To be published week of April 16 – April 22, 2012
Author Archive
New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer
Thursday, April 12th, 2012RA Run Down
Sunday, April 1st, 2012The 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. TRY THE FREE RA DATABASE based on Libraries Unlimited’s print Genreflecting Advisory series. Give it a whirl and let us know how you like it. We’d love to hear from you. Feel free to comment on any of our posts, or contact us at raoblog@lu.com. Also check out our free newsletter with more in-depth articles at Reader’s Advisor News.
Happy April Fool’s Day–our gift to you is a 100%-prank-free list of links. No foolin’!
By Cindy Orr and Sarah Statz Cords
New To the Bestseller Lists This Week:
FICTION
NONFICTION
GRAPHIC BOOKS
To Be Published Week of April 2-8, 2012:
Fiction
Nonfiction
This is just a sample from our picks of the week. Scroll down or click here for the complete list.
Forthcoming Books of 2012
We’re still compiling lists of 2012 book previews. Look to the right hand column for our collection of links, or click here. As we find new lists, we’ll add them at the top of the column.
News of the Week:
Ebook and Publishing News
Harry Potter ebooks now available at your library!
Barnes and Noble’s new market: Germany?
Three new Kindle Fire tables are on the way; also, Google to enter tablet market
Titanic centennial boon to book publishing
Publishing platform woes continue: interactive books vs. apps
Digital revenues: publishing’s winners and losers
News Stories to Debate
Does the war on women extend to fiction too?
Boston Public Library still requires parental signatures for juvenile library accounts; what’s your policy?
Does Facebook own the word “book”?
Literary fiction: different rules for men and women
Are the kids really all right? The reading levels of high schoolers
If you want to understand libertarian politics today, forget Ayn Rand. Read Robert Heinlein instead.
Other Points of Interest
April is National Poetry Month. Here’s “From an Atlas of the Difficult World,” a favorite from Adrienne Rich who died this past week.
RA on location by Joyce Saricks
It’s the 50th anniversary of A Wrinkle in Time; email KidsSchoolandLibrary@MacmillanUSA.com for a party kit; follow on Facebook;
Which countries are the most loyal to printed books?
Print and ebook sales: up? (And speaking of optimism, check out Bookslut’s Jessa Crispin’s reporting on PLA)
One of the stranger headlines of the week: Jeff Bezos hoping to lift rocket engines off the ocean floor
Professional Development Opportunities:
Webcast: Library Journal Spring Adult Book Buzz April 10
Book Bloggers! Win a trip to BookExpoAmerica
Books on Screen
Why The Hunger Games is so popular
Universal wins the rights to Fifty Shades of Grey (meanwhile, articles are popping up on “mommy porn” going mainstream)
Zadie Smith’s On Beauty to be adapted into movie
Awards
Julie Otsuka Wins PEN/Faulkner Award for The Buddha in the Attic
The Morning News Tournament of Books names its champion
Results from the Left Coast Crime Conference:
Dilys Award: S.J. Rozan
Eureka Award: Darrell James
Golden Nugget Award: Kelli Stanley
Bruce Alexander Award: Ann Parker
The Lefty Award: Donna Andrews
Authors
Adrienne Rich, prize winning poet dies at age 82 – obituary
Harry Crews: Obituary
1930s child author Patience Abbe: Obituary
Bert Sugar, “boxing’s human encyclopedia” and writer: Obituary
Ernest Hemingway had a tender side?
Screenwriter Charlie Kauffman at work on his first novel
James Patterson sends 200,000 books to troops
Anne Tyler: does famously few interviews, but here’s a new one
Preview genre mash-up master Seth Grahame-Smith’s new novel Unholy Night
Lists
9 Mysteries Every Thinking Woman Should Read
Ten of the most precocious authors in history
Ten authors who made unlikely genre jumps
Books for teens who love The Hunger Games
Lighthearted Links of the Week
9 Things to Never Say in a Book Club
Beanie Babies The Hunger Games (spoiler alert: it’s pretty accurate)
Looking to shake up meal time? Be inspired with these Game of Thrones recipes!
This makes Sarah very proud of her home state: The Onion is the most popular news source in Wisconsin, Minnesota, and NM
OverDrive Harry Potter ebooks go live Thursday
Tuesday, March 27th, 2012Here’s a link to the “partner letter” sent out by OverDrive today announcing that all the Harry Potter books will be live and ready to check out on March 29 at 9 am Eastern time.
