – 6/1/09
  • Frederick Ramsay – Choker – 6/5/09
  • Sally Spencer – Blackstone and the New World – 6/1/09
  • Danielle Steel – Matters of the Heart – 6/2/09
  • Jane Tesh – A Little Learning – 6/2/09
  • Victoria Thompson – Murder on Waverly Place – 6/2/09
  • Lisa Unger – Die for You – 6/2/09
  • John Updike – My Father’s Tears: And Other Stories – 6/2/09

  • Non-Fiction

  • Martin & Annelise Anderson – Reagan’s Secret War: The Untold Story of His Fight to Save the World from Nuclear Disaster – 6/2/09
  • Richard Bernstein – The East, the West, and Sex: A History of Erotic Encounters – 6/2/09
  • Alain de Botton – The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work – 6/2/09
  • Curt Colbert – Seattle Noir – 6/1/09
  • Forrest Griffin & Erich Krauss – Got Fight?: The 50 Zen Principles of Hand-to-Face Combat – 6/2/09
  • Michael J. Losier – Law of Connection: The Science of Using NLP to Create Ideal Personal and Professional Relationships – 6/1/09
  • Bob Mayer – Who Dares Wins: The Green Beret Way to Conquer Fear and Succeed – 6/2/09
  • Frances Osborne – The Bolter – 6/2/09
  • Kevin Sampsell – Portland Noir – 6/1/09
  • Claire Shipman & Katty Kay – Womenomics: Write Your Own Rules for Success – 6/2/09
  • Jane & Michael Stern – 500 Things to Eat Before It’s Too Late: and the Very Best Places to Eat Them – 6/4/09
  • Martha Stewart Living Magazine – Martha Stewart’s Cupcakes: 175 Inspired Ideas for Everyone’s Favorite Treat – 6/2/09
  • Julie Sussman & Stephanie Glakas-Tenet – Dare to Repair, Replace, and Renovate: Do-It-Herself Projects to Make Your Home More Comfortable, More Beautiful, and More Valuable! – 6/2/09
  • Stephan Talty – The Illustrious Dead: The Terrifying Story of How Typhus Killed Napoleon’s Greatest Army – 6/2/09
  • L. Jon Wertheim – Strokes of Genius: Federer, Nadal, and the Greatest Match Ever Played – 6/4/09
  • Neil White – In the Sanctuary of Outcasts: A Memoir – 6/2/09
  • Richard Wolffe – Renegade: The Making of a President – 6/2/09
  • Most Wanted Mashup: Hottest Books of the Week

    Sunday, May 31st, 2009

    Under the Radar: June Brides – Books about Weddings

    Sunday, May 31st, 2009
    • Mary Balogh – First Comes Marriage
    • Sandy Blair, Debbie Raleigh, & Regan Allen – How to Marry a Duke
    • Jane Feather – The Wedding Game
    • Julie Garwood – The Bride
    • Emily Giffin – Something Borrowed
    • Karen Kendall – The Bridesmaid Chronicles: First Date
    • Linda Francis Lee – The Wedding Diaries
    • Cara Lockwood – I Do, But I Don’t
    • Whitney Lyles – Always a Bridesmaid
    • Sharon Naylor – It’s My Wedding Too
    • Ann B. Ross – Miss Julia Throws a Wedding
    • Nicholas Sparks – The Wedding
    • Dorothy West – The Wedding
    • Laura Wolf – Diary of a Mad Bride

    Planes, Trains, and Lanes

    Friday, May 29th, 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

  • Mary Balogh – Seducing an Angel
  • John Grisham – Playing for Pizza
  • J.D. Robb – Vengeance in Death
  • Carl Weber – Player Haters


  • 20-Something Men

  • Stephenie Meyer – Twilight
  • Ayn Rand – Atlas Shrugged


  • 30-Something Women

  • Ken Follett – Hammer of Eden
  • Steve Toltz – A Fraction of the Whole


  • 30-Something Men

  • Vincent Bugliosi & Curt Gentry – Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders


  • Middle-Aged Women

  • Reza Aslan – How to Win a Cosmic War: God, Globalization, and The End of the War on Terror
  • Christopher Hitchens – God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything
  • Philip Kerr – A Quiet Flame


  • Middle-Aged Men

  • Seyyed Hossein Nasr- The Heart of Islam: Enduring Values for Humanity
  • Jeremy Scahill – Blackwater: The Rise of the World’s Most Powerful Mercenary Army


  • 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

    The Google Wonder Wheel

    Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

    Google is experimenting with a new feature they’re calling the Wonder Wheel.

    Here’s a search to try:

    *Go to Google and type in Mary Higgins Clark readalikes

    *Hit Enter

    *Click Show Options on the top left

    *Click Wonder Wheel on the bottom left

    Now do the same thing using the words if you like Mary Higgins Clark.

    What do you think? Let us know if you find some other cool uses for this tool.

