Archive for June, 2009

RA Run Down

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

The readers’s 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
Before I say anything else, I’d like to announce that the newest issue of The Readers Advisor News, The First and Best RA Newsletter, published quarterly by the Reader’s Advisor Online/Libraries Unlimited, will be out today. If you’ve subscribed, you’ll get it via email. If not, you can find it here. To sign up so that the newsletter comes to your mailbox, just send us an email at: ranews@lu.com. This issue has some great articles on the involvement of the catalog and catalogers on your RA team by Lauren Tarulli of The Cataloguing Librarian blog, the attraction of vampires by author Julie Kenner, how teaching makes you a better readers’ advisor by Jane Jorgensen, and readers advisory for children and tweens by Penny Peck. Be sure to take a look. There’s nothing quite like this in all the RA world. Now, on to the news of the week. Shaq’s coming to Cleveland! Shaq’s coming to Cleveland! Oh…not that news huh. Sorry.

This Week In Books

New to the bestseller lists this week:
Fiction: Catherine Coulter – Knockout, Lisa Gardner – The Neighbor, Carlos Ruiz Zafon – The Angel’s Game
Non-Fiction: Matthew B. Crawford – Shop Class as Soulcraft, Christopher McDougall – Born to Run, Norman Ollestad – Crazy for the Storm, Larry Tye – Satchel. Check the Most Wanted Mashup to the right for the complete list.

Under the Radar this week is Nonfiction Beach Reads by Sarah Statz Cords, author of The Real Story. Look to the right, just below the Most Wanted Mashup for this list.

Directly below this post you’ll find New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer, our list of selected new titles hitting the shelves in the next week. Here are just a couple: Dorothea Benton Frank – Return to Sullivan’s Island, John Lescroart – A Plague of Secrets, Swimsuit byJames Patterson & Maxine Paetro, Ridley Pearson’s – Killer Summer, The Penny Pinchers Club by Sarah Strohmeyer, and Brad Thor’s The Apostle. On the nonfiction side, there’s The Wild Marsh: Four Seasons at Home in Montana by Rick Bass and Michael Lang’s The Road to Woodstock, just to name two. As always, scroll down to the next post for the complete list.

Small Publisher Hits Jackpot on Timing of Michael Jackson Bio
Transit Media, a small publisher in Montreal couldn’t have timed it better…their new hardcover 300 plus page bio of Michael Jackson will begin rolling off the presses on Tuesday. It had been prepared in anticipation of the European concert tour that Jackson was preparing to launch. The author, Ian Halperin, is madly scribbling 50 more pages to deal with Jackson’s death. Ironically, the book had already been titled Michael Jackson: the Last Days. Preview an excerpt from the book here.

Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol Gets Extra Hype from Puzzles on Web Site
As if Dan Brown’s upcoming novel needs more hype, Random House has plans for “codes, cryptic trivia, puzzles, secret history, biblical references, maps, ambigrams, aphorisms, ciphers, arcane knowledge, and more” between now and the September 15 release.

Chris Anderson Apologizes for Plagiarism
Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail, apologized for copying parts of his forthcoming book, Free: The Future of a Radical Price, from Wikipedia without attribution. Another view here.

Stephenie Meyer New Moon: Best. Cover. Ever.
At least according to E!Online.

Governor Mark Sanford’s Book Already At the Printer
Mark Sanford, the Governor of South Carolina who was recently caught in an affair with a woman in Argentina, had already completed a book called Within Our Means before all the hoo ha. Now Sentinel has to decide what to do because the book is already at the printer. Decision to be made within the week.

You Knew It Had to Happen
An aide to John Edwards has sold a tell-all book to St. Martin’s. Andrew Young, the man who was such a true believer that he claimed to have fathered the child of Rielle Hunter, now says it’s not true, and he has an Edwards-Hunter sex tape. Yuck. It gets worse. Read the article for more.

Ben Mezrich Book on FaceBook Set to Launch
Ben Mezrich, bestselling author of Bringing Down the House, has a new book coming out on July 14. His proposal to Doubleday, which was leaked, supposedly began with the words “Sex! Money! Genius! Betrayal!” The writer of West Wing is already working on the screen version. Mezrich, who says he writes true stories, has admitted to taking some liberties with his stories. His new book, though, is going to be readily fact checkable and is about a big company—FaceBook—rather than some MIT undergraduates. We’ll see what the lawyers think.