A special 10% discount on all Harry Potter titles has been extended through April 30, 2012, and the books are now available for purchase in EPUB, Kindle, and MP3 (audio) formats.
RA Run Down
Sunday, March 25th, 2012The 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. TRY THE FREE RA DATABASE based on Libraries Unlimited’s print Genreflecting Advisory series. Give it a whirl and let us know how you like it. We’d love to hear from you. Feel free to comment on any of our posts, or contact us at raoblog@lu.com. Also check out our free newsletter with more in-depth articles at Reader’s Advisor News.
By Cindy Orr and Sarah Statz Cords
New To the Bestseller Lists This Week:
FICTION
NONFICTION
GRAPHIC BOOKS
To Be Published Week of March 12-18, 2012:
Fiction
Nonfiction
This is just a sample from our picks of the week. Scroll down or click here for the complete list.
Forthcoming Books of 2012
We’re still compiling lists of 2012 book previews. Look to the right hand column for our collection of links, or click here. As we find new lists, we’ll add them at the top of the column.
News of the Week:
So…you get better at reading by practicing, right? And reading is more fun when you’re reading something that’s not too difficult for you, right? And reading for fun includes reading things that lots of other people are reading so that you can discuss it, right? So why bash high school kids for reading easy books…some of which are classics? (Wait, To Kill a Mockingbird, Night, or Of Mice and Men shouldn’t be read by high schoolers because they’re “easy?”) The article isn’t signed, but it’s based on a report done by the Accelerated Reader people. Fortunately, several of the authors who contributed to the report say kids should read whatever they enjoy.
Applications available for Banned Book Week grants
A fascinating new book chronicles the history of government censorship in Australia with the unearthing of a banned books collection still intact in an underground storage facility where the books were placed in 1972 when a new government stopped censoring
The neuroscience of your brain on fiction; e.g. “Individuals who frequently read fiction seem to be better able to understand other people, empathize with them and see the world from their perspective.” and “Metaphors like ‘The singer had a velvet voice’ and ‘He had leathery hands’ roused the sensory cortex, while phrases matched for meaning, like ‘The singer had a pleasing voice’ and ‘He had strong hands,’ did not.” Fascinating article.
YA book sites can mobilize kids to do good
Do you read historical fiction? Take this reader survey.
Do you read romance? Take this survey about cover art.
How Big Mouths ensured the success of The Hunger Games
Publishers Weekly report on 2011 book sales figures. Top seller of the year: Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson. Simon & Schuster (10/11), 2,246,569 copies. Second place tie: The Litigators by John Grisham. Doubleday (10/25), 1,100,000 copies, and Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand. Random House (11/10), 1,100,000 copies.
GoodReads time line of Dystopian Fiction
Consumers begin noticing ebook library lending problem with publishers
Should libraries become publishers?
Shipment of marijuana intended for St. Martin’s Press intercepted by police
Occupy Wall Street Library reborn…for one day…before police confiscated the books again
Over 70% of Nook buyers are women between the ages of 25 and 45
Will the Big Six become the Big Five?
Professional Development Opportunities:
BEA’s (June 4-7 NYC) special event author roster includes Stephen Colbert, Lois Lowry, Junot Diaz, Jo Nesbo, Barbara Kingsolver
Webinar: Healing Reads: Bibliotherapy for the 21st Century
Webinar: What’s New with Graphic Novels
LJ’s Heather McCormack on PLA & RA
Books on Screen
Hunger Games opens at the Harry Potter and Twilight level
Variety reports that Sony bids $50 million for the rights to 50 Shades of Gray
Breaking Dawn Part 2 teaser trailer
Netflix to produce original movie from Farrar novel Hemlock Grove by Brian McGreevy
New York Public Library: No, But I Read the Book: Hot 2012 Forthcoming Movies Based on Novels
Trailer: Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Slayer
Video recap of Season 1 and preview of Season 2 for Game of Thrones on HBO
Awards
María Teresa Andruetto, Peter Sís Win Hans Christian Andersen Awards
Steven Millhauser Wins $20,000 Story Prize
Octavia Butler and John Clute named Solstice Prize winners for 2012
Authors
Suzanne Collins is bestselling Kindle author ever
Simin Daneshvar – obituary
Sebastian Junger launches medical training course for journalists in war zones
Lists
The Definitive Mad Men Reading List
Seattle Public Library – The Ultimate Hunger Games Readalike List
Lighthearted Links of the Week
Bitches in Bookshops – “Read so hard libraries wanna fine me.” (video)
RA Run Down
Sunday, March 18th, 2012The 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.
