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RA Run Down

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

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

Titles New to the Bestseller Lists This Week

Fiction

  • Kay Hooper - Blood Ties
  • Nonfiction

  • Ozzy Osbourne - I Am Ozzy
  • Marc A. Thiessen - Courting Disaster
  • Andrew Young - The Politician
  • To see the entire list of this week’s hottest books, check the Most Wanted Mashup in the righthand column.
    _____________________________________________
    We have a long list of titles which will be released this week including these, or check our complete New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer list.

  • Jackie Collins - Poor Little Bitch Girl - Tuesday
  • Tim Green - False Convictions - Tuesday
  • Peter Straub - A Dark Matter - Tuesday
  • Paul Theroux - A Dead Hand - Thursday
  • Adriana Trigiani - Brava, Valentine - Tuesday
  • And many more. Scroll down to the next entry to see the whole list, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is Past and Present Oscar Nominees for Best Adapted Screenplay. Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this list.

    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news of the week:

    The big news of the week is the ongoing “negotiations” between Amazon and Macmillan. The saga is a complicated one, and has now extended to HarperCollins and Hachette as well. In a nutshell, when Amazon and Macmillan disagreed on terms of their eBooks agreement, Amazon pulled all the “Buy” buttons off of Macmillan titles…paper and electronic…so that their Kindle customers could not buy them, and bewildered print customers who knew nothing about any controversy, couldn’t figure out why there was no way to buy the book they had chosen.

    Authors were the helpless victims of this bullying tactic, doubtless losing royalties on sales that went awry, and the story still continues with huge implications for the future. The argument is between Amazon’s desire to move toward controlling a bigger piece of the supply chain and the publishers’ position that they want to use the agency model. Writer Charles Stross does a great job of explaining the difference.

    The announcement of the iPad last week and Apple’s agreement to use the agency model, has added to the pressure on Amazon. Amazon’s one public statement (other than removing the “Buy” buttons) has been to their Kindle users on a forum, “We want you to know that ultimately, however, we will have to capitulate and accept Macmillan’s terms because Macmillan has a monopoly over their own titles, and we will want to offer them to you even at prices we believe are needlessly high for e-books.” Macmillan has a monopoly over their own titles seems like saying Reese’s has a monopoly on Peanut Butter Cups…um, okay…monopoly?

    By the end of the week the buttons were restored to Macmillan titles, but distrust of Amazon had caused the Authors Guild to design a website for authors which will automatically track whether their buy buttons are working in the future, and email them if not. Here are a few more good links in case you’d like to follow the controversy more closely:

  • The Daily Beast: The Great eBook Wars
  • Mediabistro: Hachette Books Transitions to Agency Model
  • Idealog.com: Amazon vs. Macmillan: What It Might Mean for eBooks
  • Early Word: from Nora Rawlinson
  • The Atlantic: Amazon vs. Apple: What Should E-Book Prices Be?
  • Huffington Post: An Analysis of the Financials
  • More News:

  • Will the iPad Become the Favorite eBook Reader?
  • Authors Vie for the Lost 1970 Booker Prize
  • New Walter Scott Prize for Historical Novels
  • The Most Popular Book Reviewers on Twitter
  • Romance Writers of America Reaffirms It Position Against Self-Publishing
  • Salinger and Zinn Books Spike Big Sales After Their Recent Deaths
  • Sarah Palin’s PAC Spends Big Money Buying Her Books
  • Verso’s 2009 Survey of Book-Buying Behavior
  • Why Is Auntie Mame Suddenly a Bestseller in Italy?
  • Trends in Romance
  • Rachel Maddow Reads from The Lorax When Clean Coal Company Steals the Name
  • What They’re Reading in Public
  • American Psycho from Book to Movie to…Musical?
  • Al’s Book Club Chooses 100 Cupboards
  • Why Are You For Killing Bookstores?
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • The Literary Side of the Oscars
  • Brad Pitt Options the Big Short by Michael Lewis
  • Emily Giffin’s Something Borrowed Fastracked to the Movies
  • Ron Howard to Produce The Lost Symbol
  • Movie Based on Twelve by Nick McDonell a Hit At Sundance, Headed for Wider Release
  • Dark Falls by Kat Falls Optioned for Film
  • Ken Baker’s Man Made: a Memoir to be a Movie
  • Movie Based on Temple Grandin’s Thinking in Pictures
  • _____________________________________________
    Awards

  • Amelia Bloomer Awards
  • Best Spoken Word Grammy Nominees
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Martin Amis - my life, my work, my women
  • Roberto Bolaño - short story in the New Yorker
  • Don DeLillo - interview
  • Terry Pratchett - offers to be test case for assisted suicide
  • Rebecca Skloot - interview
  • Bill Watterson - first interview in 20 years with the father of Calvin and Hobbes
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • New Cookbooks from Top Chef Alums
  • Spring Baseball Roundup
  • GalleyCat Reviews the Books of Lost
  • What They’re Reading on College Campuses
  • Top Ten Nonfiction Black History Month Books
  • Top 10 Literary Stepmothers
  • LJ’s Most Borrowed Titles in Public Libraries in 2009
  • The Fix’s Favorite Political Books of All Time
  • _____________________________________________
    Lighthearted Links of the Week

  • A Compendium of Sexy Librarianness from Library Journal
  • Oddest Book Title of the Year Longlist
  • Run Down

    Sunday, January 31st, 2010

    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

    New Titles on the Most Wanted Mashup This Week

    Here are the new bestsellers your patrons may be asking for:

    Fiction:

