Archive for the ‘Literary’ Category

New Title Radar: July 2 – 8

Friday, June 29th, 2012

Lots of librarian favorites and buzz titles to look out for next week, starting with Francine Matthews‘s alternate history featuring JFK, and Dianne Warren‘s prize-winning tale of small town lives. Little Bee author Chris Cleaves returns with a much-praised third novel, along with fellow Brit Louise Millar’s look into the lives of two London mothers, while Swedish author Lars Kepler is back with another creepy thriller. Usual suspects include Karin Slaughter, Jennifer Weiner and Taylor Anderson. And Cheryl Strayed delivers a collection of her tangy “Dear Sugar” advice columns from The Rumpus.

Watch List

Jack 1939 by Francine Mathews (Penguin/Riverhead; Thorndike Large Print) explores the premise that President Franklin Roosevelt enlisted a young John F. Kennedy – the son of the ambassador to Britain – to investigate a conspiracy to fix the 1940 U.S. election. Wendy Bartlett at Cuyahoga is betting big on this one, as an easy hand-sell across a busy reference desk. As she puts it, “all you need to say is: ‘There was no CIA in 1939.  JFK travels to Europe to research his Harvard senior thesis (which he actually did); Franklin Roosevelt asks him to gather intelligence on what the Nazis are up to.’ ” She believes both men and women will love it, and that it’s a perfect airplane read.

Juliet in August by Dianne Warren (Putnam/Amy Einhorn; Tantor Audio) is a debut novel that follows the residents of a small town on the edge of the vast grassland of Saskatchewan on a single day. The winner of Canada’s highly regarded Governor General’s Award, it was also an ALA Shout ‘n’ Share title, where librarian Wendy Bartlett compared the author to Alice Munro and Jaimy Gordon, saying, “Juliet, it turns out, is a place, not a person… Warren’s description of horses reminds me of Wrobeleski’s wonderful descriptions of dogs in Edgar Sawtelle… Surprise and delight your customers with this one. They’ll thank you, and when it ends up on prize lists, you’ll look smart!”

Gold by Chris Cleave (Simon & Schuster; Thorndike Large Print; S&S Audio) is the story of two friends and close rivals as they train for their last Olympic bike race together and confront the challenges of love, friendship, ambition and parenthood, written by the British author of the runaway hit Little Bee. It’s the #1 Indie Next pick for July and is getting strong early reviews, like this one from PW: “Cleave pulls out all the stops, getting inside the hearts and minds of his engagingly complex characters. The race scenes have true visceral intensity, leaving the reader feeling as breathless as a cyclist. From start to finish, this is a truly Olympic-level literary achievement.”  It’s most summer reading lists, including People magazine’s, with lots of reviews coming, and coverage on NPR’s Weekend Edition expected.

The Nightmare by Lars Kepler (Macmillan/FSG/Sarah Crichton; Thorndike Large Print) is the sequel to last year’s creepy yet excellent Swedish thriller The Hypnotist, again featuring detective Joona Linna as she looks into an arms dealing case. Booklist says, ” While the plot is overstuffed and the pacing is stiff, Kepler (a pseudonym for husband-and-wife team Alexander and Alexandra Ahndoril) creates a terrific, almost palpable atmosphere, which is sure to please fans of Swedish crime fiction.”

The Playdate by Louise Millar (S&S/Atria/Emily Bestler Trade Pbk Original) is the story of a friendship between two London women who live on the same street, one affluent and the other a struggling single mother whose child has a heart condition. PW says it begins as a “quiet story about neighbors [and] soon builds into a gripping psychological thriller.” 75,000-copy first printing.

 

Usual Suspects

Criminal by Karin Slaughter (RH/Delacorte Press; Center Point Large Print; AudioGO) is the fourth installment in the Georgia Bureau of Investigation series, with two disturbingly similar rape cases that take place 40 years apart. PW says, “Slaughter seamlessly shifts between past and present, while her usual attentive eye for character and carefully metered violence is on full display.”

The Next Best Thing by Jennifer Weiner (S&S/Atria Books; Center Point Large Print; Simon & Schuster Audio) is the story of Ruth Saunders, who moves in with her grandma in Hollywood and gets a sitcom accepted for production.

Iron Gray Sea: Destroyerman by Taylor Anderson (Penguin/NAL/Roc; Tantor Audio) is the seventh novel in the Destroyerman series about a parallel universe in which the drama of World War II plays out, with Lieutenant Commander Matthew Reddy and the crew of USS “Walker” and their allies pursuing a Japanese destroyer in Allied seas.

Nonfiction

Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar by Cheryl Strayed (Random House) is a collection of columns that appeared on the online publication The Rumpus. Formerly anonymous, the columnist recently revealed herself to be the author of the memoir Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail, the first in the Oprah 2.0 Book Club. Kirkus says this collection “demonstrates that wisdom doesn’t come only from age, but also from learning from the experiences of others. A realistic and poignant compilation of the intricacies of relationships.”

New Title Radar: June 18 – 24

Friday, June 15th, 2012

Next week brings two buzzed-about debuts: a thriller by Jean Zimmerman set in 1663 New Amsterdam and Carol Rifka Brunt‘s tale of two sisters in the age of AIDS. Plus two authors with growing followings are back: Leila Meacham with a sprawling Texas soap opera, and Linda Castillo with the fourth installment in her Amish series. Usual suspects include Janet EvanovichTerry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter, and Ridley Pearson. In nonfiction, Rachel Swarns delves into First Lady Michelle Obama’s ancestry and David Maraniss explores President Obama’s background and character development.

Watch List

The Orphanmaster by Jean Zimmerman (Penguin/Viking Books; Penguin Audiobooks; Thorndike Large Print) is a debut historical thriller set in New Amsterdam in 1663, in which a young Dutch woman and an English spy investigate the disappearances of a handful of orphans. Booklist calls it a “compulsively readable, heartbreaking, and grisly mystery set in a wild, colonial America will appeal to fans of Robert McCammon’s fast-paced and tautly suspenseful Mister Slaughter and Eliot Pattison’s Bone Rattler.” USA Today listed it as the top summer reading pick for the mystery/suspense category. Zimmerman was the first author in our Penguin Debut Authors program (read the chat & hear a podcast Q&A with the author here). She will also be featured on the ALTAFF Historical Fiction panel at ALA (Sat., 10:30 to noon)

Tell the Wolves I’m Home by Carol Rifka Brunt (RH/Dial Press) is a debut novel about two sisters who lose their uncle in the mid-’80s as AIDS is on the rise, and must come to terms with “love that’s too big to stay in a tiny bucket. Splashing out in the most embarrassing way possible.” On our GalleyChat, one librarian called it the “best book I’ve ever read.” Like the previous titles, it is one of BookPage‘s Most-Buzzed About Debuts. The Minneapolis Star Tribune lists it among their eight books for summer: “Carol Rifka Brunt establishes herself as an emerging author to watch.  Tell the Wolves I’m Home will undoubtedly be this summer’s literary sleeper hit.”

Tumbleweeds by Leila Meacham (Hachette/Grand Central; Hachette Audio; Thorndike Large Print) is the sprawling story of a love triangle between two high school football heroes and the orphan girl they befriend, who are separated by a teenage prank gone awry and an accidental pregnancy, with far-reaching consequences. LJ says, “Readers who love epic sagas that span a couple of generations will enjoy this soap opera tale of young love, betrayal, and living a life that might not have a happy ending.” 125,000-copy first-printing. One-day laydown.

Gone Missing: A Thriller by Linda Castillo (Macmillan/Minotaur) is the fourth Amish mystery featuring Chief of Police Kate Burkholder, and is set during Rumspringa — when Amish teens are allowed to experience life outside the community, a practice that always fascinates outsiders. PW says, “Castillo ratchets up the tension nicely before the disconcerting ending.” Castillo’s previous titles have hit the NYT hardcover list, but only the extended (highest, #21). Holds are heavy in some libraries. The publisher is putting extra marketing push behind this one.

Usual Suspects

Wicked Business: A Lizzy and Diesel Novel by Janet Evanovich (RH/Bantam; RH Audio; Thorndike Large Print) finds Salem, Massachusetts pastry chef Lizzy Tucker once again drawn into solving a mystery with her sexy but off-limits partner Diesel – this time involving an ancient Stone believed by some to be infused with the power of lust.

The Long Earth by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter (Harper) is the Discworld creator’s first novel in 30 years to be set in a new universe – this time comprised of an infinite number of parallel Earths, all devoid of humans, which will be explored by the gifted Joshua Valiente, employee of the Black Corporation. PW says, “the slow-burning plot plays second fiddle to the fascinating premise, and the authors seem to have more fun developing backstory and concepts than any real tension. An abrupt conclusion comes as an unwelcome end to this tale of exploration.”

The Risk Agent by Ridley Pearson (Putnam Adult; Brilliance Audio) is a thriller about a Chinese National who runs into intrigue while working for an American-owned in Shanghai (where the author lived with his family in 2008-2009). LJ says, “Famous for his plotting and attention to details, Pearson is off to a great start with his compelling and multilayered new protagonists. His many fans as well as readers who love international thrillers won’t be disappointed.”