CLICK HERE TO TRY THE FREE RA DATABASE
based on Libraries Unlimited’s print Genreflecting Advisory series. Give it a whirl and let us know how you like it. We’d love to hear from you. Feel free to comment on any of our posts, or contact us at raoblog@lu.com. Also check out our free newsletter with more in-depth articles at Reader’s Advisor News.
By Cindy Orr and Sarah Statz Cords
New To the Bestseller Lists This Week:
FICTION
NONFICTION
To Be Published Week of March 19-25, 2012:
Fiction
Nonfiction
This is just a sample from our picks of the week. Scroll down or click here for the complete list.
Forthcoming Books of 2012
We’re still compiling lists of 2012 book previews. Look to the right hand column for our collection of links, or click here. As we find new lists, we’ll add them at the top of the column.
News of the Week:
ALA President Molly Raphael reports on discussions with publishers about ebooks; another report here.
How Oprah’s endorsements hurt book sales
Belgian rights group forbids reading stories aloud in libraries
Costco picks The Lantern by Deborah Lawrenson for March
An absolutely beautiful video game that all book lovers should play
Harris Poll shows 28% of US adults read on an ebook or tablet
Independent Publishers Group vs Amazon
Professional Development Opportunities:
PLA Conference Handouts:
(The PLA Conference website is down at the moment, but we’ll add links to more program handouts later. Or, go to http://placonference.org/programs, look for RA-related sessions and see if there is a handout link by each.)
Top 5 of Another 5 by Rebecca Vnuk, Kaite Stover, Barry Trott, David Wright, John Charles
Trends in Genre Series: Joyce Saricks, Becky Spratford, John Charles, Keir Graff
Books on Screen
Coming in April on ABC: Titanic
HBO’s The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen
Madeleine L’Engle goes to the movies
Mario Puzo’s children sue Paramount for trying to block a prequel to The Godfather
Cast photos from Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card
Trailer for Kerouac’s On the Road (Do you have a decent copy on your shelves?)
Awards
Kyung-sook Shin – first woman to win Man Asian Literary Prize
National Book Critics Circle Awards
NYPL’s Young Lions Fiction Award finalists
Street Lit Book Award Medal winners
Independent Foreign Fiction Prize longlist
Andrea Hairston wins the Tiptree Award
Authors
Toni Morrison – won’t write memoir; says write what you don’t know
Jeanette Winterson – interview
Lists
Indie Mystery & Thriller Bestseller List
10 biggest book-to-movie deals of the past 25 years
100th anniversary Titanic audio roundup
11 literary friendships we can learn from
Lighthearted Links of the Week
RA Run Down
Sunday, March 11th, 2012The 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. TRY THE FREE RA DATABASE based on Libraries Unlimited’s print Genreflecting Advisory series. Give it a whirl and let us know how you like it. We’d love to hear from you. Feel free to comment on any of our posts, or contact us at raoblog@lu.com. Also check out our free newsletter with more in-depth articles at Reader’s Advisor News.
By Cindy Orr and Sarah Statz Cords
New To the Bestseller Lists This Week:
FICTION
NONFICTION
To Be Published Week of March 12-18, 2012:
Fiction
Nonfiction
This is just a sample from our picks of the week. Scroll down or click here for the complete list.
Forthcoming Books of 2012
We’re still compiling lists of 2012 book previews. Look to the right hand column for our collection of links, or click here. As we find new lists, we’ll add them at the top of the column.
News of the Week:
Big news from OverDrive: purchase of Australian company will eventually result in cloud based reading of ebooks—no software required; works on any device with a web browser; click book, read book—on or offline; give it a try at Booki.sh…fantastic implications for ease of use for public library patrons in the future.
Seth Godin thinks publishers’ refusal to license ebooks to libraries is “silly”
On Random House’s ebook price hike for libraries
The Book Report Network launches 20SomethingReads
50 Shades of Gray rises up the bestseller lists
Catching a plagiarist cashing in at Amazon
Pew Report: The Library in the City: Changing Demands and a Challenging Future
Department of Justice threatens to sue Apple and 5 of the Big 6 publishers over ebook pricing; More here.