  • Bernard Cornwell - The Burning Land
  • Jack Higgins - The Wolf at the Door
  • Leila Meacham - Roses
  • Stuart Woods - Kisser
  • Non-Fiction:

  • Patti Smith - Just Kids
  • To see the entire Most Wanted Mashup look to the righthand column.
    _____________________________________________
    Whew. There’s a long list of New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer entries this week including:

  • Chris Bohjalian - Secrets of Eden
  • Ben Bova - Able One
  • Don DeLillo - Point Omega
  • Louise Erdich - Shadow Tag
  • Kristin Hannah - Winter Garden
  • Robert Harris - Conspirata
  • James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge - Worst Case
  • And on the nonfiction side:

  • Henry M. Paulson - On the Brink about the financial near meltdown
  • Jenny Sanford - Staying True story from the wife of the SC governor who took off to “hike the Appalachian trail”
  • Marilyn Johnson - This Book is Overdue!: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All
  • Plus many more. Scroll down to the next entry to see the whole list, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is New Microhistories. This category of nonfiction shows no signs of letting up. Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this list.

    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news of the week:

  • The big story of the week concerns the direction of eBook pricing and Amazon’s near monopoly through the Kindle. First, Amazon removed the “Buy” button from all Macmillan books, print and electronic when Macmillan insisted they raise the price of their eBooks from $9.99 to around $15. As if that wasn’t bad enough, thousands of Kindle owners found that Macmillan titles they had already purchased had disappeared from their bookshelves. Then within a day, they backed down and agreed to price Macmillan Ebooks the way the publisher wants. In related news, Apple released its new iPad and Steve Jobs, when asked why people would pay more to buy the Apple version of an eBook when it’s cheaper for the Kindle, said that the prices will be the same. In other news, Amazon gets into the publishing business with four original manuscripts. Other publishers are unhappy about the pricing as well. It’s quite interesting that Amazon in their statement said that they have to capitulate because Macmillan has a “monopoly” on it own titles. Hmmm. Stay tuned.
  • Paulson Book Says He Felt “Jolt of Fear” and Nausea As Economy Threatened to Plunge Off a Cliff
  • Do You Own This Book? It Will Be Featured on Lost
  • Texas Education Board Drops Bill Martin, Author of Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? from Curriculum After Confusing Him With Bill Martin, Author of Ethical Marxism
  • Shiloh Walker Takes on Author Solutions for “Monetizing the Slush Pile,” Which, Translated, Means Charging Writers for Things They Can Get Free
  • GalleyCat Launches Book Reviews
  • Study Shows That Readers Want Both Print and Electronic Books
  • Largest Book in the World Goes on Display
  • New Book: Serving Boys Through RA
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • All You Need To Know About the Apple iPad
  • And a Bunch More Takes on the iPad
  • BBC Planning Six More Wallanders Episodes
  • Digital Book World Conference Reports
  • _____________________________________________
    Awards

  • National Jewish Book Awards, Rohr Awards
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Louis Auchincloss - obituary
  • Kage Baker - obituary
  • Mervyn Gould - obituary
  • Kafka - the last living human who knew him personally reminisces (amazing piece)
  • Ralph McInerny - obituary
  • James Patterson, Inc.
  • Condoleeza Rice - first memoir coming October covers early years, not Bush years
  • JD Salinger - obituary, and how his town protected his privacy
  • Jennifer Weiner - asks fans to help her get script on TV
  • Howard Zinn - obituary
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • January Catholic Bestsellers
  • YALSA 2010 Best Books for Young Adults
  • 2010 Popular Paperbacks for Young Adults
  • 2010 Quick Picks for Reluctant YA Readers
  • 2010 Great Graphic Novels for Teens
  • Top Ten Rock and Roll Novels
  • Horror Mall’s Bestselling Books of December, 2009
  • Neal Wyatt: Narrative Histories
  • March 2010 Indie Next List
  • _____________________________________________
    Lighthearted Link of the Week

  • The Ten Best Songs About Libraries and Librarians
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, January 24th, 2010

    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

    New Titles on the Most Wanted Mashup This Week:

    Fiction:

  • Robert Crais - The First Rule
  • Elizabeth Kostova - The Swan Thieves
  • John Lescroart - Treasure Hunt
  • Non-Fiction:

  • John Heilemann & Mark Halperin - Game Change
  • To see the entire Most Wanted Mashup for this week, look to the righthand column and be ready for the patron requests.
    _____________________________________________
    New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer: Titles Published in the Next Seven Days include:

  • Tim Dorsey - Gator A-Go-Go
  • Ralph Ellision - Three Days Before the Shooting
  • Robin Hobb - Dragon Keeper
  • Kay Hooper - Blood Ties
  • And many more. Scroll down to the next entry to see the whole list, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is Books to Nosh On (Fiction and Nonfiction Featuring Food). Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this list.