Nonfiction

American Tapestry: The Story of the Black, White, and Multiracial Ancestors of Michelle Obama by Rachel L. Swarns (HarperCollins/Amistad) is the story of the First Lady’s lineage, starting with slave girl Melvinia in the mid 1800s in Jonesboro, Georgia, the mother of Dolphus Shields, Michelle Obama’s maternal great-great-grandfather.  Kirkus says, “Swarns provides numerous tales of heartbreak and achievement, many of which essentially make up the American story. Elegantly woven strands in a not-so-easy-to-follow whole, but tremendously moving.” 100,000-copy first printing.

Barack Obama: The Story by David Maraniss (Simon & Schuster; S&S Audio) is a multi-generational biography of Barack Obama and his family, based on hundreds of interviews, including with President Obama – written by the author and associate editor of the Washington Post.  PW says, “Obama’s story here is interior and un-charismatic, but it makes for a revealing study in character-formation as destiny. The book ends as Obama prepares to enter Harvard Law.” One-day laydown.

New Title Radar: June 11 – 17

Friday, June 8th, 2012

More media and librarian favorites land next week, as the summer reading season swings into gear. Some familiar names deliver new novels with big potential, including Alan Furst, Mark Haddon, Jess Walter, John Lanchester, and Robert Goolrick. There are also debuts to watch from Claire McMillan, Benjamin WoodMaggie Shipstead. Usual suspects include Robert Dugoni, Dorothea Benton Frank, Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus. And in nonfiction, there’s an intriguing look at what humans and animals have in common when it comes to health and healing by cardiologist and psychiatrist Barbara Natterson-Horowitz and science writer Kathryn Bowers.

Watch List

Mission to Paris by Alan Furst (Random House; Thorndike Large Print; S&S Audio) is set in Paris in the year leading up to Germany’s 1940 attack, as a Hollywood film star is drawn in to the Nazi propaganda war. It’s on Time magazine’s list of top ten picks for the year so far. In an early New York Times review, Janet Maslin says, “This particular Paris is the spy novelist Alan Furst’s home turf. He has been there many times in the course of 11 soignée, alluring novels. But he has never been there with a Hollywood movie star.”

The Gilded Age by Claire McMillan (S&S) follows a woman who returns to close-knit Shaker Heights, Ohio after a divorce and rehab, to find her next wealthy husband. It led the “women’s fiction” category on USA Today‘s Summer Books previewPublishers Weekly says that “while the novel tips its hat to House of Mirth, a simple comparison doesn’t do McMillan justice.”  More Edith Wharton-inspired novels are out this summer. The Innocents by Francesca Segal (Hyperion/Voice. 6/5/12) recasts Edith Wharton’s Age of Innocence in a close-knit North West London Jewish community and BEA Lbirarians Shout ‘n’ Share pickThe Age of Desire by Jenny Fields, Penguin/Pamela Dorman, 8/2/12, is about Edith Wharton’s love affair with a younger man.

The Bellwether Revivals by Benjamin Wood (Penguin/Viking; Brilliance Audio) is  told by caregiver Oscar Lowe, who becomes entangled with Cambridge students Iris and her brother Eden, who thinks he can heal others through music. It’s the second galley featured in our First Flights programBooklist says, “this first novel is most notable for its acute characterizations and flowing prose that engrosses the reader as initial foreboding fades only to grow again. Wood is definitely a writer to watch.”

Returning Favorite

The Red House by Mark Haddon (RH/Doubleday; Random House Audio) is a social novel about a brother who invites his sister, her husband and three children for week’s vacation with his new wife and step-daughter, by the author of the runaway bestseller The Curious Incident of a Dog in the Night.  Entertainment Weekly gives it a B+, saying in a review that sounds more like an A, “The story unfolds from all eight characters’ points of view, a tricky strategy that pays off, letting Haddon dig convincingly into all of the failures, worries, and weaknesses that they can’t leave behind during this pause in their lives.” It’s a June Indie Next pick.

GalleyChat Picks

Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter (HarperCollins) is a bittersweet romance that begins when a starlet pregnant with Richard Burton’s baby is whisked from the set of Cleopatra to a tiny Italian seaside village in 1962, where the innkeeper falls in love with her, and looks her up in Hollywood years later.  Reviews have begun already, as we noted earlier.

Capital by John Lanchester (Norton) is set in former a working class London neighborhood where property values have skyrocketed, as the 2008 recession sets in. LJ says it “weaves together multiple stories in an uncanny microcosm of contemporary British life that’s incredibly rich and maybe just a bit heavy, like a pastry. Yet definitely worth a look.”  It’s also a June Indie Next pick.

Heading Out to Wonderful by Robert Goolrick (Workman/Algonquin Books; Highbridge AudioThorndike Large Print) is the story of a man who returns from WWII to a small Virginia town with a suitcase stuffed with cash and a set of butcher knives. LJ says, “this novel is not a straightforward Southern gothic thriller but primarily a lyrical meditation on the magnified elements of small-town life: friendship, trust, land, lust, and sin.” The author’s previous novel, A Reliable Wife, was a huge seller, especially in paperback. We’re expecting even more from this one. This one is the #2 June Indie Next pick

Seating Arrangements by Maggie Shipstead (RH/Knopf), a debut novel, is the story of  “WASP wedding dysfunction at it’s most hilarious,” as librarian Jennifer Dayton of Darien, CT observed on our GalleyChat. It’s a June Indie Next pick and a B&N Best Book of the Month. Ron Charles in the Washington Post this week calls it “a perfect summer romp” and, “Shipstead’s weave of wit and observation continually delights.”

Usual Suspects

The Conviction by Robert Dugoni (S&S/Touchstone) is the fifth thriller featuring Seattle lawyer David Sloane, as he tries to spring his adopted son and his friend from a hellish juvenile detention center. Nancy Pearl is a Dugoni fan, as evidenced by this interview from 2011.

Porch Lights by Dorothea Benton Frank (Harper/ Morrow; HarperAudio; Thorndike Large Print) explores how a mother and son rekindle their faith in life after their beloved husband and father is killed in the line of duty as a fireman.

Between You and Me by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus (S&S/Atria Books; Wheeler Large Print; S&S/Audio) is the story of a young woman who escaped her unhappy Oklahoma childhood as an adult in New York City, but can’t refuse a request to assist her famous cousin, who proceeds to have a very public unraveling. LJ says, “while attempting to address deeper family bonds, the authors swing wide and miss their mark. The emotional ties never quite shine through.”

Nonfiction

Zoobiquity: What Animals Can Teach Us About Health and the Science of Healing by Barbara Natterson-Horowitz and Kathryn Bowers (RH/Knopf; RH Audio) brings together cardiologist and psychiatrist Natterson-Horowitz and science writer Bowers to make the case that since animals and humans suffer the same diseases, doctors and veterinarians should work more closely together. Booklist calls it “as clarion and perception-altering as works by Oliver Sacks, Michael Pollan, and E. O. Wilson.”

Chat with Benjamin Wood, BELLWETHER REVIVALS, Begins at 4 p.m.