    Most Wanted Mashup: Hottest Books of the Week

    Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

    RA Run Down

    Tuesday, May 26th, 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’ 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
    The bestseller turnover trend continues–a few new titles on the list again this week, but all the fiction is by recognizable authors. Take a look to the right for this week’s Most Wanted Mashup for the complete list. The titles new to the lists this week are: Douglas Preston and Lincoln ChildCemetery Dance, John SandfordWicked Prey, John HartThe Last Child, Elmore LeonardRoad Dogs. In nonfiction, there’s only one new title this week:
    Doug StantonHorse Soldiers.

    Just under the Most Wanted Mashup in the righthand column, you’ll see this week’s Under the Radar list: Me in a Nutshell: Memoirs Under 200 Pages by Sarah Statz Cords.

    And, as always, just under this post, you’ll see this week’s New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer, a listing of selected titles hitting the shelves in the next seven days. A few highlights: China Mieville’s The City and the City, The Scarecrow by Michael Connelly, Neil Gaiman’s Crazy Horse, One in a Million by Kimberla Lawson Roby, Shanghai Girls by Lisa See, Richard Ben-Veniste’s The Emperor’s New Clothes: Exposing the Truth from Watergate to 9/11,
    and Holly Robinson’s The Gerbil Farmer’s Daughter: A Memoir. Again, page down to see the complete list. It’s a long one this week.

    If you’re lucky enough to be going to BEA, have a blast! Here’s a list of the best galleys to watch for.

    On Demand and Short Run Books Exceed the Number of Traditionally Published Titles
    Bowker just released book industry statistics for 2008 showing that, for the first time ever, more On Demand and short-run books were published (285,394) than the output of traditional publishing.
    The top five selling categories were
    1. Fiction (47,541 new titles)
    2. Juveniles (29,438)
    3. Sociology/Economics (24,423)
    4. Religion (16,847)
    5. Science (13,555)

    Though fiction had the most titles, it was one of the biggest losers, falling 11% from 2007. Travel fell 15%. No distinction was made between self-published books using short run technology, and traditional publishers using it, but one can presume that a lot of the increase can be accounted for by self-publishing.

    In Publisher Advances, $35,000 is the new $75,000
    Captain Richard Phillips, the merchant-ship hero who recently saved his crew from pirates, has a book in the works, and the auction for rights topped out at around $500,000…about half the advance it had been expected to go for. As the bad economy takes its toll, advances get smaller…or disappear entirely. Britney Spears unsuccessfully shopped her memoir recently, for example.

    Amazon’s 2009 Breakthrough Novel Finalists
    Amazon will announce its Breakthrough Novel of the Year on Wednesday.The three finalists are James King: Bill Warrington’s Last Chance, Ian Gibson: Stuff of Legends, and Brandi Lynn Ryder: In Malice, Quite Close.

    For Those Who Hate to Weed and Those Who Try to Convince Them They Should Love It
    Here are some candidates for the world’s most awful books still on library shelves. Take a look—is this your library?

    Reading Aloud: Is It a Lost Art?
    Listening to how a person reads aloud can tell you a lot about that person. In this age, we listen to works being read by professionals, as we sit alone. Or, if we prefer to read print, we sit alone reading silently. The great abundance of books has made this possible. Readers in the past did not have the abundance or the technology, so they read aloud to each other. Reading to ourselves rather than sharing, may mean that we are forgetting how to skillfully read aloud.

    British Readers React to Shelftalkers
    When The Guardian asked for reader reaction to bookstore shelftalkers, they got an earful. Read the short article here and be sure to scroll down for the comments. Wonder if these reactions are typical in America as well?

    Senior VP of Farrar, Straus & Giroux on the Book Business
    Much has been written about how the publishing industry is in trouble. But this is scary—especially coming from Farrar, Straus & Giroux, an outstanding company whose titles often dominate the awards lists. Elisabeth Sifton, senior VP says in The Nation, “It is a confused, confusing and very fluid situation, and no one can predict how books and readers will survive. Changed reading habits have already transformed and diminished them both. I, for one, don’t trust the book trade to see us through this. Wariness is in order.”

    Science Fiction Novelists Plot the Future Of Homeland Security
    Harry McDavid, chief information officer for Homeland Security’s Office of Operations Coordination & Planning says that “We’re stuck in a paradigm of databases. How do we jump out of our infrastructure and start conceptualizing those threats?” One way Homeland Security is trying—ask science fiction writers to help them. How cool is that?

    To Library Webmasters: Heads Up…Could This Happen to You?
    You Tube is hard at work deleting thousands of sexually explicit videos after it was hit by an organized attack. The attackers uploaded the porn as a reaction to You Tube’s policy of deleting copyrighted music. Now that would just ruin your day.

    Try a Graphic Novel Book Club
    One bookseller at least, has found a graphic novel book club to be successful. Have you tried one in your library? How did it go?

    Do Princess Stories Influence Girls to Expect a Pedestal?
    Why don’t those who assume that books can influence children ever seem to think they influence them for good? Anyway…here’s another controversy. What happens when our daughters get to adulthood and they realize that the world isn’t a fairy tale?