Check out Grad Students Who Read Romance to Cope
Full time school librarians linked to higher reading scores
Why there are so few standalone children’s books
The Launch of Google Play for ebooks
Professional Development Opportunities:
Library Journal Spring Mystery Announcements – Thursday, March 22, 2012– 3:00 PM EDT – 60 minutes
Books on Screen
Interview with producer of Hunger Games (coming March 23)
Big Miracle based on Freeing the Whales by Thomas Rose
Lorax film helps sales of Dr. Seuss books
Daniel Radcliffe in The Woman in Black, based on the book by Susan Hill
Awards
National Book Critics Circle Awards
Publishing Triangle Award Finalists Unveiled
Discover Great New Writers Awards
Authors
Judy Blume coming in ebook this month, as is John Updike
Christopher Paolini’s strange story
PW talks to Kim Stanley Robinson
The private lives of great writers
Why Jonathan Franzen Can’t Appreciate Edith Wharton; and the essay that started it all
Jose Saramago novel finally published after 59 years
Lists
Oprah’s 18 good books for March
Lighthearted Links of the Week
Christopher Walken retells the Three Little Pigs
RA Run Down
Sunday, January 29th, 2012The 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. TRY THE FREE RA DATABASE based on Libraries Unlimited’s print Genreflecting Advisory series. Give it a whirl and let us know how you like it. We’d love to hear from you. Feel free to comment on any of our posts, or contact us at raoblog@lu.com. Also check out our free newsletter with more in-depth articles at Reader’s Advisor News.
By Cindy Orr and Sarah Statz Cords
New To the Bestseller Lists This Week:
FICTION
NONFICTION
GRAPHIC BOOKS
To Be Published Week of Jan. 30 to Feb. 5, 2012:
Fiction
Nonfiction
This is just a sample from our picks of the week. Scroll down or click here for the complete list, including ISBNs.
Best Books of 2011
It’s Best Books of the Year season! Look to the right hand column for our collection of links, or click here. As we find new lists, we’ll add them at the top of the column.
News of the Week:
Ebook News:
ALA To Meet With Top Executives of Macmillan, Simon & Schuster, and Penguin on Ebook Lending
OverDrive Reports 35 Million Digital Titles Checked Out in 2011, Page Views Up 130 Percent
Pew Says Ownership of Tablets and E-Readers Doubled Over the Holidays
Library e-Book Wars and Bundling
Is Digital Rights Management NOT the way to go?
Sesame Street launches digital series
Social networks, privacy, etc.:
New social network for book lovers
Take a look at Google’s new privacy policy
And all other things literary:
Amazon makes a deal with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
No wonder it’s hard to keep up; “there were more books published this week than in all of 1950.”
Indie publisher Melville House turns 10
Washington, D.C., the nation’s most literate city
Professional Development Opportunities:
Library Journal webcast: Meet the Power Patron
Books on Screen
Six of the nine best picture films are from books
The obligatory Downton Abbey post
Sweet Valley High, the musical!