Friday, June 1st, 2012
 Live Chat with Benjamin Wood, BELLWETHER REVIVALS(06/01/2012) 
3:58
Nora - Earlyword: 
Our chat with Ben Wood, author of Bellwether Revivials begins ins just a few minutes.
Friday June 1, 2012 3:58 Nora - Earlyword
4:00
Nora - Earlyword: 
Hey; I see a bunch of readers out there! Welcome -- I was worried, since it's a Friday and all.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:00 Nora - Earlyword
4:00
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
Looking forward to the session.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:00 colldev00
4:00
[Comment From ReadingEnvy ReadingEnvy : ] 
Hi there!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:00 ReadingEnvy
4:01
[Comment From Kristin Kristin : ] 
Hello!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:01 Kristin
4:01
Nora - Earlyword: 
I see I had no reason to worry about turnout!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:01 Nora - Earlyword
4:01
[Comment From readingreality readingreality : ] 
it's a rainy friday here in Atlanta. Might as well be reading!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:01 readingreality
4:02
[Comment From BethMills2 BethMills2 : ] 
No problem making this one--it's my day off
Friday June 1, 2012 4:02 BethMills2
4:02
Nora - Earlyword: 
Spoken like a true librarian, Beth!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:02 Nora - Earlyword
4:02
[Comment From Theresa Theresa : ] 
Hello! Getting ready to rain here in PA
Friday June 1, 2012 4:02 Theresa
4:02
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
I've been listening to the Audio interview (again) while waiting for the chat to begin.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:02 colldev00
4:03
Nora - Earlyword: 
Just heard from Ben -- trying to get him added in now.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:03 Nora - Earlyword
4:04
[Comment From Anne Anne : ] 
Yes, and I am not up in an airplane - so this is good
Friday June 1, 2012 4:04 Anne
4:04
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
I like having the Chat session on a Friday afternoon too even though I am at work. Nice break but still dealing with books
Friday June 1, 2012 4:04 colldev00
4:04
[Comment From Carherine Carherine : ] 
Happy to join the chat.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:04 Carherine
4:05
[Comment From Lesley Lesley : ] 
Happy to be here on a Friday afternoon. I have 4 more pages of the book left to finish
Friday June 1, 2012 4:05 Lesley
4:06
[Comment From Donna Zmrazek Donna Zmrazek : ] 
Hello. I'm looking forward to the live chat too!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:06 Donna Zmrazek
4:06
[Comment From Sue D Sue D : ] 
Hello from Kansas City. On vacation but wouldn't miss this!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:06 Sue D
4:06
[Comment From Guest Guest : ] 
I'm here for now. I have a feeling someone might try to get me back out at a desk.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:06 Guest
4:06
[Comment From Guest Guest : ] 
Hello, Nora - hello, everyone!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:06 Guest
4:06
[Comment From Cynthia Cynthia : ] 
Just joining the chat. I've only just started the book.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:06 Cynthia
4:07
Nora - Earlyword: 
No worries if you haven't finished the book; we hope this chat will help you enjoy reading it.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:07 Nora - Earlyword
4:07
[Comment From Shanella Shanella : ] 
Joining from NYC!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:07 Shanella
4:08
Nora - Earlyword: 
Just heard from Ben; he'll be joining shortly (tech problem from my end! -- I was losing my mind!)
Friday June 1, 2012 4:08 Nora - Earlyword
4:10
Nora - Earlyword: 
OK -- still waiting -- I know Ben's out there, but having trouble patching him in!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:10 Nora - Earlyword
4:12
[Comment From Cynthia Cynthia : ] 
Thanks, Nora. That's my thinking too.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:12 Cynthia
4:12
BENJAMIN WOOD
[Comment From BENJAMIN WOOD BENJAMIN WOOD : ]
Hello, everyone.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:12 
4:13
Nora - Earlyword: 
Somehow, we made your avatar HUGE!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:13 Nora - Earlyword
4:13
[Comment From Guest Guest : ] 
Will there be spoilers, other than what was in the audio? - haven't read yet...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:13 Guest
4:13
[Comment From Melanie Melanie : ] 
Hello from North Carolina.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:13 Melanie
4:13
[Comment From Donna Zmrazek Donna Zmrazek : ] 
I thought the book was good. The story really stayed with me. I hope you will enjoy the book too. I listened to the live chat from earlier. The author is very interesting.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:13 Donna Zmrazek
4:13
[Comment From Jackie R. Jackie R. : ] 
Really enjoying the book ... can't wait to hear what he has to say!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:13 Jackie R.
4:13
Benjamin Wood
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ]
Hello from London!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:13 
4:14
Nora - Earlyword: 
Hi Ben, it’s 9 p.m. in London – you should be heading out on the town. Thanks for spending it with your American librarian readers.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:14 Nora - Earlyword
4:14
[Comment From Catherine Catherine : ] 
I finished the novel several days ago and find I'm still haunted by these tragic characters. This doesn't often happen to me.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:14 Catherine
4:14
[Comment From Laura B. Laura B. : ] 
Warning, I submitted questions with spoilers!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:14 Laura B.
4:14
[Comment From Diane Diane : ] 
Can't see the eyelashes
Friday June 1, 2012 4:14 Diane
4:14
Nora - Earlyword: 
The previous comment will be explained later!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:14 Nora - Earlyword
4:14
[Comment From Lesley Lesley : ] 
I literally just finished your book. It was a page turner.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:14 Lesley
4:15
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
It's my pleasure to be here. Great to meet so many librarians and readers in the US.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:15 Benjamin Wood
4:15
[Comment From shayes732 shayes732 : ] 
I really loved the book Ben
Friday June 1, 2012 4:15 shayes732
4:15
[Comment From Christine Christine : ] 
Yes, it kept me up too late one night.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:15 Christine
4:16
Nora - Earlyword: 
Hi Ben -- give us a brief synopsis (minus spoilers!)
Friday June 1, 2012 4:16 Nora - Earlyword
4:17
[Comment From Sue D Sue D : ] 
I have enjoyed the atmosphere you have created Ben. Even without the prologue, the descriptions of the College, the weather, what the surrounding town was like, I had feeling the tension was building and building. Great job!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:17 Sue D
4:17
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Thank you, everyone. Wonderful to hear that you're all enjoying the book. For those that haven't read it yet, here's a synopsis:
Friday June 1, 2012 4:17 Benjamin Wood
4:17
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
The novel follows Oscar Lowe, a bright young nursing home assistant in Cambridge. He falls in love with a medical student at King’s College, Iris Bellwether, after he is drawn into an evensong service at the chapel by the ethereal sound of an organ. Soon, he becomes embroiled in the machinations of Iris’s older brother, Eden, who is a rather self-confident but troubled musical prodigy. Eden believes he can adapt the theories of a forgotten Baroque composer for healing purposes, and he lures Oscar into a series of experiments to prove his claims. The novel is a love story at heart—the graduating romance between Oscar and Iris is very much at the foreground. It adopts a different viewpoint from most campus-set novels, in that Oscar isn’t a student at the university but an outsider looking in on a world of scholarship and privilege. With Eden’s musical claims at the centre of the plot, the novel explores the partition between genius and madness, touching on wider themes along the way, such as the conflict between science and faith.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:17 Benjamin Wood
4:18
Nora - Earlyword: 
Let's take a look at the cover, which tells us the setting and a bit of the theme (can you see the music score in the background?)...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:18 Nora - Earlyword
4:18
Nora - Earlyword
US Cover
Friday June 1, 2012 4:18 
4:19
[Comment From shayes732 shayes732 : ] 
I kept thinking as I was reading, how much research into music and psychology did you have to do?
Friday June 1, 2012 4:19 shayes732
4:19
[Comment From Laura B. Laura B. : ] 
You write so well about the music. Do you play an instrument?
Friday June 1, 2012 4:19 Laura B.
4:20
Nora - Earlyword: 
It's interesting that the UK cover emphasized the music theme by using the metronome...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:20 Nora - Earlyword
4:20
Nora - Earlyword
UK Edition
Friday June 1, 2012 4:20 
4:21
[Comment From Shanella Shanella : ] 
I loved the font on the UK cover
Friday June 1, 2012 4:21 Shanella
4:22
Nora - Earlyword: 
Look what the Canadian publisher went with...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:22 Nora - Earlyword
4:22
Nora - Earlyword
Canadian Cover
Friday June 1, 2012 4:22 
4:22
Nora - Earlyword: 
I think we've lost Ben -- keep trying --
Friday June 1, 2012 4:22 Nora - Earlyword
4:23
Nora - Earlyword: 
One of the things Ben told me about was the origin of the term "bellwether"...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:23 Nora - Earlyword
4:23
Nora - Earlyword: 
It’s the lead goat in a herd, identified by his bell.

Wether is an old English word for a gelded ram – I read it could come from a term meaning a yearling, since rams were castrated at one year old (a related term is “veal”). Here’s a great shot of a real bellwether…
Friday June 1, 2012 4:23 Nora - Earlyword
4:23
Nora - Earlyword
An original bellwether
Friday June 1, 2012 4:23 
4:24
[Comment From Theresa Theresa : ] 
I think I like the UK cover better.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:24 Theresa
4:24
[Comment From Anne Anne : ] 
It is always interesting to see the difference between the Us & UK covers. I usually like the UK covers better.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:24 Anne
4:24
[Comment From Melanie Melanie : ] 
I like the US cover the best.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:24 Melanie
4:24
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
Does the Canadian cover deliberately cut off the top of the head or did the image not come through completely in the chat box?
Friday June 1, 2012 4:24 colldev00
4:24
Nora - Earlyword: 
I keep wondering if there is a cultural significance to the difference in covers.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:24 Nora - Earlyword
4:25
[Comment From Kristin Kristin : ] 
Golly - hard to just look at the covers and imagine them being for the same book!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:25 Kristin
4:26
Nora - Earlyword: 
Ben keeps emaiing me in frustration -- he can see your comments, but can't get in. I may shut down the whole system and start again -- don't go away...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:26 Nora - Earlyword
4:26
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Sorry, everyone. I'm having some real technical problems at this end. Must be the extra Diamond Jubilee traffic!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:26 Benjamin Wood
4:28
[Comment From Laura B. Laura B. : ] 
I thought Bellwether might refer to the warning bell atop a weather buoy, sounding an alarm of rough seas. Iris is that Bellwether, so maybe Eden is the lead ram?
Friday June 1, 2012 4:28 Laura B.
4:29
[Comment From Diane Diane : ] 
probably the newspapers hacking in
Friday June 1, 2012 4:29 Diane
4:30
[Comment From Kristin Kristin : ] 
@Laura B I had the same thought!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:30 Kristin
4:30
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
@Shayes732 and Laura B: Thanks for reading. I engaged in plenty of research into music theory over the course of writing the novel, particularly into an area called music aesthetics. I am a self-taught musician (guitar and a little piano, but only enough to bash out a version of The Long and Winding Road), so it took some time to get acquainted with the theoretical side of music required for the novel. Most of all, I wanted to be able to convey the sensory aspect of music in the prose, rather than rely on too many precise technical terms or jargon to represent it, which I often find distancing in fiction relating to music.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:30 Benjamin Wood
4:31
Nora - Earlyword: 
Hey; there's Ben -- guess we'll have to have him chime in as a "guest' -- so sorry, Ben!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:31 Nora - Earlyword
4:32
Nora - Earlyword: 
So, back to the question of names -- love this one from a participant:

I love to discuss an author's clever character names with my teen book discussion group, and I found your names wonderful, particularly Bellwether. Any special significance to "Oscar" or "Iris," since she proved not to be a genus but a fragile and fleeting flower?