    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news of the week:

  • Start Your Reading for the 2010 Tournament of Books
  • Twilight, the Graphic Novel
  • LA Lakers Coach Gives Books to His Team Members
  • Again? Bloomsbury Puts White Model on Cover of Book with Brown-Skinned Protagonist Update: They Stop Shipping and Work on Design of New Cover
  • LJ Introduces Graphic Novel PrePub Alert
  • Since 2006, 1 in Every 17 Novels Purchased in the US Was Written by James Patterson
  • Kitty Kelley Book on Oprah Due in April
  • New Book on the History of Memoir
  • New Study Shows Kids’ Reading Holding Steady
  • Where Kids Live Can Affect Reading
  • Translation Often Not Viewed As a Serious Academic Enterprise
  • New York Times Moves Toward Charging for Frequent Access to Its Site
  • Anna Nicole Smith Judge Writes Book
  • The Distinction Between Crime and Thrillers and Literary Fiction Lies in the Attitude to Language
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • Howl, the Film, At Sundance
  • Geeta Anand’s The Cure to be Released as Extreme Measures
  • Rick Riordan’s The Lightning Thief Hits Movie Screens in February
  • Sean Penn to Join Cast of Water for Elephants?
  • Martin Scorsese in Talks to Make Hugo Cabret
  • Up in the Air Based on Walter Kirn Novel from Almost a Decade Ago
  • _____________________________________________
    Awards

  • ALA BCALA Literary Awards
  • ALA RUSA Notable Books Awards
  • ALA RUSA 2010 Reading List Awards for Genre Fiction
  • ALA Stonewall Book Awards from the GLBT Round Table
  • Edgar Awards
  • Left Coast Crime Award Nominees
  • National Book Critics Circle Awards
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Jonathan Ferris - interview
  • Neil Gaiman - Kid Goth
  • Jonathan Lethem - on lucky things
  • M. R. D. Meek - obituary
  • Robert B. Parker
  • Paul Quarrington - obituary by Margaret Atwood
  • Erich Segal - obituary
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • Zombie Fiction
  • BookPage’s Readers’ Choice Best Books of 2009
  • Boston Herald’s Ten Books You’ll Want to Read in 2010
  • February Indie Booksellers Notables
  • LJ Best Graphic Novels of 2009
  • The Best Books on Haiti from The Daily Beast
  • Wall Street Journal Best Books of 2009
  • _____________________________________________
    Lighthearted Link of the Week

  • What Else Can You Do with a Book?
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, January 17th, 2010

    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
    New Titles on the Most Wanted Mashup This Week
    Fiction:
    Douglas Preston - Impact
    Anne Tyler - Noah’s Compass
    Non-Fiction: Atul Gawande - The Checklist Manifesto
    Elizabeth Gilbert - Committed
    Daniel H. Pink - Drive

    To see the entire Most Wanted Mashup look to the righthand column.
    _____________________________________________
    Lots of New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer entries this week as the post holiday publishing season ramps up. Here are just a few authors with new books hitting the shelves in the next seven days: Joshua Ferris, Kimberla Lawson Roby, Sara Donati, Bernard Cornwell, Jack Higgins, and T. C. Boyle in fiction. On the nonfiction side, Gary Wills, Joseph Stiglitz and Patti Smith all have new books.

    There are many more. Scroll down to the next entry to see the whole list, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is Mortal Remains: Slightly Macabre Nonfiction. Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this week’s topical list by Sarah Statz Cords.
    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news of the week:

    The big book news this week is this year’s RUSA awards: Notable Books and The Reading List. Two graphic novels were on the Notable list this year: Stitches and The Photographer. The complete list is here.

    Perhaps of even more interest to Readers’ Advisors is The Reading List Awards. Thanks to Twitter, we know that Adriana Trigiani won the Women’s Fiction Award for Very Valentine and called her mother right there from the podium.

    Winner in the Science Fiction category was The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi.

    The Romance Award went to What Happens in London by Julia Quinn.

    A Beautiful Place to Die by Malla Nunn took the Mystery Award.

    Last Days by Brian Evenson won for Horror.

    The Historical Fiction winner was Agincourt by Bernard Cornwell.

    Lamentation by Ken Scholes won for Fantasy.

    The Adrenaline genre award winner was Gone Tomorrow by Lee Child. Congratulations to all, and special thanks to Alicia, the Princess of the World (@princessofworld) for taking the time to tweet the winners!

  • Children’s Book Recalled Due to Lead
  • Nine Oxmoor House Home Repair Books Recalled Due to Faulty Wiring Instructions
  • GalleyCat to Launch Book Review Section on January 25
  • The New Republic Condescends to Add Book Reviews To Its Website: “The absence of any site for the serious consideration of serious books is…a fact of the web.” “We are not slumming here, or surrendering to the carnival of the web. Quite the contrary. We are hoping to offer an example of resistance to it.” Okay…
  • Upcoming Crop of Layoff Lit: But Will It Appeal? And Can Readers Relate to the Wealthy Who Have Fallen?
  • Seth Godin’s Predictions of Library Doom…and Responses
  • What Could Be Entering the Public Domain If the Copyright Law Hadn’t Been Changed in 1978
  • Dante’s Inferno Featured In Video Game; Tie-In Edition on Sale
  • Android Karenina the Next Quirk Classic
  • Most Downloaded Works in 2009 from OverDrive
  • Trends and Triumphs of the 2009 Book Year
  • Hotel Reservations Now Open for BookExpo in New York in May
  • Why Are So Many Authors from Other Countries Writing Science Fiction in English?
  • Top Ten US Book Publishers for 2009
  • Powell’s Books: Vote for the Best Book You’ve Read in the Past Decade
  • Mayhem in the Midlands Mystery Conference Sponsored by Omaha Public Library in May
  • Top Ten Ballsy Blogs About Books
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • Which Books Lend Themselves Best to Screen Adaptations?
  • Creation, a New Movie Based on Annie’s Box
  • Lionsgate to Turn What to Expect When You’re Expecting into a Romantic Comedy
  • _____________________________________________
    Awards