Dick Cheney Sells Book for $2 Million
According to Cheney, “I want my grandkids, 20 or 30 years from now, to be able to read it and understand what I did, and why I did it.”

James Frey Shopping YA Book
According to the New York Times, James Frey is anonymously shopping a YA series of six books. He is working with another writer who will produce the actual text. Guess it’s not anonymous anymore. The story is about a group of nine children from a planet called Lorien who have been attacked by a hostile race from another planet. More detail here.

Urban Fantasy Writers for Buffy Fans
“Urban fantasy — a cross of fairy tale, noir and classic coming-of-age narrative — is peculiarly suited to wrestling with the quandaries of early 21st-century womanhood, which is itself a hybrid of age-old preconceptions and fledgling, undreamed-of promise. Buffy, I think, would be proud,” says Laura Miller in Salon.

Vote for the Best Beach Books Ever
At NPR.

The Big Read Schedule 2009-2010

Audio Book Sales 2008
Digital downloads up. Library share 32%. More here.

Slinging Stones at the Genre Goliath: plus “Goliath” Strikes Back
Sonya Chung started off the fight in The Millions with her article called “Slinging Stones at the Genre Goliath,” where she says that when her fiction students tell her they’re reading Dean Koontz or Dan Brown or Nora Roberts or Stephenie Meyer, “something goes thud in my stomach and a low-grade dread begins to buzz in my head.” She goes on to say that she is possibly an insufferable snob, and “if you think so, feel free to stop reading now; we may be at an impasse.”

Bethanne, the Bookmaven has an answer called “Fable of My Deconstruction: A Response (of a sort) to Sonya Chung at The Millions.” “I know that others are able to do what I could not: Continue to love reading while plowing through volumes and manuscripts of academic writing. I needed to return to enjoying books and not deconstructing them.”

Chung ends her article with a list of “bait and switch books to convert the unbelieving to the (crucial, soul-shaping) fact that you needn’t ingest bad or ‘not that bad’ writing in order to be entertained and/or absorbed by a book.” Bookmaven answers by focusing on her students: “The books my students read, while not as nutritious as more serious fiction, were just as vital in their human experience. When you don’t know that blueberries are full of antioxidants or hell, you just loathe their taste because you didn’t eat them while you were growing up, you may turn to junk food for your fruit. If you grow up in a home where there are no books, where no one reads anything deeper than the phone book, well, then, your “way in” to literature may be James Patterson. Or Jeffrey Deaver. Or Nora Roberts. And so on.” Read them both and tell us what you think.

Then there’s The Independent, which asked if genre fiction is raising its game.

Harlequin Enters YA Market
Harlequin has announced that it will enter the teen market with a line called Harlequin Teen. It will publish novels in several genres, including science fiction, fantasy, and mystery.

The Importance of Comfort Reads
The digital world gives an added bonus: “I can have all my comfort reads with me all the time.”

Books on Screen
First Peek at Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland

Grisham Agrees to Testament Film Option

Authors
Ray Bradbury – on libraries; he wrote Fahrenheit 451 on a library typewriter
Janet Evanovich – her new website shows you the Burg, including peeks inside of some of the buildings
Linda Fairstein – interview
Sebastian Faulks – won’t write another Bond sequel: “once funny, twice silly”
H. B. Gilmour – obituary
Treva Harte – trademark lawyer, author and publisher of some of the most successful erotic romance novels; started company Loose Id 5 years ago; has sold more than a million books
Joe McGinniss - needs ideas for his next book
Paul Muldoon - Pulitzer Prize-winning poet on Stephen Colbert Show
Haruki Murakami – talks about his new novel
Andrzej Sapkowski – bestselling Polish author wins Gemmell Prize for Fantasy for Blood of Elves
Michael Thomas – interview
Tasha Tudor – ugly family fight over not only her estate, but what to do with her ashes
Gerhard Weinberg – wins 2009 Pritzker Military Library Literature Award for Lifetime Achievement
Edith Wharton – lost letters to be auctioned at Christie’s

Lists
ABE Books Summer Reading Recommendations
Christian Marketplace Bestsellers June 2009
Neal Wyatt in LJ Summer Reading – Food Books
NPR Summer Reading for Kids Featuring Sari Feldman, PLA President
Large Hearted Boy’s Summer Reading Compilation
<strong>The Globe and Mail - It’s Summer, Not Dumber