Friday June 1, 2012 4:32 Nora - Earlyword
4:32
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
About the Bellwether - it's a sheep (usually a castrated ram) with a bell around its neck, whom the rest of the flock follow...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:32 Benjamin Wood
4:33
Nora - Earlyword: 
Ben -- we'll give you some time to adjust to this new arrangement -- I wanted to get your thoughts on this quote on the UK jacket:

Love the quote on the UK cover -- “there is no great genius without some note of madness”
Friday June 1, 2012 4:33 Nora - Earlyword
4:34
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
I felt it was a pertinent name to give someone such as Eden - but I really like the suggestions for the connotations in relation to Iris.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:34 Benjamin Wood
4:34
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
No special relevance. With Oscar, I wanted a name that sounded soft and compassionate, and which seemed almost classless...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:34 Benjamin Wood
4:35
Which of these famous writers is not a Cambridge University graduate?
Michael Frayn
 ( 9% )
AS Byatt
 ( 0% )
Nick Hornby
 ( 45% )
Sebastian Faulks
 ( 0% )
Kazuo Ishiguro
 ( 18% )
Zadie Smith
 ( 27% )

Friday June 1, 2012 4:35 
4:35
Nora - Earlyword: 
We've just posted a poll -- see how you do!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:35 Nora - Earlyword
4:35
Nora - Earlyword: 
We will give you the answer later.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:35 Nora - Earlyword
4:36
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
With Iris, I was looking for a name that seemed intelligent and yet welcoming. It was probably a residual name from an early draft (insider info here) in which Eden Bellwether was once called Michael Iris. Somehow, it stuck.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:36 Benjamin Wood
4:36
Nora - Earlyword: 
We've been talking about the various covers, Ben. Which is your favorite?
Friday June 1, 2012 4:36 Nora - Earlyword
4:36
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
Isn't an Iris a hothouse flower with all the connotations that might carry as well.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:36 colldev00
4:37
Nora - Earlyword: 
I don't know -- I've seen some pretty tough irises out in fields!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:37 Nora - Earlyword
4:38
Nora - Earlyword: 
Love the quote on the UK cover -- “there is no great genius without some note of madness”

And, on the other hand, one of your characters says, "Hope is a form of madness. A benevolent one, sure, but madness all the same."
Friday June 1, 2012 4:38 Nora - Earlyword
4:38
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
Not a gardner or into plants, just thought I'd heard that somewhere.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:38 colldev00
4:38
Nora - Earlyword: 
Let's talk about the "eyelashes" issue -- You got a great review in the Independent, but it had this unusual line:

…images of Benjamin Wood's beautiful hair and long eyelashes are becoming familiar …

Your writer friends must have LOVED that!
Coming up, the author photo that inspired the above...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:38 Nora - Earlyword
4:39
Nora - Earlyword
The author photo that got almost as much attention as the book
Friday June 1, 2012 4:39 
4:39
[Comment From AndrewSalchert AndrewSalchert : ] 
My irises grow so tall they can't stand on their own.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:39 AndrewSalchert
4:39
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
My favourite cover is actually the US cover. I like all of them, and they all have their own differences and finishes (the UK version is velvety to the touch, because of the paper that they used). But the US cover image is the one that I think best reflects the mood and themes of the book.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:39 Benjamin Wood
4:40
Nora - Earlyword: 
Eden is taken with the Baroque composer Johann Mathesson. Tell us a bit about him. While you’re answering, here’s a bit of his organ music – we used it for the intro to our podcast interview…
Friday June 1, 2012 4:40 Nora - Earlyword
4:40
Johann Mathesson organ music  Play
Friday June 1, 2012 4:40 
4:40
Nora - Earlyword: 
Sounds like this moody image of Cambridge...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:40 Nora - Earlyword
4:41
Nora - Earlyword
King's College and Chapel
Friday June 1, 2012 4:41 
4:41
Nora - Earlyword: 
And, seen from another angle...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:41 Nora - Earlyword
4:41
Nora - Earlyword
King's College Chapel Cambridge
Friday June 1, 2012 4:41 
4:42
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Funnily enough, I'd never really thought much about my own eyelashes (who does?) until that review. But I suppose a national paper is a decent forum for such a discussion. The review began with a paragraph talking about my author photo, which was worrying, but then it said some rather pleasing things about the novel - so I can have no complaints, even though people still tease me about the eyelashes and call me "the pompadour".
Friday June 1, 2012 4:42 Benjamin Wood
4:42
[Comment From Susan Susan : ] 
It also sounds moody like Eden is moody.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:42 Susan
4:43
Nora - Earlyword: 
Ben -- what's the answer tot he first poll?
Friday June 1, 2012 4:43 Nora - Earlyword
4:44
Which of these famous literary figures once lived in Grantchester, where the Bellwethers reside?
Tom Stoppard
 ( 0% )
Ford Maddox Ford
 ( 11% )
Sylvia Plath
 ( 56% )
Michael Ondaatje
 ( 22% )
VS Pritchett
 ( 0% )
J.G. Ballard
 ( 11% )

Friday June 1, 2012 4:44 
4:44
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Mattheson is one of those almost forgotten figures of the Baroque era, in some ways. He was a greatly talented composer (of sacred music and opera) and he was a contemporary of Handel (they were friends, and almost killed each other in a duel). But what he is most known for is his critical theory, in particular a work call Der Vollkommene Capellmeister (rough trans. The Perfect Chapelmaster) which made a case for manipulating the properties of music for certain emotional effects.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:44 Benjamin Wood
4:45
Nora - Earlyword: 
How did you learn about him? What happened to his theories?
Friday June 1, 2012 4:45 Nora - Earlyword
4:45
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Answer to the first poll, Nora, is KAZUO ISHIGURO - though I can see why most would plump for Hornby or Smith... Hope everyone is bearing with me here. I'm trying my best to keep up with the lag!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:45 Benjamin Wood
4:46
Nora - Earlyword: 
Don't worry -- Americans are more patient than we are usually given credit for!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:46 Nora - Earlyword
4:47
Nora - Earlyword: 
The bit of Mattheson music, hat you heard earlier is played on a 1966 Moller organ by David Christensen in Riverside, California. If you want to listen to the full version, it's on YouTube -- http://youtu.be/jKYA0rAO-_0
Friday June 1, 2012 4:47 Nora - Earlyword
4:48
[Comment From ReadingEnvy ReadingEnvy : ] 
Oh I can imagine most Baroque composers not exactly embracing that philosophy!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:48 ReadingEnvy
4:49
Nora - Earlyword: 
You describe Eden playing Mattheson on the organ -- he hovers "his fingers above the keys like a puppeteer" -- a great image, since Eden also acts as a puppeteer to his band of friends.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:49 Nora - Earlyword
4:49
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
I learned about Mattheson through my research into music aesthetics. His name kept cropping up in texts I was reading, to see if anyone had tried to explain music's emotional effects in definite terms. And the more I read, the more Mattheson kept popping up. So I found out as much as I could about him and his works. And he struck me as a historical figure that someone like Eden would become quite obsessed with.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:49 Benjamin Wood
4:50
[Comment From shanellareads shanellareads : ] 
[I have to head home - will this chat be available after?]
Friday June 1, 2012 4:50 shanellareads
4:50
Nora - Earlyword: 
Thanks for the question -- yes the chat will be archived and you will also be able to listen to the Podcast of my interview with Ben (no tech difficulties there!)
Friday June 1, 2012 4:50 Nora - Earlyword
4:51
[Comment From kellydcurrie kellydcurrie : ] 
We've been talking a lot about Eden, but to tell you the truth, I was fascinated with Oscar. He seemed like such a gentleman and a wonderful contrast to the larger than life Eden.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:51 kellydcurrie
4:51
Nora - Earlyword: 
That ties in to a question that was submitted in advance -- the person wanted to know why Oscar worked in a nursing home.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:51 Nora - Earlyword
4:52
[Comment From Susan Susan : ] 
I agree, I think Oscar was just as strong a character as Eden with a completely different outlook.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:52 Susan
4:52
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Thanks, KellyDCurrie. I'm really pleased you connected with Oscar as character.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:52 Benjamin Wood
4:52
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
I relied on my personal experiences of growing up in a nursing home to depict Oscar’s working life at Cedarbrook. The fondness he feels towards the residents at Cedarbrook, the genial atmosphere of the place, were born of my own recollections of childhood, growing up in the care home my parents owned when I was about six or seven.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:52 Benjamin Wood
4:54
Nora - Earlyword: 
Wait! You "grew up" in a nursing home? That makes me understand the great relationship that Oscar had with Paulsen (my favorite character in the book).
Friday June 1, 2012 4:54 Nora - Earlyword
4:54
[Comment From kellydcurrie kellydcurrie : ] 
Wow, living there must have made a big impression on you. If I were in a nursing home, I certainly would want someone like Oscar caring for me.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:54 kellydcurrie
4:55
Nora - Earlyword: 
By the way, here's a portrait of the Baroque composter, Mattheson -- he was a real person...
Friday June 1, 2012 4:55 Nora - Earlyword
4:55
Nora - Earlyword
Johann Mattheson, baroque composer
Friday June 1, 2012 4:55 
4:55
Nora - Earlyword: 
I'm betting HE had great eyelashes!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:55 Nora - Earlyword
4:55
[Comment From BethMills2 BethMills2 : ] 
Enjoyed character of Dr Paulsen--elderly too often caricatures or invisible in fiction.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:55 BethMills2
4:56
[Comment From Laura B. Laura B. : ] 
His profession makes Oscar, the Lowe among the aristocrats, a very compassionate but also down-to-earth character.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:56 Laura B.
4:56
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
It did, Kelly. There's a line in the book about Oscar feeling that the residents are "a cast of elderly relatives he was grateful to have adopted" - that reflects my own feelings. It was like have an extra 20 sets of grandparents in the house.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:56 Benjamin Wood
4:56
Nora - Earlyword: 
This may be an odd detail to focus on -- but I was curious about the clove cigarettes that Iris smoked continually.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:56 Nora - Earlyword
4:58
Nora - Earlyword: 
It's one of the details that made the novel feel so specific and therefore more real -- as one of our early commenters put it...