  • Val McDermid Wins the Cartier Diamond Dagger Award
  • Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Awards
  • Story Prize Finalists
  • Borders Original Voices Award Winners
  • Scott O’Dell Award - to Matt Phelan for The Storm in the Barn
  • Charlotte Zolotow Award - goes to Carmen Tafoll for What Can You Do with a Paleta?
  • Dolly Gray Literary Awards
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Sophie Brody Award Winners
  • Georges Anglade - obituary; author and president of PEN Haiti killed in earthquake
  • Mireille Neptune Anglade - obituary; Director of a UN program to help Haitian women; killed in the earthquake with her husband Georges
  • Paul Copeland - obituary
  • Miep Gies - (her memoir tells of hiding Ann Frank’s family and saving her manuscript) obituary
  • Laura Hruska - obituary
  • Zdenek Kopal - obituary
  • Joyce Carol Oates - on Joyce Carol Oates
  • P. K. Page - obituary
  • Florence Temko - obituary
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • Top Ten Books Set in the Arab World
  • USA Today’s Top 100 Sellers of 2009
  • Indie Booksellers Mind, Body, Spirit Bestseller List
  • Independent Mystery Booksellers Association December Bestseller List
  • USA Today’s Winter Book Calendar
  • Time Magazine’s Top Ten Notable New Diet Books
  • _____________________________________________
    Lighthearted Link of the Week

  • Can a Reader Love a Non-Reader?
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, January 10th, 2010

    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

    News of the Week:

  • Kirkus May Be Saved
  • New Issue of Readers’ Advisor News Now Available Online
  • New Edition of Fiction Catalog Released (Now Called Fiction Core Collection)
  • GOP Party Chairman Michael Steele’s Surprise New Book Released Last Week–Even Republican Officials Had No Idea He Was Writing One
  • Parent Company of LJ, SLJ, and PW—Reed Business US—Announces Possible Closures and Layoffs
  • Scholastic to Relaunch Babysitters Club
  • New Sam’s Club Book Club
  • Costco’s Books Club Picks The Mercy of Thin Air by Ronlyn Domingue
  • Jenny Sanford’s Book Moved Up to February
  • Library Thing Releases iPhone App “Local Books” Which Shows Libraries and Bookstores Near Your Current Location …You Might Want to Claim Your Library’s Venue and Add Your Events
  • Timbuktu: the Alexandria of Black Africa?
  • RUSQ: “Books That Inspire, Books That Offend” by Molly Strothmann and Connie Van Fleet
  • RUSQ: “Book Group Therapy: A Survey Reveals Some Truths about Why Some Book Groups Work and Others May Need Some Time on the Couch” by Megan McArdle; Barry Trott, editor
  • Reading Increased in 2008 - “Reading, which was in decline due to the growth of television, tripled from 1980 to 2008, because it is the overwhelmingly preferred way to receive words on the Internet.”
  • 2010 Books Preview from the Wall Street Journal
  • Which Bestsellers Are Readable? New Blog Evaluates Books Like Consumer Reports Does Toasters. If You Don’t Like This Approach, Try The New York Review of Books
  • Huffington Post Book Club Pick: The Shadow Elite
  • Holt to Add Discussion Guides and Extra Material to Trade Paperbacks
  • Days of Our Lives Book Line Launches in May
  • 2009: Year of the Short Story?
  • Cleveland Librarian Works to Save Home of Langston Hughes
  • Authors Read from Books They Can’t Live Without
  • The Key to Literary Success? Be a Man
  • The Atlantic: The Best Book I Read This Year
  • 2009: A Year in Books - good month by month review
  • Dallas News 2009’s Top Ten Literary Moments
  • A Baker’s Dozen Predictions for 2010 - meme of the year: What is a book?
  • How E-Books Will Change How We Read and Write
  • A Disjointed But Dazzling Decade in Books
  • Bad Timing: How I Play Golf by Tiger Woods Goes to Audio in April
  • Ian Halperin Writes Unauthorized Bio of Tiger Woods
  • Disney Acquires Marvel Comics
  • Top Selling UK Books of the Decade—Enid Blyton Anyone?
  • Intelligent Design Textbook Sent to Schools
  • Small Publisher Finds Its Niche in Literature in Translation
  • Data Shows Uptick in Reading—Especially Among Twenty-Somethings
  • A New Book On Reading
  • Preview of a Few 2010 Blockbusters
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • “Bestselling” E-Books on Amazon? The Free Ones Of Course, But Should That Count? - 64 Out of Their Top 100 Were Giveaways
  • Is the Amazon Kindle an Outright Fraud? Where Are the Real Numbers?
  • Top Ten Film Adaptations of 2009
  • Does Ray Kurzweil Have the Winning E-Book Platform?
  • A Look At the Vook
  • Hackers Crack the Kindle DRM
  • Dune…Another Adaptation
  • How the Forthcoming Apple Tablet Could Change Publishing
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Don Belton - obituary
  • Julian Fane - obituary
  • Elizabeth Gilbert - on marriage - interview by Ann Patchett; and a conversation with the New York Times (video)
  • Günter Grass - spied on by secret police, book coming in March
  • P. D. James - interview
  • William J. Lederer - author of The Ugly American - obituary
  • Ursula K. Le Guin - resigns from Authors Guild over Google settlement; and the Authors Guild responds
  • Paul Nathan - obituary
  • Maurine Bergland Sayler - obituary
  • Gerard P. Weber - obituary
  • Lu Xiaobo - Chinese author sentenced to 11 years in prison for “subversive” writings
  • Rachel Wetzsteon - poet, obituary
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • Oline Cogdill’s Top Mysteries of 2009
  • Daily Beast’s Most Overlooked Books of the Decade
  • USA Today: Ten More Books We Loved Reading in 2009 (In Addition to The Help)
  • Maureen Corrigan’s Best Books of 2009
  • Books for the Smartest Teens You Know
  • http://news.bookweb.org/7262.html