Lighthearted Link of the Week

Surprising Facts About 15 Bestselling Authors

New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

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

Fiction

  • A. Manette Ansay – Good Things I Wish You – 6/30/09
  • A.C. Baantjer – DeKok and the Mask of Death – 7/1/09
  • Kira Coplin & Julianne Kaye – Pop Tart – 6/30/09
  • Mary Anna Evans – Floodgates – 7/5/09
  • Dorothea Benton Frank – Return to Sullivan’s Island – 6/30/09
  • Michael Genelin – Dark Dreams – 7/1/09
  • Kerry Greenwood – Murder on a Midsummer Night – 7/1/09
  • Jane Stanton Hitchcock – Mortal Friends – 6/30/09
  • Declan Hughes – All the Dead Voices – 6/30/09
  • Syrie James – The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Bronte – 6/30/09
  • John Lescroart – A Plague of Secrets – 6/30/09
  • James Patterson & Maxine Paetro – Swimsuit – 6/29/09
  • Ridley Pearson – Killer Summer – 6/30/09
  • Sarah Strohmeyer – The Penny Pinchers Club – 7/2/09
  • Brad Thor – The Apostle – 6/30/09
  • Non-Fiction

  • Rick Bass – The Wild Marsh: Four Seasons at Home in Montana – 7/1/09
  • Michael Lang – The Road to Woodstock – 6/30/09
  • Mark Ribowsky – The Supremes: A Saga of Motown Dreams, Success, and Betrayal – 6/29/09
  • Brenda Warner, Kurt Warner, & Jennifer Schuchmann – First Things First: The Rules of Being a Warner – 6/30/09
  • Most Wanted Mashup: Hottest Books of the Week

    Sunday, June 28th, 2009
      Nonfiction
    • Matthew B. Crawford – Shop Class as Soulcraft
    • Malcolm Gladwell – Outliers
    • Mark R. Levin – Liberty and Tyranny: A Conservative Manifesto
    • Michael Lewis – Home Game
    • Christopher McDougall – Born to Run
    • Norman Ollestad – Crazy for the Storm
    • Joe Scarborough – The Last Best Hope
    • Doug Stanton – Horse Soldiers
    • Larry Tye – Satchel
    • Richard Wolffe – Renegade

    Under the Radar: Nonfiction Beach Reads

    Sunday, June 28th, 2009

    Planes, Trains, and Lanes

    Saturday, June 27th, 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

  • Valerie Block – Was It Something I Said
  • Barbara Delinsky – Family Tree
  • Danielle Steel – Honor Thyself
  • 20-Something Men

  • Frank Herbert – Dune
  • Kurt Vonnegut – Slaughterhouse Five
  • 30-Something Women

  • Patricia Cornwell – Blow Fly
  • Emily Giffin – Baby Proof
  • Daniel Tammet – Born on a Blue Day
  • Zane – Purple Panties
  • 30-Something Men

  • Michael Lewis – Moneyball
  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez – 100 Years of Solitude
  • Middle-Aged Women

  • J.D. Robb – Born in Death
  • Danielle Steel – Sisters
  • Middle-Aged Men

  • Michael Connolly – The Scarecrow
  • 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

    ALA Conference RA Programs

    Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

    Here’s a quick preview of programs at the American Library Association Conference in Chicago next month that may be of interest to readers advisors. If I got something wrong or left something out, please let me know and I’ll correct and repost.

    FRIDAY

  • Genre Galaxy: Explore the Universe of Teen Reading
    Friday, July 10, 9:00 a.m – 5:00 p.m.
  • SATURDAY