I just wanted to comment on how wonderfully detailed the setting was; I love a richly detailed narrative that engages all the senses without being overwritten: I could hear the sounds Oscar heard, smell the things around him. It was very easy to get lost in his world
Friday June 1, 2012 4:58 Nora - Earlyword
4:58
[Comment From Laura B. Laura B. : ] 
And Herbert was a great character, too. I wish I could read his book -- the version with Eden.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:58 Laura B.
4:58
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
I agree, BethMills2 - and they are often stereotyped. I hope that Dr Paulsen comes across as bad-tempered but compassionate.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:58 Benjamin Wood
4:58
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Ah, the cloves. They're banned in the USA, I hear.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:58 Benjamin Wood
4:59
Nora - Earlyword: 
We ban a lot of strange things -- now Mayor Bloomberg wants to ban large sugared sodas!
Friday June 1, 2012 4:59 Nora - Earlyword
4:59
[Comment From Theresa Theresa : ] 
Ben - which character do you most identify with? I'm guessing Oscar.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:59 Theresa
4:59
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
".. an extra 20 sets of grandparents", what a lovely sentiment and portrayed in Oscar's character so well in the book.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:59 colldev00
4:59
[Comment From kellydcurrie kellydcurrie : ] 
Are clove cigarettes popular in the UK?
Friday June 1, 2012 4:59 kellydcurrie
4:59
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Theresa - I related most to the protagonist, Oscar, yes—his observations as a non-student living in the shadow of the Cambridge colleges partly reflect my own.
Friday June 1, 2012 4:59 Benjamin Wood
5:00
Nora - Earlyword: 
Before we have to end... tell us who lived in Grantchester?
Friday June 1, 2012 5:00 Nora - Earlyword
5:00
[Comment From Sue D Sue D : ] 
I was reminded of The Secret History by Donna Tartt when reading this book. That is one that sticks with you just like this book pops up in your thoughts unexpectedly.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:00 Sue D
5:01
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Cloves are available in the UK, but not hugely popular. They have a rather sweet, cloying scent (not too dissimilar to pipesmoke). The high tar content makes them VERY bad for your health (as if regular cigarettes weren't bad enough, eh?).
Friday June 1, 2012 5:01 Benjamin Wood
5:01
[Comment From Susan Susan : ] 
As far as popular characters, Eden certainly had his followers.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:01 Susan
5:02
[Comment From Laura B. Laura B. : ] 
Ben, you caught the feel of Iris' experiences and even the singers' experiences in Eden's plots very well.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:02 Laura B.
5:03
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Sylvia Plath shared a farmhouse with Ted Hughes in Grantchester Meadows. A lot of people knew that one, it seems!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:03 Benjamin Wood
5:03
[Comment From kellydcurrie kellydcurrie : ] 
Hmmm. So Iris was maybe doomed one way or the other!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:03 kellydcurrie
5:03
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Sue D - that is wonderful to hear. Thank you. If if can stay in people's minds for 20+ years, like Donna Tartt's debut, I will be thrilled and humbled.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:03 Benjamin Wood
5:04
Nora - Earlyword: 
Thanks for joining us, everyone. Sorry for the tech difficulties. We will work them out before the next chat.

We're looking forward to the book's publication here, Ben. Always fun to talk to an author on the eve of a launch. Will you be touring here?
Friday June 1, 2012 5:04 Nora - Earlyword
5:05
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Thanks, Laura B. It is difficult, when writing ensemble scenes with lots of action, to make sure that every character's emotional state is hinted at. So I'm glad you connected with these scenes.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:05 Benjamin Wood
5:05
[Comment From ReadingEnvy ReadingEnvy : ] 
I've got to run but I'm looking forward to finishing, and novels incorporating music always mean more to me, so thank you.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:05 ReadingEnvy
5:06
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
Thanks Nora for the chat session and a big THANK YOU to Ben for joining in from the UK.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:06 colldev00
5:06
[Comment From kellydcurrie kellydcurrie : ] 
Thanks Nora and Ben for a great chat!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:06 kellydcurrie
5:07
[Comment From Donna Zmrazek Donna Zmrazek : ] 
This was a great chat session! Thanks!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:07 Donna Zmrazek
5:08
[Comment From Theresa Theresa : ] 
Thank you for a great chat - wish it could have been longer!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:08 Theresa
5:08
[Comment From Anne Anne : ] 
Wonderful chat. it helped to enhance my reading.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:08 Anne
5:08
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
Waiting to 'see' the answer to Nors's question about touring here.
Friday June 1, 2012 5:08 colldev00
5:08
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
THANK YOU, everyone, for joining me. Sorry that tech problems slowed things down. It was a great pleasure to be able to chat with you all. When I sat down to write this book, I hoped to see it on the shelves in the US one day, and it's such a privilege to hear from so many American librarians engaging with the characters and story. I'm not sure if I'll be doing any events in the US, but I hope I'll be over soon. It's a fine country. Great meeting everyone. Bye!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:08 Benjamin Wood
5:08
Nora - Earlyword: 
Thanks for hanging in with us, Ben -- you were a great sport!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:08 Nora - Earlyword
5:10
[Comment From colldev00 colldev00 : ] 
Thank you, again. Bye!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:10 colldev00
5:10
[Comment From Benjamin Wood Benjamin Wood : ] 
Any time, Nora. Thanks for moderating through the tech issues. It was fun!
Friday June 1, 2012 5:10 Benjamin Wood
 
 

New Title Radar: June 4 -10

Friday, June 1st, 2012

A handful of much-anticipated summer reading picks arrive next week, including thrillers from Matthew Quirk, Gillian Flynn and Elizabeth Haynes, contemporary novels with unusual characters and settings from Francesca Segal and Rhian Ellis, and Laura Moriarty‘s historical novel about the young Louise Brooks’s chaperone. Usual suspects include Jeffrey Deaver, Eric Von Lustbader, Laurell K. Hamilton, Mary Kay Andrews and Luanne Rice. And political commentators David Limbaugh and Gail Collins deliver new political critiques.

Watch List

The 500 by Matthew Quirk (Hachette/Little, Brown.Reagan Arthur; Hachette Large Print ; Hachette Audio) is a thriller set in a Washington D.C. political lobbying firm, where Harvard law grad Mike Ford is forced to draw on the skills he learned from his con man father, as he’s drawn into the midst of a political conspiracy. It’s the lead thriller on USA Today‘s summer reading list (“Why it’s hot: Early reviews compare this classic David-and-Goliath tale to the early works of John Grisham”) and a June Indie Next pick. The movie rights were sold right after the book was picked up, and there’s also a sequel coming. Libraries that bought it heavily say the Reagan Arthur imprint makes them pay particular attention.

The Innocents by Francesca Segal (Hyperion/Voice) recasts Edith Wharton’s Age of Innocence in a close-knit North West London Jewish community, where a 12-year engagement is upset by the arrival of the bride-to-be’s free-spirited cousin. Kirkus says, “overall this is a well-tuned portrait of a couple whose connection proves to be much more tenuous than expected, and of religious rituals that prove more meaningful than they seem.” It’s also a June Indie Next pick.