  • 2010’s Most Exciting Food Books
  • Neal Wyatt: On Petticoats and Plesiosauria
  • The 15 Best Time Travel Stories of All Time
  • From Aya to Zapt: 24 Graphic Novels for African American History Month
  • Blockbuster Books of the Decade
  • USA Today: A Decade in Books
  • Boston Globe: The Decade’s Best Books
  • _____________________________________________
    Lighthearted Link of the Week

  • Dr. Mehmet Oz’s Suggested New Year’s Resolutions: have more sex, get more sleep, and never let yourself feel hungry:
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, November 29th, 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
    New Titles on the Most Wanted Mashup This Week
    No new nonfiction titles on the bestsellers lists this week.
    In fiction, two new titles debuted this week:

  • Clive Cussler & Justin Scott - The Wrecker
  • James Patterson - I, Alex Cross
  • To see the entire Most Wanted Mashup look to the righthand column.
    _____________________________________________
    Lots of New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer entries again this week including:

    Fiction:

  • Steve Berry - The Paris Vendetta
  • Sue Grafton - U is for Undertow
  • J.A. Jance - Trial By Fire
  • Colleen McCullough - Too Many Murders
  • Harry Turtledove - Liberating Atlantis
  • Nonfiction:

  • Lance Armstrong - Comeback 2.0: Up Close and Personal
  • Greg Mortenson - Stones Into Schools
  • Julie Powell - Cleaving: A Story of Marriage, Meat, and Obsession
  • And many more. Scroll down to the next entry to see the whole list of noteworthy titles to be published this week, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is the first of our best of the year lists, Best Short Stories of 2009. Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this list.

    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news of the week:

  • A Guide to the Revised Google Books Settlement
  • National Book Award Winner Paperback to Be Released December 4
  • Some Readers Mix Up Palin Books Going Rogue and Going Rouge, As Intended By Authors of the Latter
  • Next David Sedaris Audio Release Will Be on Vinyl with No Corresponding Print Book
  • More Genre Wars: When Mystery Becomes Literary Fiction and Vice Versa
  • Al Roker Launches Mystery Series with Dick Lochte
  • Our Hunger for Cookbooks
  • Bathroom Book Sells for $171,000
  • The Tournament of Cookbooks
  • How Our Brains Learned to Read
  • How to Run a Short Story Book Club
  • Checking Out Graphic Novel Circulation
  • Borders UK On the Verge of Bankruptcy
  • Publishers Fight the Web With Behemoth Cookbooks
  • Entrepreneur Ushered in Renaissance of Pop-Up Books in the 1960s
  • Author Suggests We Boycott Books Until Publishers Stop With the Celebrity “Authors” Already, or, in the alternative, MediaBistro Offers Its Celebrity Book Toolkit
  • President Obama’s Mother’s Dissertation To Be Published
  • Bloomberg Press Closes
  • Will Oprah’s Hiatus Be a Huge Blow for Publishing?
  • Rupert Murdoch Will Likely Block Google’s Spiders from Indexing His News Sites
  • Forge Still Has Elmer Kelton Titles to Publish
  • It’s Not the End of the World: The Similarity Between E-Books and Mass Market Paperbacks As Emerging Formats
  • Roz Reisner’s Read On: Life Stories
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • FX Captures Cable Rights to Twilight Series
  • Tommy Lee Jones Leaves Lincoln Lawyer Team
  • New Moon Sets All-Time Record for Opening Day Sales
  • Kindle vs. Sony Reader: Do Library Checkouts Give Sony an Edge?
  • _____________________________________________
    Awards

  • Costa Book Awards
  • Booktrust Teenage Prize Goes to Gaiman’s Graveyard Book
  • While Fantasy Is Popular with Teens, Many Read Much Stronger Stuff
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Raymond Carver - reviewed by Stephen King; you’ll never think of Carver the same way again
  • Bernice McFadden - talks about “seg-book-gation” in publishing
  • Bill Moyers - will leave his weekly show
  • Alice Munro - podcast interview
  • Jim Sutton - obituary
  • Jeffrey Zaslow - writes books about humble heroes
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • Janet Maslin’s Top Ten Books of 2009
  • Globe & Mail - Margaret Cannon’s Top 11 Crime Books
  • Greatest Swashbuckling Heroes From 100+ Years Of SF Books
  • NPR’s 11 Best Cookbooks of 2009
  • Blackwell’s Top Ten Books of the Decade
  • IndieNext December Notables
  • Indie Comics & Graphic Works Bestseller List
  • New York Times Gift Book Suggestions
  • New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2009
  • Michiko Kakutani’s Top 10 Books of 2009
  • Dwight Garner’s Top 10 Books of 2009
  • Cuyahoga County Public Library Great Books for Kids
  • New York Times Best 2009 Graphic Novels
  • Telegraph Books of the Year

  • New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Books of 2009
  • Hudson Booksellers 2009 Best Airport Books
  • Horn Book Best New Holiday Books
  • _________________________________________________
    Lighthearted Link of the Week

  • Best You Tube Librarian Videos
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, November 22nd, 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
    New Titles on the Most Wanted Mashup This Week

    New to the List, Fiction:

  • Linda Howard - Ice
  • Stephen King - Under the Dome
  • New to the List, Nonfiction:

  • Andre Agassi - Open
  • George Carlin - Last Words
  • To see the entire Most Wanted Mashup of this week’s bestselling books, look to the righthand column.
    _____________________________________________
    Only a handful of New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer entries this week including new titles by Michael Crichton, Ha Jin, and Dean R. Koontz.