  • What Do I Watch, Listen to, Play, or Download Next: Readers’ Advisory Techniques for the Digital World
    PLA. Sat., Jul. 11, 1:30–3 p.m. Guidance on using traditional RA practices to help media-savvy patrons make informed choices when it comes to ebooks, streaming videos, Playaways, and other digital media.
  • ALTAFF President’s Program
    Saturday, 1:30 – 3:00 p.m.
    Debbie Macomber
  • ALA VRT Celebrating Ten Years of the Notable Videos for Adults Saturday 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm 63b
  • PLA What Do I Watch, Listen to, Play, or Download Next: Readers Advisory Techniques for the Digital World
    Saturday 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm 65a
  • ALTAFF Love is in the Air – Romance Writers Discuss their Work Saturday 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm 68c
  • Science Fiction and Fantasy: Uncovering the Modern World of Information, Society, and Technology through Metaphor and Imagination
  • Saturday July 11, 3:30-5:30 p.m. Convention Center W-196c
    Distinguished science fiction and fantasy authors R. A. Salvatore, Ken Scholes, Margaret Weiss, Robert Charles Wilson, and John Brown (a great lineup of Tor authors) and Eric Flint (of Baen fame) will discuss the visionary nature of their craft, how speculative literature suggests new ideas and technologies, and the possible impact the ideas could have on society in the future. Authors will be signing complementary copies of their works immediately following the program.

    SUNDAY

  • Notable Books Breakfast 8 – 10am, Sunday July 12, Palmer House Hilton, 17 E. Monroe St. $40 RUSA members / $45 ALA members / $55 non-members
    A not-to-miss event for every book lover! The breakfast celebrates the year’s best literature and brings librarians together with award-winning authors from the Notable Books List of fiction, The Reading List and the Sophie Brody Medal. Authors read from their work, ruminate on writing and sign books while
    attendees enjoy a scrumptious breakfast. This year’s award-winning speakers are Mark Harris (Pictures at a Revolution); Toby Barlow (Sharp Teeth); Nick Taylor (American-Made: The Enduring Legacy of the WPA); and Peter Manseau (Songs for the Butcher’s Daughter). (Reg. Code RU5)
  • Michael Connelly
    Sunday July 12, 8:00 – 9:00 a.m.
    Michael Connelly is the bestselling author of the Harry Bosch series of novels as well as The Poet,
    Blood Work, Void Moon, Chasing the Dime
    , and the #1 New York Times bestseller The Lincoln Lawyer. He is a former newspaper reporter who has won numerous awards for his journalism and his novels. He spends his time in California and Florida.
  • YA Author Coffee Klatch
    Sunday, July 12, 8:30 – 10:00 a.m.
  • PRIME TIME FAMILY READING TIME®: A Model Program for Strengthening Families and Building Communities
  • ALTAFF Authors Come in All Colors — Diversity in Literature Sunday 10:30 am – 12:00 pm 75b
  • Programs with Poets and Poetry Sunday 10:30 am – 12:00 pm 74b
  • Sunday 10:30 am – 12:00 pm 74b

  • Things That Go Bump in the Stacks: Whole Collection Advisory for Paranormal Fiction Sunday, 10:30am – 12pm, McCormick Place West
    Come discuss best practices for helping patrons find paranormal materials they can really
    sink their teeth into. This program focuses on understanding the appeal of the genre
    and helping fans find materials throughout the library. Event panel moderated by
    Neil Hollands includes genre authors Charlaine Harris, Charlie Huston and Marjorie Liu.
  • YALSA The 2009 Alex Awards Sunday 10:30 am – 12:00 pm 76b
  • AASL Nonfiction Book Blast: Booktalks for Reluctant Readers Sunday 10:30 am – 12:00 pm 72c
  • ALSC Evaluating Audiobooks: Selecting the Best for Children and Teens Sunday 10:30 am – 12:00 pm 75a
  • ALA PUBLISHING Booklist Adult Books Readers’ Advisory Forum Sunday 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm 78c
  • PLA Booktalking Bonanza: Jazzing Up Booktalks with Media Technology Sunday 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm 80c
  • Large Print for All: Bigger is Better
    ASCLA LSSPS Sunday, 3:30 pm-5:00 pm
  • MONDAY