Galley Chat Picks         

Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn (Crown) is the story of a marriage gone badly wrong, told alternately in diary entries by the wife, a New York golden girl who goes missing on the couple’s fifth anniversary, and her husband, who has much to hide. As we wrote earlier, it’s shaping up to be the author’s breakout. The New York Times‘s Janet Maslin is over the moon about it, comparing Flynn with Patricia Highsmith and calling her third novel a “dazzling breakthrough. It is wily, mercurial, subtly layered and populated by characters so well imagined that they’re hard to part with.” It is also on Time‘s list of top fiction for the year and is a June Indie Next pick as well as big on GalleyChat.

The Chaperone by Laura Moriarty (Penguin/Riverhead; Thorndike Large Print; Blackstone Audio; Penguin Audio) centers on the prim married woman from Kansas who accompanied 15 year-old silent film femme fatale Louise Brooks on her first trip to New York City in 1922, and spans the next six decades of the older woman’s life. It’s on O magazine’s The 16 Best Books Coming Out This June and is a June Indie Next pick  (more bookseller comments here). It’s also showing heavy holds at Wake County Library, which has featured it on their Web site. Recreational Reading Librarian Janet Lockhart says, “Once our members see it on the list, the cover and the high concept plot lead to holds. I know it’s in my to-be-read pile because of those two things—I’m a big movie fan and Louise Brooks is an icon.”

Into the Darkest Corner by Elizabeth Haynes (Harper) is a debut thriller about a woman struggling to escape an abusive relationship, a surprise hit in the UK.  It’s featured in USA Today‘s summer preview, and LJ says, “UK police intelligence analyst Haynes has crafted a scary and superbly written debut thriller. Her chilling portrayal of OCD and the violent cycles of an abusive relationship will cause readers to lose sleep and check the locks on windows and doors.”

Readers Advisory 

After Life (Book Lust Rediscoveries) by Rhian Ellis (Amazon Encore paperback; Brilliance Audio) is the second in Nancy Pearl’s series of favorites being brought back in to print. This one is also a favorite of Ann Patchett’s, who calls it, “that rarest of wonders, a book that is both exquisitely written and a thrill to read.”

Usual Suspects

XO by Jeffery Deaver (S&S; S&S Audio; Thorndike Large Print) follows rising country pop singer Kayleigh Towne as she’s threatened by a stalker while people close to her die, putting pressure on Special Agent Kathryn Dance to solve the case; on USA Today‘s summer reading list.

Robert Ludlum’s The Bourne Imperative by Eric Van Lustbader (Hachette/Grand Central) is the seventh Bourne novel, this time set in Sadeloga, Sweden, where Bourne helps a man who, like him, suffers from amnesia. PW says, “Newbies who want to understand the various plot lines would be advised to begin at least two or three books back. Established fans will find all the usual cliffhangers, hairbreadth escapes, and multiple betrayals they expect from this series.” 250,000 copy first printing.

Little Night by Luanne Rice (Penguin/Pamela Dorman) is the author’s 30th novel. It tells the story of two sisters – one of whom, Clare, wound up in prison after she tried to save her sister, Anne, from an abusive husband, whom Anne lied to protect him. LJ says, “this hard-to-put-down story about how family ties can be undone and sometimes retied is compelling and will undoubtedly resonate with fans of contemporary women’s fiction.”

Spring Fever by Mary Kay Andrews (Macmillan/St. Martin’s Press; Wheeler Publishing; Macmillan Audio) is the tale of two exes who get a second chance when one of their weddings is unexpectedly halted. PW calls is “unmemorable” but still “an enjoyable escape.” This one is a Costco Pennie’s Pick for June (the article also mentions that the success of the Andrews’ books has brought attention to the books she wrote under her own name, Kathy Trocheck. HarperCollins will re-release the Callahan Garrity series with new covers under the Andrews name. They will also be available as ebooks).

Kiss the Dead (Anita Blake Vampire Hunter Series #21) by Laurell K. Hamilton (Penguin/Berkley; Penguin Audio) finds U.S. Marshall and vampire hunter confronting the terrorist fringe of a group of rouge vampires. PW says, “there’s nothing here that Hamilton hasn’t done already, but there’s enough to sustain readers until Anita’s next escapade.”

Nonfiction

The Great Destroyer: Barack Obama’s War on the Republic by David Limbaugh (Regnery) is the fourth book by the political commentator who is the brother of Rush Limbaugh. The title says it all. 300,000-copy first printing.

As Texas Goes…: How the Lone Star State Hijacked the American Agenda by Gail Collins (Norton/Liveright) has the New York Times op-ed columnist locating the country’s political ailments deep in the heart of Texas. 100,000-copy first printing.

Summer Reading Lists Arrive

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

      

Memorial Day is marked by parades, wreath laying, dreams of long days reading in the hammock, and summer reading lists. Several arrived as scheduled, and, as we’ve come to expect, there’s very little overlap among them. Only four titles were mentioned more than once in this round:

The Age of MiraclesKaren Thompson Walker(Random House, 6/26; BOT Audio; Thorndike Large Print; ebook and audio, OverDrive)

On NYT (Maslin), NPR (Schaub) and WSJ lists
Digital ARC on Edelweiss and NetGalley.

The Next Best Thing, Jennifer Weiner, (S&S/Atria, 7/3; S&S Audio)

On USA Today and Good Houskeeping lists
Downloadable from NetGalley

The Orphanmaster, Jean Zimmerman, (Penguin/Viking, 6/19; Penguin Audio; Thorndike Large Print)

On USA Today and Good Houskeeping lists
Digital ARC on Edelweiss and NetGalley

Where’d You Go, Bernadette, Maria Semple, (Hachette/Little, Brown, 8/14; Hachette Audio)

On NPR (Schaub) and WSJ lists as well as on Time‘s list of the best ten novels of the year.

Below are the lists:

USA Today — Summer Books Preview”

Our favorite, because it’s most in tune with the titles we’ve been hearing about on GalleyChat and it is presented in an interactive format (flash cards for readers advisors), although, surprisingly, it misses the big buzz debut of the summer, Karen Thompson Walker’s The Age of Miracles(Random House, 6/26).

The Wall Street Journal — “Rewriting the Rules of Summer Fiction

The WSJ contends that several of the summer’s most anticipated novels “combine genres in unexpected ways and subvert long-held narrative conventions.”  It’s a good hook, but the phenomenon wasn’t invented this season. The prime examples are The Age of Miracles because it’s “a quiet family drama with science-fiction themes” and  Dare Me (Hachette/Regan Arthur, 8/31) by Megan Abbot, dubbed “High-School Noir” because it “turns the frothy world of high-school cheerleading into something truly menacing.”

NPR — 15 Summer Reads Recommended By Booksellers

Unsurprisingly, this is the least buzz-oriented of the lists. NPR has published several other summer reading lists, including Nancy Pearl’s and critic Michael Schaub’s (who is more clued in to buzz; The Age of Miracles is on his). The full roundup of the various NPR lists is here.

New York Times, Janet Maslin — “New Under the Sun: Books for Basking; Granddad, There’s a Head on the Beach and Other Summer Reads

Maslin lavishes the most attention on Hilary Mantel’s Bring Up the Bodies, already a best seller, and includes some quirky titles, (such as the one in the headline, Granddad, There’s a Head on the Beach, a “droll mystery” by Colin Cotterill, Macmillan/Minotaur, 6/18), and some buzz titles (The Age of Miracles). One surprising recommendation; reality-show-creator-cum-talk-show-host Andy Cohen’s Most Talkative (Macmillan/Holt), currently #5 on the NYT hardcover nonfiction best seller list after two weeks. She says he is “as funny as Augusten Burroughs used to be.”

Good Housekeeping — 11 Summer Beach Reads

This list is also in tune with titles we’ve been hearing about on GalleyChat, such as Laura Moriarty’s The Chaperone (Penguin/Riverhead, 6/5) called a “fun romp” by GH. Also on the list, The Orphanmaster, a genre-bending title described as “A thriller, love story, and costume drama in one.” It’s also on USA Today‘s list, under mysteries. Many of you joined us in reading the book and chatting with the author as part of Penguin’s First Flights debut author program. The newly-released trailer features Jean talking about the historical background of the novel.

New Title Radar: May 21 – 27

Friday, May 18th, 2012

Richard Ford and Paul Theroux return next week – with Ford exploring a boy’s coming of age and Theroux probing a mid-life crisis – while Elizabeth Lowell delivers her latest romantic thriller. There are also three novels that librarians have been buzzing about on our Galley Chat: Suzanne Joinson‘s tale of two women connected across time, Melanie Gideon‘s comic novel about a bored wife, and a mystery set amid the early days of Scotland Yard by Alex Grecian. Plus YA novels from Alyson Noël and Michael Scott.  And in nonfiction, Colin Powell shares his leadership lessons.

Literary Favorites

Canada by Richard Ford (Harper/Ecco; HarperLuxe) is a story of abandonment and self-discovery, told by a boy transplanted to an obscure town in Canada after his parents are arrested for a bank robbery and his sister flees. It’s the #1 IndieNext Pick for June. LJ says, “the narrative slowly builds into a gripping commentary on life’s biggest question: Why are we here? Ford’s latest work successfully expands our understanding of and sympathy for humankind.” At libraries, holds are light on moderate ordering, but it’s on nearly every list of upcoming titles. 200,000 copy first printing.