    Scroll down to the next entry to see the whole list, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is Six Great Books That Didn’t Make the Bestseller Lists. Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this list.

    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news of the week:

  • Big News of the Week: Harlequin Joins Thomas Nelson in Offering a Self-Publishing Division; then Romance Writers of America, and the Science Fiction Writers of America, plus the Mystery Writers of America All Object and Issue Statements; Nora Roberts Says No—They’re Supposed to Pay YOU; The Results: Harlequin Backs Down, Changes Name of New Division; See More Detail Here
  • James Patterson Threatens Death If You Don’t Buy His New Book
  • Nabokov’s Original Laura Excerpted in Playboy
  • Readers Have the Right to Expect That a Newspaper Will Make Some Attempt to Reflect Their Cultural Tastes, and Book Pages Simply Don’t
  • Raise Your Hand If You Can’t Face Weeding
  • Biblioburro: the Donkey Library
  • NEA Big Read Grants Available
  • How Teen Librarians Prepared for the New Moon Movie Release
  • National Book Awards Attendees Weigh In on Stephenie Meyer: You May Be Surprised At What They Said
  • Who Needs Libraries?
  • The Unexpected Art of Science Fiction Book Covers
  • Reading Comics Can Help With Early Literacy
  • Gift Guide for Book Lovers
  • Christian Vampire Books?
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • The Blind Side: Book by Michael Lewis; Film Starring Sandra Bullock
  • HBO Feature on Temple Grandin, Author of Thinking in Pictures
  • New Disney Studios Chief Pulls the Plug on Captain Nemo: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Script by Michael Chabon
  • The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel Sells to Movies
  • The Box, Based on Richard Matheson Short Story
  • The Men Who Stare At Goats
  • Tess Gerritsen’s Rizzoli Headed to TV
  • My Name Is Memory by Ann Brashares to Be a Movie
  • Fourth Librarian Movie Will Go to the Big Screen
  • Gwyneth Paltrow and Nicole Kidman in The Danish Girl
  • Cell Phone Apps Challenge E-Readers
  • _____________________________________________
    Awards

  • Roald Dahl Funny Prize Winners
  • Giller Prize
  • Man Asian Literary Prize
  • Governor’s General Literary Awards
  • National Outdoor Book Awards
  • National Book Awards First Novel Award
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Michael Hart - interview with founder of Project Gutenberg
  • Vladimir Nabokov - covers redesigned
  • Susan Orlean’s Bookshelf - video
  • James Patterson - says librarians need to make more noise
  • Karl Rove - new book coming in spring
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • 2009 Bad Sex in Fiction Award Short List
  • Library Journal Best Books of 2009
  • LJ Best YA Books for Adults 2009
  • 2010 Book-Based Movies
  • November Catholic Bestsellers
  • Vote on the Best Book Covers of 2009
  • World War I Books
  • Best Food Books of 2009
  • _____________________________________________
    Lighthearted Links of the Week

  • New Moon, New Edition
  • The Best Twilight Tattoos
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, November 15th, 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
    New Titles on the Most Wanted Mashup This Week

    There are three fiction titles that made it to the top of the bestseller lists this week for the first time…big names all, so that’s no surprise. Patrons may be surprised though to find that John Grisham’s new book is a collection of short stories rather than a novel.

    Pat Conroy, in a review of Grisham’s Ford County, says “The modern world punishes the short story writer with inattention. The literary reviews keep the short story alive and finger-popping in America today, while the New Yorker tries to strangle the form with its bare hands.” Conroy goes on to say that Grisham’s stories are good enough to be considered for inclusion in the best short stories of the year anthologies. Quite the praise!

    New to the bestseller lists this week:

    Fiction:

  • John Grisham - Ford County
  • Barbara Kingsolver - The Lacuna
  • J.D. Robb - Kindred in Death
  • Nonfiction:

  • Larry Bird & Magic Johnson - When the Game Was Ours
  • Sarah Palin - Going Rogue
  • David Plouffe - The Audacity to Win
  • To see the entire Most Wanted Mashup of the most popular books this week, look to the righthand column.
    _____________________________________________
    Our New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer entries this week include a new Alex Cross book by James Patterson (with no co-author), and new books by Barbara Kingsolver and Alic Munro among others. There’s the original version of Laura by Vladimir Nabokov, and, of course, the huge news is the Sarah Palin book Going Rogue. Coverage should continue on that one for awhile as fact checkers from the media—whom Palin accuses of getting it all wrong—work to prove that they were right. Will this translate into patron demand? We’ll have to see, I guess.

    Scroll down to the next entry to see our list of books hitting the shelves this week, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is Books to Howl About, a few good werewolf books in honor of the movie release of New Moon. Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this list.
    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news:

  • What’s In Sarah Palin’s Book?
  • Library Tries Fee-Based, But No-Fine Netflix Model of Service
  • Is Amazon’s Vine Viewer Program Legit?—Turns Out Publishers Pay for the Privilege of Reviews
  • The State of the Crime Novel
  • Lemony Snicket Signs Up To Do a New Series
  • Court Denies Valerie Plame and S & S Request to “Un-Redact” the Dates She Worked for the CIA
  • Be Ready for 2012 Book Requests: New Movie Causes NASA to Explain Why the World Won’t End Two Years from Now
  • Why Do Vampires Attract So Many Readers?
  • Juan Williams Find Precious Little Value in “Ghetto Lit”
  • It’s Not Readers’ Or Writers’ Fault That Publishers Have Blown It
  • Harlequin Has Successful Year Despite Economic Downturn and Strength of the Canadian Dollar
  • So Where Are We On the Google Book Deal With the Authors Guild?
  • Worst Library Books Blog Gets National Attention—Pretty Embarrassing for Libraries
  • Don’t Patronize: Fed Up With Seeing Some of Our Best Authors Written Off As Chick Lit
  • James Jones: Daughter Says From Here to Eternity Had Gay Scenes Cut
  • Aussie Writer Hailed As the Next J. K. Rowling
  • ____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • Stephenie Meyer’s New Moon Movie Opens Friday
  • How to Train Your Dragon Animated Feature Coming in March
  • Emily Giffin’s Something Borrowed Headed for Spring Release
  • Christopher Isherwood’s A Single Man Opens December 1 (Movie Tie-In Edition Available)
  • Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Now With 30% More Zombies (Quirk Opens New Website)
  • Aussies Reject Changes in Book Import Laws: Bookstores Enraged At High Prices
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Chinua Achebe - rejects endorsement as father of African literature, says there are others who deserve recognition
  • Ray Bradbury - signs on to do miniseries of six of his short stories
  • Donald Harington - obituary
  • Edward P. Jones - his known world
  • Tim LaHaye - sells new apocalyptic series concentrating on political events called The End
  • Edgar Allan Poe - 200 years after his birth, his influence is still strong
  • Robert Louis Stevenson - his amazing archive goes digital
  • _______________________________________________
    Lists

  • NY Times Best Illustrated Children’s Books of 2009
  • 100 Books That Defined the Naughties
  • The Atlantic’s Best Books of the Year
  • _____________________________________________

    Lighthearted Link of the Week

  • Classic Titles Made Sarcastic With Quotation Marks
  • and

  • Job Opening of the Week: Archivist for The Grateful Dead Collection
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, November 8th, 2009

    The reader’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
    New Titles on the Most Wanted Mashup This Week

    Fiction:

  • David Baldacci - True Blue
  • Charlaine Harris - Grave Secret
  • John Irving - Last Night in Twisted River
  • Robert Jordan & Brandon Sanderson - The Gathering Storm
  • Nonfiction:

  • Timothy Egan - The Big Burn
  • Chuck Klosterman - Eating the Dinosaur
  • Bill Simmons - The Book of Basketball
  • To see the entire Most Wanted Mashup list of the titles new to this week’s bestseller lists, look to the righthand column.
    _____________________________________________
    Lots of New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer entries this week including:

  • Linda Howard - Ice
  • Stephen King - Under the Dome
  • Wally Lamb - Wishin’ and Hopin’: A Christmas Story
  • Edward Rutherfurd - New York
  • Andre Agassi - Open
  • George Carlin - Last Words
  • Zadie Smith - Changing My Mind: Occasional Essays
  • And many more. Scroll down to the next entry to see the our list of titles that will be published in the next seven days, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is There’s a Book about That? New and Offbeat Nonfiction. Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this list, or click here.

    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news of the week:

  • Eloise Moves from The Plaza to New York Public Library
  • Sarah Palin’s Unconventional Book Tour
  • The State of the Crime Novel
  • Is the Hardcover in Its Last Days?
  • LJ Christian Fiction Webcast
  • Price Wars in Context: What If You Could Buy New Movies for $5? No One Could Afford to Make New Movies
  • Comic Books Are Good for Children’s Learning
  • Booklist Romance Fiction in the Library Webinar
  • Brewster Kahle’s Bookserver: Universal Access to Digital Books
  • Price Wars, New Wrinkle: Prices Varying by the Hour
  • Is Glenn Beck the New Oprah for Thrillers?
  • Brad Thor Says Glenn Beck Is the Oprah of Thrillers
  • Is The Boss Working on His Autobiography?
  • Obama’s Half-Brothers Working on Books
  • Books on the iPhone
  • Borders to Close 200 Waldenbooks and Borders Outlet Stores
  • USA Today Guide to Publishing Your Own Book
  • NY Times Editor Compares Print Media to the Titanic
  • How Exactly Do Writers Write—Anecdotes from Hilary Mantel, Orhan Pamuk, Michael Ondaatje and Others
  • Triumph Rushes Yankee/World Series Book to Print
  • When the Store Doesn’t Have the Book, Borders Will Ship It for Free
  • As the Book Form Changes, Libraries Must Champion Their Power Base - The Reader
  • Borrowing from Bookstores Makes Libraries More Usable
  • Barnes and Noble’s Nook eBook Reader
  • Internet Archive Introduces BookServer eBook System
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • Director of High Fidelity to Make Upcoming Memoir Lay the Favorite, Take the Dog
  • Patricia Highsmith’s Cry of the Owl Goes to the Screen in 2010
  • Hemingway and Fuentes, the Movie
  • All Star Coriolanus
  • YA novel The Secret History of Tom Trueheart To Be Feature Film
  • Bret Easton Ellis To Pen Series Adaptation of Jason Starr’s The Follower For HBO
  • _____________________________________________
    Awards

  • IMPAC Dublin Award Longlist
  • Australia’s 2009 Prime Minister’s Literary Awards
  • World Fantasy Awards
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Roberto Bolano - is not the next Gabriel Garcia Marquez, says his former friend and fellow novelist Horacio Castellanos Moya
  • John Irving - says his early works wouldn’t be published in today’s climate; worries about young writers
  • Lorrie Moore - “a lot of writers are watching musicians and the way they’ve bypassed the sinking music industry and struck out on their own”
  • Marie NDiaye - is the first woman in a decade and the first black woman ever to win the Prix Goncourt
  • Twitter Chats for Authors and Publishers
  • Rick Riordan - announces new series, The Kane Chronicles
  • Annie Proulx - donates papers to New York Public Library
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • NY Times Best Illustrated Children’s Picture Books of 2009
  • PW’s Best Children’s Books of 2009
  • NPR’s What We’re Reading
  • December Indie Next List
  • Bookmunch’s 50 Books You’ll Want to Read in 2010
  • Amazon’s Top 100 Editors’ Picks
  • PW’s Best Books of 2009
  • All In: Poker Books
  • _____________________________________________
    Lighthearted Link of the Week

  • 10 Coolest Bookends
  • and

  • Bulwer-Litton Fiction Contest Results
  • RA Run Down

    Sunday, November 1st, 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

    New Titles on the Most Wanted Mashup This Week

    There are three novels new to the bestseller lists this week, and three nonfiction books.