  • Stonewall Book Awards
    Brunch Celebration
    Monday, July 13, 10:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
  • ALTAFF Reflecting on the Past – Literary Memoirs Monday 10:30 am – 12:00 pm 89a
  • Lisa Scottoline
    Monday, July 13, 10:30 – 11:30 a.m.
    Lisa Scottoline is the Edgar-Award winning, bestselling author of Lady Killer, Daddy’s Girl, Dirty Blonde and
    many more. She currently has 25 million copies of her books in print in the United States and she is published
    in 25 countries. Lisa loves her job and it shows in her writing. Her bestselling novels, set in Philadelphia and
    featuring gutsy and resilient female characters, have thrilled and entertained readers with page-turning action and her trademark wit and humor. Lisa has created an array of unforgettable characters, and continues to add to the cast with each new book. Many of her books feature the all-female firm of Rosato & Associates, while the rest introduce fresh, new, but equally compelling heroines all written in Lisa’s unique voice. A lifelong Philadelphian, Lisa still lives in the Philadelphia area and enjoys writing about her hometown city.
  • PLA Not Just for Kids: Promoting Library Services Through Adult Summer Reading Programs
    Monday 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm 92a
  • AASL Reading Outside the Box: Collaborating with Graphic Novels and Audio Books
    Monday 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm 90c
  • RUSA President’s Program
    Monday, 1:30 – 3pm, Hyatt Regency Chicago, 151 E. Wacker Dr.
    RUSA President Neal Wyatt invites you to a discussion and exploration of the cutting edge of readers’ advisory (RA) services at the inaugural Readers’ Advisory Research and Trends Forum. This new RUSA initiative creates a meeting space where ideas, best practices and creative possibilities are actively engaged and deconstructed in order to contribute to the advancement of RA service. Nora Rawlinson, former
    editor-in-chief of Publishers Weekly, Susan Chun, founder of Steve: The Museum Social Tagging Project, and Nathan Altice, adjunct professor of sound communication at Virginia Commonwealth University, will address this year’s theme—how appeal is an interdisciplinary concept that applies to music, art and books—from multiple perspectives, including service implications and collection building.

  • ALTAFF Author Tea
    Monday, July 13, 2:00 – 4:00 p.m.
    ALTAFF
    Join Lisa Scottoline and other bestselling authors
  • PLA President’s Program
    Featuring Cokie Roberts
    Monday, July 13, 5:00 – 6:30 p.m.
  • ALSC 6th Annual Poetry Blast
    ALSC
    Monday, 5:30 pm-7:30 pm
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, June 21st, 2009

    The readers’s 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
    Happy Fathers Day to all fathers! In case you forgot to buy Dad a gift, there are some more new hot titles this week. New to our Most Wanted Mashup of bestselling titles (look to the right for the full list), are Jeffery Deaver’s Roadside Crosses, Katherine Howe’s The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane, Relentless by Dean Koontz, and Eric Van Lustbader’s The Bourne Deception, based on the character of Jason Bourne by Robert Ludlum. If you look at the nonfiction bestsellers, you’ll find three new titles on those lists: Melissa Gilbert’s Prairie Tale, Soul Survivor by Andrea and Bruce Leininger with Ken Gross, and Joe Scarborough’s The Last Best Hope.

    Our Under the Radar list this week is Fiction Beach Reads by Sarah Statz Cords. Look to the right, just under the Most Wanted Mashup for that list. It’s a nice long one.

    Just under this post, you’ll see our usual New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer list of titles to be published this week. Some of the big names include Mary Kay Andrews, Janet Evanovich with number 15, James Rollins, Gregg Hurwitz, Madeleine Wickham and even Gloria Vanderbilt (Anderson Cooper’s mom writes an erotic tale). In nonfiction, there’s Back to the Garden: The Story of Woodstock by Pete Fornatale, Magnificent Desolation: The Long Journey Home from the Moon by Buzz Aldrin & Ken Abraham, and James Gavin’s Stormy Weather: The Life of Lena Horne. This is only a very small selection, so be sure to scroll down to see the rest.

    Now on to the news of the week.

    Book News

    10-Day Temporary Restraining Order Issued in Salinger Case

    Jeffrey Archer Rewrites Kane and Abel

    Barack Obama’s Half-Brother to Write Book

    Nora Roberts – profile in The New Yorker – June 22 issue, p. 60. She sold 8 million books in 2008. One rule of writing: “ass in the chair.” New Yorker author profiles are terrific. Be sure to check this one out.