The Lower River byPaul Theroux (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) follows a man journeying back to an area in Malawi he hasn’t returned to since his years with the Peace Corps after his wife and child leave him, only to discover a village wracked by poverty. PW says, “A somewhat slow exposition and occasional repetition aside, Theroux successfully grafts keen observations about the efficacy of international aid and the nature of nostalgia to a swift-moving narrative through a beautifully described landscape.” Also an IndieNext pick for June.

Romance

Beautiful Sacrifice by Elizabeth Lowell (Harper/Morrow; HarperLuxe) finds archeologist Lina Taylor and former Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Hunter Johnson joining forces to track down missing Mayan artifacts in this romantic thriller.  150,000 copy-first-print. One-day laydown.

 

 

GalleyChat Favorites

A Lady Cyclist’s Guide to Kashgar by Suzanne Joinson (Bloomsbury) is a historical novel with two parallel stories about women struggling to define themselves, which moves between 1920s Turkestan and present-day England. The publisher compares it to Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand and The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. It’s been getting buzz on GalleyChat, with librarians saying it’s a ” good historical fiction novel, with a great cover.” LJ is also positive: “this atmospheric first novel immediately engages… Highly recommended” and it is an IndieNext pick for June. However, libraries have bought it relatively lightly. Cuyahoga buyer Wendy Bartlett cautions that the book does not deliver the light-hearted story signaled by the cover and title and that the parallel stories may put off casual readers. 75,000 copy first printing. The Web site LadyCyclistsGuide.com provides background on Kashgar and the origins of the story.

Wife 22 by Melanie Gideon (RH/Ballantine; RH Audio) is about a bored San Francisco Bay Area wife and mother of teenagers, who in the course of taking a survey about her marriage (she is Wife #22) realizes that the researcher who’s interviewing her may understand her better than her husband. It’s the first adult novel from YA novelist Gideon, who is also the author of the popular adult memoir The Slippery Year.  Here are a few comments from our Galley Chat: “Add me to the list enjoying Wife 22. Would definitely be a great book for discussion.” — “Hard to put down! People will either love or hate main character.” CRYSTAL BALL: Most libraries could use more copies.

The Yard by Alex Grecian (Putnam) is a mystery set in Victorian London, featuring a detective new to Scotland Yard as the organization tries to recover from its failure to catch Jack the Ripper, and written by the author of the graphic novel series Proof. Booklist says, “Grecian’s infusion of actual history adds to this thriller’s credibility and punch.” One of our Galley Chatters had this to say: “mystery set at the end of the 19th C is excellent. Early Scotland Yard, beginning of forensics.” Also an IndieNext pick for June

Young Adult

Fated by Alyson Noël (St. Martin’s/Griffin) marks the beginning of the new Soul Seekers series, about a girl who discovers that she’s descended from Native American shamans, from the author of popular The Immortals series. PW says, “Though weakened by genre cliches and off-screen character development, [the] story is nicely paced and well-written.” It launches with its own Web site.

The Enchantress (Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel Series #6) by Michael Scott (RH/Delacorte Young Readers; Listening Library) is the latest installment in the series that mixes fantasy (the main character is a fabulously wealthy book seller), science fiction and horror. Trailers and games available on the series site.

 

Nonfiction

It Worked For Me: In Life and Leadership by Colin Powell (HarperCollins) is a series of anecdotes that illustrate leadership lessons, by the former secretary of state and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and author of the two-million-copy bestseller My American Journey. PW says, “There’s much inspirational sense drawn from Powell’s matchless range of managerial and political experiences, but also a frustrating reticence on the great leadership crisis of his time [the war in Iraq].” Print Run: 750,000 copies.

New Title Radar: May 14 – 20

Friday, May 11th, 2012

Our list of eleven titles you need to know next week, includes Jai Pausch’s memoir about coming to terms with the loss of her husband, Randy, whose book, The Last Lecture, has been an enduring favorite. The author of Friday Night Lights writes a new book about traveling with his brain-damaged son. On our Watch List is a book libraries may have under bought and a Nancy Pearl pick for the summer.

Watch List

The Cottage at Glass Beach by Heather Barbieri (HarperCollins) is the followup to the 2009 word-of-mouth hit, The Lacemakers of Glenmara. Library orders range widely, with Cuyahoga (OH) buying the most; over 150 copies for their 28 branches, even though there are few holds on it so far. Head of collection development, Wendy Bartlett took a stand on the book because the previous book was a long-running local hit, with people continuing to place holds over a year after it was published. Wake County (NC) has bought more conservatively, and has much higher holds than other libraries we checked. Recreation Reading Librarian, Janet Lockhart believes holds are based on the cover and description, featured on their catalog, which appeals to anyone looking forward to summer on the beach. The Lacemakers of Glenmara is still circulating in both libraries, creating a built-in audience. Note: The author lives in Seattle and the book is set in Maine. CRYSTAL BALL: Most libraries can use more copies of this; with that cover and author name recognition, it will turn over quickly.

The Lola Quartet by Emily St John Mandel (Unbridled Books) explores the lives of the members of a suburban Florida high school jazz quartet as their paths cross ten years later, and they face the disappointments of adulthood, from lost jobs to unplanned progeny to addiction. This is a Nancy Pearl pick for the summer, as were the author’s previous two novels, both of which were critical successes.

Literary Favorites

The Chemistry of Tears by Peter Carey (RH/Knopf) is a tale of love and loneliness by the two-time Booker winner focusing on a museum conservator in London who plunges into a project to restore an automaton as she silently grieves the death of her lover of 13 years, who was married to someone else. Booklist says, “Carey’s gripping, if at times overwrought, fable raises provocative questions about life, death, and memory and our power to create and destroy.” The Wall St. Journal has an interview with the author.

Usual Suspects

The Columbus Affair by Steve Berry (RH/Ballantine; Random House Large Print; Random House Audio) is a standalone thriller in which a journalist works to decipher the artifacts left in his father’s coffin, leading to discoveries about Christopher Columbus. The author is usually compared to Tom Clancy or Clive Cussler, but here, he is working in the Dan Brown mode.

Stolen Prey by John Stanford (Penguin/Putnam; Penguin Audiobooks) is the 22nd novel featuring Lucas Davenport of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, as he investigates the murder of a family in their lakeside trophy house.

YOUNG ADULT

The Accused (Theodore Boone Series #3; Penguin/Dutton Children’s) by John Grisham finds 13 year-old Theo facing his biggest challenge yet, after having discovered key evidence in a murder trial and in his best friend’s abduction.

Gilt by Katherine Longshore (Penguin/Viking Children’s) follows the life of Henry VIII’s fifth wife, Katherine Howard, through the eyes of her close friend. Kirkus says, “the mounting terror as lusty, luxury-loving Cat’s fortunes fall is palpable, as is the sense that the queen is no innocent. The author’s adherence to historical detail is admirable, clashing with both title and cover, which imply far more froth than readers will find between the covers. A substantive, sobering historical read, with just a few heaving bodices.” This one is highly anticipated by librarians on our YA GalleyChat.

A Confusion of Princes by Garth Nix (HarperCollins) is a space opera featuring a 19-year-old prince who is forced out of his protected bubble and must grapple with the weaknesses and strengths of his true self in order to take his rightful place as intergalactic Emperor. Kirkus says, “the rocket-powered pace and epic world building provide an ideal vehicle for what is, at heart, a sweet paean to what it means to be human.  75K copies.” This one has been heavily ordered by libraries and has holds.

Nonfiction

Father’s Day: A Journey into the Mind and Heart of My Extraordinary Son by Buzz Bissinger (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; Simon & Schuster Audio) finds the author of Friday Night Lights on a cross-country trip with his 24 year-old son, who has some significant disabilities related to brain damage at birth, and many admirable qualities. 100K copy first printing.

DNA USA by Bryan Sykes (Norton/Liveright) is part travelogue, part genealogical history of the U.S. as the author, an Oxford geneticist, writes about the DNA samples he has gathered. Kirkus says, “Sykes gives lucid, entertaining explanations of new genetic techniques and their startling success at tracing familial ties across continents and millennia.” An interview with the author is scheduled for NPR’s Weekend All Things Considered, in addition to coverage on local NPR stations. Libraries are showing some holds.

Dream New Dreams: Reimagining My Life After Loss by Jai Pausch (RH/Crown Archetype) is a meditation on marriage, grief and caregiving through illness by the wife of Randy Pausch, who wrote the bestseller The Last Lecture on the eve of his death from pancreatic cancer. Kirkus says, “Far from being a mere add-on to her late husband’s book, this work stands on its own as an eloquent testimony of a caregiver.”

One Shot at Forever: A Small Town, an Unlikely Coach, and a Magical Baseball Season by Chris Ballard (Hyperion) is a Sports Illustrated writer’s fond look back at the 1971 Macon (Ill.) High School’s baseball team’s journey to the state finals. PW says, “Ballard holds the story of the team together with his conversational prose and boosts the story’s poignancy with a touching conclusion that demonstrates the importance of high school sports and hometown heroes while asking, if not answering, the question of how much one game, a win or lose, can change a life.” 100,000 copy first printing.