Awards
2012 Oscar nominations are in!
National Book Critics Circle Award Finalists
Andrew Miller wins the Costa Award; now Short Stories have their own Costa Award as well
All awards ALA, announced last week:
2012 ALA Notable Books
ALA Reading List Awards
Newbery and other youth awards
RUSA Listen List
2012 odyssey award
Sophie Brody Medal; Louis Shores Award (congrats Sarah Johnson!); Zora Neale Hurston Award; Stonewall Book Award
Authors
Charla Krupp: Obituary
Newt Gingrich: SF author
Charlotte Bronte, love letter writer
Tolkien’s Middle-earth “family tree”
Ezra Jack Keats’s The Snowy Day turns 50
Lists
The 5 Books That Inspire the Most Tattoos
Most Dangerous Novels of all time
New York Times Editors’ Choice for Jan. 27
Lighthearted Links of the Week
Newbery, Caldecott, Printz, Alex, King, and Other Youth Award Winners
Monday, January 23rd, 2012John Newbery Medal for the most outstanding contribution to children’s literature:
Jack Gantos – “Dead End in Norvelt”
Randolph Caldecott Medal for the most distinguished American picture book
Chris Raschka – “A Ball for Daisy”
Michael L. Printz Award for excellence in literature written for young adults
John Corey Whaley – “Where Things Come Back”
Coretta Scott King Book Award recognizing African American authors
Kadir Nelson – “Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans”
Coretta Scott King Book Award for illustration
Shane W. Evans – “Underground: Finding the Light to Freedom”
Pura Belpre Award honoring a Latino illustrator
Duncan Tonatiuh – “Diego Rivera: His World and Ours”
Belpre Author Award
Guadalupe Garcia McCall – “Under the Mesquite”
Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults
Susan Cooper
Theodor Geisel Award for most distinguished beginning reader book
Josh Schneider – “Tales for Very Picky Eaters”
William C. Morris Award for a debut book published by a first-time author writing for teens
John Corey Whaley – “Where Things Come Back”
Schneider Family Book Award for best teen book embodying an artistic expression of the disability experience
Wendelin Van Draanen – “The Running Dream”
Schneider Award for middle-school readers
Joan Bauer – “Close to Famous”
Brian Selznick – “Wonderstruck: A Novel in Words and Pictures”
Alex Awards for adult books that appeal to teen audiences
“Big Girl Small” by Rachel DeWoskin
“In Zanesville” by Jo Ann Beard
“The Lover’s Dictionary” by David Levithan
“The New Kids: Big Dreams and Brave Journeys at a High School for Immigrant Teens” by Brooke Hauser
“The Night Circus” by Erin Morgenstern
“Ready Player One” by Ernest Cline
“Robopocalypse: A Novel” by Daniel H. Wilson
“Salvage the Bones” by Jesmyn Ward
“The Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt: A Novel in Pictures” by Caroline Preston
“The Talk-Funny Girl” by Roland Merullo
Brody, Shores, Hurston, Stonewall Prize Winners from ALA Midwinter Conference
Monday, January 23rd, 2012Sophie Brody Medal for Outstanding Jewish Literature:
“Sacred Trash: the Lost and Found World of the Cairo Geniza” by Adina Hoffman and Peter Cole (Schocken Books)
Honor Books:
“Jerusalem: the Biography” by Simon Sebag Montefiore (Alfred A. Knopf)
“MetaMaus” by Art Spiegelman (Pantheon Books)
“Quiet Americans: Stories” by Erika Dreifus (Last Light Studio Books)
Louis Shores Award for Book Reviewing
Sarah L. Johnson, professor of library services at Eastern Illinois University and author of the blog Reading the Past and book review editor, The Historical Novels Review
2012 Zora Neale Hurston Award for Outstanding African-American Literature
Vanessa Irvin Morris, author of The Readers’ Advisory Guide to Street Literature (ALA Editions)
Stonewall Book Award for exceptional merit relating to the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender experience
Bil Wright – “Putting Makeup on the Fat Boy”
RUSA’s Inaugural Listen List: Outstanding Audiobook Narration
Monday, January 23rd, 2012“All Clear,” by Connie Willis. Narrated by Katherine Kellgren. Brilliance Audio. (ISBN 978-1-4418-7576-1).
This sequel to “Blackout,” a stellar science fiction adventure, follows the plight of a group of historians from 2060, trapped in WWII England during the Blitz. In a narrative tour de force, Kellgren brings to life a large cast of characters, including a pair of street-smart urchins who capture the hearts of characters and listeners alike.
Listen-Alikes:
“Away” by Amy Bloom. Narrated by Barbara Rosenblat. HighBridge.
“Pirate King” by Laurie R. King. Narrated by Jenny Sterlin. Recorded Books.
“Year of Wonders” by Geraldine Brooks. Narrated by Josephine Bailey. Books on Tape.
“Bossypants,” by Tina Fey. Narrated by Tina Fey. Hachette Audio. (ISBN 978-1-60941-969-1). AudioGO. (ISBN 978-1-60941-719-2).
In a very funny memoir made decidedly funnier by its reader, Tina Fey relates sketches and memories of her time at SNL and Second City as well as the difficulties of balancing career and motherhood. In a voice dripping with wit, she acts out the book, adding extra-aural elements that print simply cannot convey.
Listen-Alikes:
“Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim,” by David Sedaris. Narrated by David Sedaris. Hachette Audio.
“I Was Told There’d Be Cake,” by Sloane Crosley. Narrated by Sloane Crosley. Penguin Audio.
“The Partly Cloudy Patriot,” by Sarah Vowell. Narrated by Sarah Vowell. Simon & Schuster Audio.