    Reading Group Guides Survey Results
    “A lot has changed since 2001,” the last time Reading Group Guides did a survey of their users. The survey excluded people who said they were not a member of a formal book group either in person or online. Here are some highlights:

  • Leading sources for media information about books are local newspapers, followed by The New York Times; the Oprah Winfrey Show ranked third, followed by morning talk shows and NPR.
  • 71% rely on recommendations from friends as their primary source of information
    for selecting books.
  • 54% are on Goodreads and 53% are on Facebook.
  • 70.9% use recommendations from friends as their top resource for selecting books for their group, followed by Amazon.com (56.1%), ReadingGroupGuides.com (50.2%), BarnesandNoble.com (39.4%) and newspapers (34.7%). Librarians are down the list under Other.
  • 72.8% usually borrow books from libraries for their discussions while 60.1% buy at chain
    stores, 48.2% buy at online retailers, 39.5% shop at “big box” stores and 27.5% buy at
    independent bookstores.

    There is a ton of good information in the survey. Thanks to Carol Fitzgerald who owns the site for conducting the survey. Full results of the 62-question survey are here.

    Authors Choose Book Characters to Spend a Day at the Beach
    Well, you knew someone would choose Mr. Darcy (Jodi Picoult). Take a look at who the others chose here.

    Joining the Conversation About You
    If you’ve read The Cluetrain Manifesto you’ll remember the premise that the market is a conversation. “Through the Internet, people are discovering and inventing new ways to share relevant knowledge with blinding speed. As a direct result, markets are getting smarter—and getting smarter faster than most companies.” Here’s an interesting blog conversation on the subject. Do you use Twitter and other sources to see what your customers say about you?

    Romance Writers of America Annual Conference
    Coming soon…the RWA Annual Conference in Washington, D. C. July 15-18. Go here to register and find out more info.

    Library School Accreditation Report Does Not Mention RA Work
    The ALA Library Education Task Force Final Report which was submitted to the ALA Committee on Accreditation of library schools was completed and has a list of core competencies of librarianship. They are: 1. Foundations of the Profession, 2. Information Resources, 3. Organization of Recorded Knowledge and Information, 4. Technological Knowledge and Skills, 5. Reference and User Services, 6. Research, 7. Continuing Education and Lifelong Learning, 8. Administration and Management. I’m personally a bit disappointed that they didn’t mention readers’ advisory training. I suppose you could possibly infer that it’s part of reference and user services, but many library schools completely ignore the subject. It’s especially disappointing because the committee asks that the new standards be written as “mandates not suggestions.” The report is here. And some of the comments are here.

    A Look Through Old Publishers Weeklies
    Maureen Corrigan on NPR finds by looking through old Publishers Weekly magazines that what people were reading long ago isn’t so different from what people are reading today.

    The Digital Bookmobile in Denver
    The Denver Public Library hosted OverDrive’s Digital Bookmobile last week and it was a huge hit. See the video here.

    Ethics for Memoirists
    This LA Times article by Marion Winik is a serious discussion of the ramifications of writing a memoir. What does the author owe to the subjects of the book? Who owns a memory when it is remembered differently by different people? Great story.

    Books on Screen

    Screen Gems Buys Michael Cunningham’s Beautiful Girls

    Beat Writers Featured in Three Upcoming Films

    Authors
    Scott Brick – invites you to audition to be an audiobook reader
    Kaye Gibbons - faces drug charges
    Harold Norse – called “the best poet of your generation” by William Carlos Williams – obituary