    Accounts of the Death of the Short Story Are Greatly Exaggerated
    At least according to Laura Furman, editor of the annual O. Henry prize anthology, short stories are alive and well. Video here.

    Books on Screen
    Dean Koontz – The Husband
    Sherlock Holmes, and here, starring Robert Downey, Jr., Jude Law, and Rachel McAdams
    George Orwell – Catalonia, starring Colin Firth and Kevin Spacey
    Martin Booth – A Very Private Gentleman, starring George Clooney
    Jody Picoult – My Sister’s Keeper

    Authors
    Mario Benedetti – revered Latin American author – obituary
    David Herbert Donald - Lincoln expert – obituary
    Amos Elon – Israeli author – obituary
    Elsie B. Washington – wrote the first black romance novel – obituary
    Lists
    Ten Books to Read Before They Hit the Big Screen
    James Tait Black Memorial Prizes Shortlist
    15 Influential Early Works of Apocalyptic Fiction
    Writing of Place
    The Daily Beast’s 13 Hottest Summer Reads

    Lighthearted Link of the Week
    Thanks to Jessica Zellers for this one:
    Top 20 Most Annoying Book Reviewer Clichés

    Under the Radar: Me in a Nutshell: Memoirs Under 200 Pages

    Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

    New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer

    Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

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

    Fiction

  • Michael Connelly – The Scarecrow – 5/26/09
  • Phillip DePoy – The King James Conspiracy – 5/26/09
  • P.T. Deutermann – Nightwalkers – 5/26/09
  • Marina Fiorato – The Glassblower of Murano – 5/26/09
  • Neil Gaiman – Crazy Hair – 5/26/09
  • Craig Johnson – The Dark Horse – 5/28/09
  • Ana Menendez – The Last War – 5/26/09
  • China Mieville – The City and the City – 5/26/09
  • Isla Morley – Come Sunday – 5/26/09
  • Mary B. Morrison & Noire – Maneater – 5/26/09
  • Diana Palmer – Heartless – 5/26/09
  • Jeremy Robinson – Pulse – 5/26/09
  • Kimberla Lawson Roby – One in a Million – 5/26/09
  • Donald Thomas – Sherlock Holmes and the King’s Evil – 5/27/09
  • Lisa See – Shanghai Girls – 5/26/09
  • Alexandra Sokoloff – The Unseen – 5/26/09
  • Wendy Williams – Ritz Harper Goes to Hollywood! – 5/26/09

  • Non-Fiction

  • Richard Ben-Veniste – The Emperor’s New Clothes: Exposing the Truth from Watergate to 9/11 – 5/26/09
  • Max Brockman – What’s Next: Dispatches on the Future of Science – 5/26/09
  • Michael J. Collins – Blue Collar, Blue Scrubs: The Making of a Surgeon – 5/26/09
  • Matthew B. Crawford – Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work – 5/28/09
  • Byron L. Dorgan – Reckless!: How Debt, Deregulation, and Dark Money Nearly Bankrupted America (And How We Can Fix It!) – 5/26/09
  • Wayne W. Dyer – Excuses Begone!: How to Change Lifelong, Self-Defeating Thinking Habits – 5/26/09
  • John Ferling – The Ascent of George Washington: The Hidden Political Genius of an American Icon – 5/26/09
  • Adam Hart-Davis – String: Unravel the Secrets of a Little Ball of Twine – 5/28/09
  • Kate Hopkins – 99 Drams of Whiskey: The Accidental Hedonist’s Quest for the Perfect Shot and the History of the Drink – 5/26/09
  • Hala Jaber – The Flying Carpet of Small Miracles: A Woman’s Fight to Save Two Orphans – 5/28/09
  • Andrew Levy – A Brain Wider Than the Sky: A Migraine Diary – 5/26/09
  • A.J. Monte & Rick Swope – Take Charge of Your Money Now!: Essential Strategies for Winning in Any Financial Climate – 5/26/09
  • Ingrid Newkirk – The PETA Practical Guide to Animal Rights: Simple Acts of Kindness to Help Animals in Trouble – 5/26/09
  • Lilian Pizzichini – The Blue Hour: A Life of Jean Rhys – 5/26/09
  • Holly Robinson – The Gerbil Farmer’s Daughter: A Memoir – 5/26/09
  • Mark Seal – Wildflower: An Extraordinary Life and Untimely Death in Africa – 5/26/09
  • Paul Starobin – After America: Narratives for the Next Global Age – 5/28/09
  • White House Staff – President Ronald Reagan’s Initial Actions Project – 5/26/09
  • Mishna Wolff – I’m Down: A Memoir – 5/26/09
  • Run Down Delayed Until Tuesday

    Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

    Monday’s RA Run Down will be delayed until Tuesday—yes, we’ll be enjoying the holiday weekend (Go Cavs!)—but it’s really due to a switch of servers. Libraries Unlimited, and thus Readers Advisor Online, is now owned by ABC-CLIO, and the computer systems will be migrating this weekend. We’ll also be skipping Friday’s Planes, Trains, and Lanes this week, but we’ll be back and updating as usual next week. Enjoy the holiday weekend!