    Fiction:

  • Richard Castle - Heat Wave
  • Patricia Cornwell - The Scarpetta Factor
  • Danielle Steel - Southern Lights
  • Nonfiction:

  • Malcolm Gladwell - What the Dog Saw
  • Steven D. Levitt & Stephen J. Dubner - Superfreakonomics
  • Andrew Ross Sorkin - Too Big to Fail
  • To see the entire Most Wanted Mashup listing the books your patrons will be asking for this week, look to the righthand column.
    _____________________________________________
    Lots of New, Noteworthy, and No-Brainer entries this week. Get these books on the shelf, folks. They’ll be in the bookstores this week.

  • Sandra Brown - Rainwater
  • Jennifer Chiaverini - A Quilter’s Holiday
  • John Grisham - Ford County: Stories
  • Sue Henry - The End of the Road
  • Barbara Kingsolver - The Lacuna
  • J.D. Robb - Kindred in Death
  • Jeff Shaara - No Less Than Victory
  • Ken Auletta - Googled: The End of the World As We Know It
  • Jonathan Safran Foer - Eating Animals
  • Annie Leibovitz - A Photographer’s Life: 1990-2005
  • Joel Osteen - It’s Your Time: Activate Your Faith, Achieve Your Dreams, and Increase in God’s Favor
  • David Plouffe - The Audacity to Win: The Inside Story and Lessons of Barack Obama’s Historic Victory
  • And many more. Scroll down to the next entry to see the whole list, or click here.
    _____________________________________________
    Our Under the Radar list this week is Words of Wisdom? Presidential Speeches. Look in the righthand column just under the Most Wanted Mashup for this week’s list.

    _____________________________________________
    And now on to the news of the week:

  • Prequel to Pride and Prejudice and Zombies Set for March
  • What the Book Price War Means and How Powell’s Books Sees It
  • Oprah Book Club Discusses Say You’re One of Them in Simulcast Monday November 9
  • Random House Cancels Book by Imprisoned NBA Referee
  • Library Patron Crosses Out Naughty Words
  • What Do Teens Want to Read?
  • Follow Newberry and Caldecott Awards Live Online
  • Fans Line Up to Buy Next Installment of Jordan’s Wheel of Time Series
  • Roker Picks Where the Mountain Meets the Moon for His Children’s Book Club
  • The Rise of the Neuronovel
  • Tribune Owner Says Newspapers Can’t Survive but Daniel Gross Says, “Chillax, Folks!”
  • Pennie Picks Kingsolver’s The Lacuna for Costco
  • Webinar: The State of the Romance Genre in Libraries
  • Japan to Create Manga Library
  • Barnes and Noble Will Likely Close Stores
  • Introduction of E-Books in British Libraries Leads to Surge in Memberships
  • The Short Story Faces a Difficult Future
  • Castro’s Sister Says in New Book That She Worked for the CIA Against Her Brother
  • Hyperion Postpones December Books After Sweat Lodge Deaths
  • _____________________________________________
    Books on Screen

  • Eggers Zeitoun Heads to Animation
  • Ang Lee Takes Life of Pi to the Big Screen—Hmm, Will It Be a Crouching Tiger?
  • Dry by Augusten Burroughs Will Be a Movie
  • _____________________________________________
    Awards

  • Goldman Business Book Award
  • Whiting Writers’ Awards
  • Dagger Awards
  • Ellis Peters Historical Award
  • _____________________________________________
    Authors

  • Margaret Atwood - goes totally green on her book tour
  • Bourdain vs. Foer - guess who wins?
  • Lionel Davidson - obituary
  • Charles de Lint - interview
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald - a peek at his tax returns
  • John Grisham - excerpt from his new book
  • Ernest Hemingway - Kennedy Library gets his papers from Cuba
  • John Keats - his horrible death, thanks to the doctor
  • Stephen King - pens a comic book
  • Alice Munro - talks about her cancer
  • Ayn Rand - more relevant than ever—according to Mark Sanford—yes, the Mark Sanford from the old Appalachian Trail
  • Maurice Sendak - to parents worried about Where the Wild Things Are: “Go to hell.”
  • J. R. R. Tolkien - makes Forbes list of top earning dead celebrities
  • E. B. White - “I hate the guts of English grammar.”
  • Laura Ingalls Wilder - surprising editorial change to Little House on the Prairie
  • _____________________________________________
    Lists

  • Ten Years of Great November Reads
  • IndieBound November Notables
  • PW’s Top Ten Books of 2009
  • Amazon’s Best Books of 2009 Countdown
  • Hair-Raising Reads
  • Christian Marketplace Bestsellers
  • Five Best Books About New York Society
  • _____________________________________________
    Lighthearted Link of the Week

  • Ten Surprising Former Librarians
  • and

  • Critterati Pet Literary Costume Contest Winners