    Lists

    Summer Reading Lists

  • Amazon’s Summer Reading List
  • AskMen.com’s Top 5 2009 Summer Reading Picks for Guys
  • Bill O’Reilly’s 2009 Summer Reading List
  • Books on the Nightstand’s Books for Your Beach Bag
  • The Daily Beast’s 13 Hottest Summer Reads
  • Charlie Gibson’s Summer Reading List
  • Chicago Tribune 33 Hot Reads for the Summer
  • Cleveland Plain Dealer Summer Books Paperbacks for Sizzling, Mesmerizing Reading
  • Daily Beast’s 13 Hottest Summer Reads
  • Daily Beast’s 5 Hot Summer Thrillers
  • Dallas Morning News Summer Reading Season
  • Houston Chronicle’s Hot Books Available for Summer Reading
  • Huffington Post – Kenneth Davis’s A Historian’s Summer Reading List With a Slight Twist: a “Water” Theme
  • LA Times 60 New Books to Read This Summer
  • Nancy Pearl Picks Summer’s Best Books
  • The National Post Guide to Summer Reading
  • New York Magazine’s What to Read This Summer: Reality Rules
  • New York Times Girls of Summer
  • New York Times Summer Reading: Cookbooks
  • New York Times Summer Reading: Gardening Books
  • New York Times Summer Reading: Travel Books
  • New York Times Summer Reading: Visual Books
  • Newsday Ten Books for Summer Reading
  • NPR’s Summer Books 2009 – Alan Cheuse, Maureen Corrigan, others
  • NPR Summer Reads 2009 – Liesl Schillinger, Jamil Zaidi, and Laurie Hertzel
  • NPR’s 10 Best Summer Cookbooks
  • NPR’s Critics Lists: Summer Books
  • NPR’s Summer Reading Suggestions from 3 Independent Booksellers
  • Oprah Magazine’s Summer Reading List
  • Relevant Magazine Summer Reading Guide 09
  • Salon.com Asks Authors to Recommend Great Summer Reading
  • Stephen King’s 7 Great Books for Summer
  • USA Today’s Summer Reading ‘09
  • USA Today’s Book Roundup: Food/Travel
  • Wall Street Journal’s Interactive Summer List
  • Words Without Borders Staff Picks for Summer Reading
  • Lighthearted Link of the Week
    Original Titles of Some of Your Favorite Books

    Most Wanted Mashup: Hottest Books of the Week

    Sunday, June 21st, 2009

    Under the Radar: Fiction Beach Reads

    Sunday, June 21st, 2009

    New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer

    Sunday, June 21st, 2009

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

    Fiction

  • Mary Kay Andrews – The Fixer Upper – 6/23/09
  • Heather Barbieri – The Lace Makers of Glenmara – 6/23/09
  • Hyatt Bass – The Embers – 6/23/09
  • Jacqueline Carey – Naamah’s Kiss – 6/24/09
  • Linda Castillo – Sworn to Silence – 6/23/09
  • Philippe Claudel – Brodeck – 6/23/09
  • Ron Currie, Jr. – Everything Matters! – 6/25/09
  • Janet Evanovich – Finger Lickin’ Fifteen – 6/23/09
  • Jodi Della Femina & Sheri McInnis – By Invitation Only – 6/23/09
  • Christie Golden – Star Wars: Fate of the Jedi: Omen – 6/23/09
  • Chris Grabenstein – Mind Scrambler – 6/23/09
  • James Hayman – The Cutting – 6/23/09
  • Gregg Hurwitz – Trust No One – 6/23/09
  • Lora Leigh, Lori Foster, Cheyenne McCray and Heidi Betts – Real Men Last All Night – 6/23/09
  • Colum McCann – Let the Great World Spin – 6/23/09
  • Francis Ray – And Mistress Makes Three – 6/23/09
  • Laurie Viera Rigler – Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict – 6/25/09
  • James Rollins – The Doomsday Key – 6/23/09
  • Adam Schell – Tomato Rhapsody – 6/23/09
  • Jacqueline Sheehan – Now and Then – 6/23/09
  • Elizabeth Sims – The Extra – 6/23/09
  • Gloria Vanderbilt – Obsession – 6/23/09
  • Madeleine Wickham – The Wedding Girl – 6/23/09
  • Non-Fiction

  • Buzz Aldrin & Ken Abraham – Magnificent Desolation: The Long Journey Home from the Moon – 6/23/09
  • Pete Fornatale – Back to the Garden: The Story of Woodstock – 6/23/09
  • James Gavin – Stormy Weather: The Life of Lena Horne – 6/23/09
  • Michael E. Gerber – The E-Myth Enterprise: How to Turn a Great Idea Into a Thriving Business – 6/23/09
  • James Hider – The Spiders of Allah: Travels of an Unbeliever on the Frontline of Holy War – 6/23/09
  • Sally Jenkins & John Stauffer – The State of Jones – 6/23/09
  • Dick Morris & Eileen McGann – Catastrophe – 6/23/09
  • Craig Nelson – Rocket Men: The Epic Story of the First Men on the Moon – 6/25/09
  • Linda Rosenkrantz & Pamela Redmond Satran – Beyond Ava & Aiden: The Enlightened Guide to Naming Your Baby – 6/23/09
  • Jason Sheehan – Cooking Dirty: A Story of Life, Sex, Love, and Death in the Kitchen – 6/23/09
  • Graham Swift – Making an Elephant: Writing from Within – 6/23/09