“The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey,” by Walter Mosley. Narrated by Dominic Hoffman. Penguin Audio. (ISBN 978-0-14-242856-6). Books on Tape. (ISBN 978-0-3078-7583-9).
Dominic Hoffman reads this elegiac novel of memory and redemption with fierce grace, inhabiting Mosley’s characters with voices perfectly crafted in pitch and rhythm. His rough, gravelly narration manages the pace and mood of the book with astounding skill, brilliantly capturing the mental clarity and fog of 91-year-old Ptolemy Grey’s world.
Listen-Alikes:
“Emily, Alone,” by Stewart O’Nan. Narrated by Andrea Gallo. Recorded Books.
“Flowers for Algernon,” by Daniel Keyes. Narrated by Jeff Woodman. Recorded Books.
“Noah’s Compass,” by Anne Tyler. Narrated by Arthur Morey. Random House Audio. Books on Tape.
“Life Itself: A Memoir,” by Roger Ebert. Narrated by Edward Herrmann. Hachette Audio (ISBN 978-1-60941-035-3). AudioGO. (ISBN 978-1-61113-792-7).
Ebert’s clear-eyed account chronicles his life from his youth in Urbana, Illinois, to his fame as a world-renowned film critic in Chicago. Herrmann’s engaging, affable reading mirrors the author’s tone—honest, often humorous, sometimes bittersweet—as he unhurriedly ushers listeners through Ebert’s moving reflections on a life well lived.
Listen-Alikes:
“Born Standing Up: A Comic’s Life,” by Steve Martin. Narrated by Steve Martin. Simon & Schuster Audio. Recorded Books.
“Chapters from My Autobiography,” by Mark Twain. Narrated by Bronson Pinchot. AudioGO.
“Life,” by Keith Richards and James Fox. Narrated by Keith Richards, Johnny Depp and Joe Hurley. Hachette Audio.
“Middlemarch,” by George Eliot. Narrated by Juliet Stevenson. NAXOS. (ISBN 978-184-379-439-4).
Juliet Stevenson brings crisp clarity, a witty sensibility and a charming tonal quality to Eliot’s masterpiece of provincial life. Through her deft management of pacing and tone, she reveals character motivation and illuminates the many themes of the novel. But most of all she reclaims Eliot for listeners who thought they did not enjoy classics.
Listen-Alikes:
“The Age of Innocence,” by Edith Wharton. Narrated by Lorna Raver. Blackstone Audio.
“Jane Eyre,” by Charlotte Brontë. Narrated by Nadia May. Blackstone Audio.
“Pride and Prejudice,” by Jane Austen. Narrated by Josephine Bailey. Tantor Media.
“The Mischief of the Mistletoe,” by Lauren Willig. Narrated by Kate Reading. Penguin Audio. (ISBN 978-0-14-242830-6).
In this Regency Christmas caper, a pudding, a spy, a hilarious school theatrical and a memorable country house party lead to laughter, love and an offer of marriage. Reading’s lovely English accent and exuberance are a perfect fit for the wide range of characters, from young girls to male teachers to members of the aristocracy.
Listen-Alikes:
“The Black Cobra Quartet,” series by Stephanie Laurens. Narrated by Simon Prebble. Harper Audio. Blackstone Audio.
“The Scarlet Pimpernel,” by Baroness Emma Orczy. Narrated by Ralph Cosham. Blackstone Audio.
“The Talisman Ring,” by Georgette Heyer. Narrated by Phyllida Nash. AudioGO.
“One of Our Thursdays is Missing” by Jasper Fforde. Narrated by Emily Gray. Recorded Books. (ISBN 978-1-4498-4675-6).
In this genre-bending romp, the “written” Thursday must rescue the “real” Thursday from a nefarious Bookworld plot. Emily Gray wears Thursday like a second skin, as she does the robots, dodos, and space aliens running around. The story is paced such that every nuance of pun and word play is captured and rendered aurally.
Listen-Alikes:
“Blackout,” by Connie Willis. Narrated by Katherine Kellgren. Brilliance Audio.
“The Peculiar Crimes Unit Mysteries,” series by Christopher Fowler. Narrated by Tim Goodman. Recorded Books/Clipper Audio.
“Relative Danger,” by Charles Benoit. Narrated by Patrick Lawlor. Blackstone Audio.
“A Red Herring Without Mustard,” by Alan Bradley. Narrated by Jayne Entwistle. Random House Audio (ISBN 978-0-307-57643-9). Books On Tape. (ISBN 978-0-3077-0479-5).
Flavia de Luce, a terrifyingly proficient 11-year-old amateur chemist and sleuth, investigates the beating of a gypsy and the death of a villager in this third outing. Entwistle’s spot-on narration reveals the irrepressible, intrepid heroine’s prowess and captures a delicious range of secondary characters in these whimsical mysteries set in 1950s rural England.
Listen-Alikes:
“To Kill a Mockingbird,” by Harper Lee. Narrated by Sissy Spacek. Harper Audio/Caedmon. Recorded Books.
“Special Topics in Calamity Physics,” by Marisha Pessi. Narrated by Emily Janice Card. Penguin Audio. Books on Tape.
“Tallgrass” by Sandra Dallas. Narrated by Lorelei King. Macmillan Audio. BBC Audiobooks America.
“The Snowman,” by Jo Nesbø. Narrated by Robin Sachs. Random House Audio. (ISBN 978-0-307-91750-8). Books On Tape. (ISBN 978-0-307-91752-2).
The icy chill of the Norwegian countryside and a series of cold-blooded murders dominate this Harry Hole crime novel. Sachs contrasts Hole’s world-weary professional attitude, his unquenchable thirst for justice and his yearning for love and comfort, as he skillfully maintains a suspenseful pace and projects an overarching sense of doom.
Listen-Alikes:
“The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,” by Stieg Larsson. Narrated by Simon Vance. Books on Tape.
“Hell is Empty,” by Craig Johnson. Narrated by George Guidall. Recorded Books.
“Rain Gods,” by James Lee Burke. Narrated by Tom Stechschulte. Recorded Books.
“A Tale of Two Cities,” by Charles Dickens. Narrated by Simon Prebble. Blackstone Audio. (ISBN 978-1-4551-0867-1).
The tragedy and heroism of the French Revolution come alive through Prebble’s distinctive and graceful narration. As the lives of Charles Darnay and Sydney Carton intersect, Prebble takes listeners deep into France and England, narrating terrifying descriptions and breathless acts of courage with a cadence that sweeps one away.
Listen-Alikes:
“Les Misérables,” by Victor Hugo. Narrated by George Guidall. Recorded Books.
“Sharpe’s Fury,” by Bernard Cornwell. Narrated by Steven Crossley. Recorded Books.
“War and Peace,” by Leo Tolstoy. Narrated by Frederick Davidson. Blackstone Audio.
“The Tiger’s Wife,” by Téa Obreht. Narrated by Susan Duerden and Robin Sachs. Random House Audio (978-0-307-87700-0). Books On Tape. (ISBN 978-0-307-87702-4).
In this imaginative novel, Balkan physician Natalia, on a mission of mercy, learns of her beloved grandfather’s death. Duerden’s mesmerizing voice leads listeners through the complexities of this rich novel with its intertwining stories, while Sachs memorably relates her grandfather’s haunting tales in a gentle and gruff voice.
Listen-Alikes:
“Bel Canto,” by Ann Patchett. Narrated by Anna Fields. Harper Audio. Blackstone Audio.
“Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close,” by Jonathan Safran Foer. Narrated by Jeff Woodman, Barbara Caruso, Richard Ferrone. Recorded Books.
“Pretty Birds,” by Scott Simon. Narrated by Christina Moore. Recorded Books.
“Why Read Moby-Dick?,” by Nathaniel Philbrick. Narrated by Nathaniel Philbrick. Penguin Audio. (ISBN 978-1-61176-024-8). Books on Tape. (ISBN 978-0-307-96967-5)
In what should be required reading before cracking the pages of Moby-Dick, Nathaniel Philbrick’s homage to this great American novel compels the listener to experience Melville with an almost incandescent joy. His voice resonates with palpable enthusiasm and calls to mind a New England professor giving a fascinating lecture.
Listen-Alikes:
“Moby-Dick,” by Herman Melville. Narrated by Frank Muller. Recorded Books.
“My Reading Life,” by Pat Conroy. Narrated by Pat Conroy. Random House Audio. Books on Tape.
“The Swerve,” by Stephen Greenblatt. Narrated by Edoardo Ballerini. Recorded Books.


