Fiction Radar: May 7th – 13th

Friday, May 4th, 2012

Media attention is focusing on next week’s titles from long-time literary stars Toni Morrison, and John Irving as well as Hilary Mantel’s sequel to Wolf Hall. There’s also a hot debut romance with a touch of time travel from newcomer Beatriz Williams, another doggy bestseller from Bruce Cameron, and a prequel to The GodfatherReturning favorites include James Patterson and Maxine Paetro and Richard Paul Evans.

WATCH LIST

Overseas by Beatriz Williams (Penguin/Putnam) is a debut novel about a contemporary Wall Street analyst, who falls in love with a mystifying billionaire, and then discovers they met in another life, in WWI. PW says, “at heart this is a delicious story about the ultimate romantic fantasy: love that not only triumphs over time and common sense, but, once Kate overcomes Julian’s WWI-era ideas about honor, includes mind-blowing sex.” The author begins her book tour with her home town library in Greenwich, CT.

A Dog’s Journey: Another Novel for Humans by W. Bruce Cameron (Macmillan/Forge; Macmillan Audio; Wheeler Large Print) is the sequel to the bestseller A Dog’s Purpose that asks: Do we really take care of our pets, or do they take care of us? Booklist says, “Cameron explores the concept of canine karma with acute sensitivity and exhibits cunning insight into life from a dog’s perspective.”

The Family Corleone by Ed Falco (Grand Central; Hachette Audio; Hachette Large Print) is a prequel to The Godfather. We wrote about the book trailer‘s clever twist last week.

LITERARY FAVORITES

Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel (Macmillan/Holt) continues the story of intrigue in the Tudor court that began in the Booker Prize winning Wolf Hall. There have already been several advance reviews, including Janet Maslin’s in the New York Times (which says that Wolf Hall is “a hard act to follow. But the follow-up is equally sublime”), and in Entertainment Weekly (it gets an “A”), as well as an article in the Wall St. Journal about whether you need to read Wolf Hall first (you don’t according to her publisher, but a Washington D.C. bookseller says you do).

In the British book trailer, Mantel talks about the enduring fascination with her subject, Anne Boleyn, who had “huge sexual magnetism.”

Home by Toni Morrison (RH/Knopf; Random House Large Print; Random House Audio) is the Nobel winner’s exploration of the inner life of Korean War veteran, who endured front line trauma and returns to racist America with more than just physical scars. People magazine says, “At half the length of most of her previous works, Home is as much prose poem as long-form fiction — a triumph for a beloved literary icon who, at 81, proves that her talents remain in full flower.”

In One Person by John Irving (Simon & Schuster; Simon & Schuster Audio) is a portrait of a bisexual man described by the publisher as “a story of unfulfilled love—tormented, funny, and affecting—and an impassioned embrace of our sexual differences.” It’s well known that Irving repeats themes; Wikipedia even has a chart of which recurring subjects appear in which books. Some find that tiresome;  Entertainment Weekly asks, “What is it with John Irving and transsexuals?” but still gives it a B+. Earlier, in an interview in the same publication, Irving explained that he continues to explore issues he began writing about in Garp back in 1978 because, “There’s still a problem. People hate each other for their sexual differences, even today.”  People, also comments on Irving revisiting old themes, but says in this book, he manages to expresses a “fresh, heartfelt urgency.”

Expect major media coverage, including a profile in Time magazine (which asserts that  In One Person marks the author’s return to being “a literary heavyweight”), an appearance on NPR’s Weekend Edition tomorrow and CBS This Morning on Tuesday. NOTE: Irving will be featured speaker at ALA on Saturday, June 23.

A person who got to know the book intimately, the audio narrator, gives a passionate promo for the book and talks about the difference between narrating a book and acting:

USUAL SUSPECTS

11th Hour by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro (Hachette/Little, Brown; Hachette Large Print; Hachette Audio) finds Lindsay Boxer pregnant and on the case of the murder of a millionaire with a weapon that’s linked to the deaths of four of San Francisco’s most untouchable criminals, and was taken from her own department’s evidence locker.

The Road to Grace by Richard Paul Evans (Simon & Schuster; Center Point Large Print; Simon & Schuster Audio) continues The Walk series, with Alan setting out to cover nearly 1,000 miles between South Dakota and St. Louis on foot, where he encounters a mysterious woman, a ghost hunter and an elderly Polish man.


New Title Radar: April 30th – May 6

Friday, April 27th, 2012

Next week is a big one for memoir and biography, with the much-anticipated fourth installment in Robert Caro‘s biography of Lyndon Johnson, plus memoirs by Dan Rather and Ryan O’Neal, and an oral history of NBC-TV’s triumphant turnaround in the 1990s by former executive Warren Littlefield. It also brings a debut novel by Brandon Jones about human trafficking in North Korea and Nell Freudenberger‘s sophomore novel of cross-cultural marriage. And, new titles are soming from usual suspects Charlayne Harris and Ace Atkins filling in for Robert Spenser, and the latest installments in popular YA series by Kristin Cashore and Rick Riordan.

Watch List

All Woman and Springtime by Brandon Jones (Workman/Algonquin; Highbridge Audio) is a debut novel about two North Korean girls who form an immutable bond when they meet in an orphanage, but are betrayed and sold into prostitution at age 17, taking them on a damaging journey to South Korea and ultimately a brothel in Seattle. LJ calls it “impossible to put down,” adding “this work is important reading for anyone who cares about the power of literature to engage the world and speak its often frightening truths.”

Critical Success

The Newlyweds by Nell Freudenberger (RH/Knopf; Random House Audio) is the author’s second novel of cultural confrontation, this time featuring Amina, a 24 year old Bangladeshi woman who becomes the e-mail bride of George, an electrical engineer in Rochester, NY. It’s heavily anticipated by the critics, as indicated by the number of early reviews in the consumer press. It gets the cover of the NYT Book Review this coming Sunday, Ron Charles reviewed it earlier this week in the Washington Post and Entertainment Weekly gives it a solid A.

Usual Suspects

Deadlocked: A Sookie Stackhouse Novel (Sookie Stackhouse/True Blood #12) by Charlaine Harris (Penguin/Ace Books; Recorded Books; Wheeler Large Print) is the penultimate title in this popular supernatural series, as Sookie Stackhouse and her friends struggle with the consequences of the death of the powerful vampire Victora. PW says, “as loyalties realign and betrayals are unmasked, Harris ably sets the stage for the ensembleas last hurrah.”

Robert B. Parker’s Lullaby: A Spenser Novel by Ace Atkins (Penguin/Putnam; Random House Audio) finds Parker’s PI invesigating a women’s death at the request of her 14 year old daughter. PW says that “Atkins hits all the familiar marks – bantering scenes with Spenseras girlfriend, fisticuffs, heavy-duty backup from the dangerous Hawk – as he offers familiar pleasures. At the same time, he breaks no new ground, avoiding the risk of offending purists and the potential rewards of doing something a bit different with the characters.”

Young Adult

Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore (Penguin/Dial Books; Penguin Audiobooks) arrives to the sound of YA librarians and their readers screams of “at last!”  Kirkus says of this followup to Graceling (2008) and Fire (2009), “devastating and heartbreaking, this will be a disappointment for readers looking for a conventional happy ending. But those willing to take the risk will — like Bitterblue — achieve something even more precious: a hopeful beginning.”

The Serpent’s Shadow (Kane Chronicles Series #3) by Rick Riordan (Disney/Hyperion; Thorndike Large Print; Brilliance Audio) is the conclusion to this bestselling YA fantasy series, in which Carter and Sade Kane risk death and the fate of the world to tame the chaos snake with an ancient spell.

Embargoed

Rather Outspoken: My Life in the News by Dan Rather (Hachette/Grand Central; Hachette Large Print; Hachette Audio) reveals that the TV news anchor felt “his lawsuit against his former network was worth it, even though the $70 million breach-of-conduct case was rejected by New York courts,” according to the Associated Press, which broke the embargo on this book, on sale May 1. Kirkus calls it “an engaging grab-bag: part folksy homage to roots, part expose of institutional wrongdoing and part manifesto for a truly free press.”

Nonfiction

The Passage of Power: The Years of Lyndon Johnson by Robert A. Caro (RH/Knopf; Brilliance Audio) is the fourth volume in Caro’s series on Lyndon Johnson, focusing on the years between his senatorship and presidency, when he battled Robert Kennedy for the 1960 Democratic nomination for president, and undertook his unhappy vice presidency. Caro is the subject of a New York Times Magazine profile, and will doubtless get an avalanche of coverage, starting with Entertainment Weekly‘s review (it gets an A-). Kirkus notes, “the fifth volume is in the works, and it is expected to cover Johnson’s election to the White House and his full term, with the conduct of the Vietnam War ceaselessly dogging him.”

Both of Us: My Life with Farrah by Ryan O’Neal (RH/Crown Archtype; Center Point Large Print; Random House Audio) is the story of film actor O’Neal’s enduring love for TV actress Fawcell – from the love that flared when she was married to Lee Major, to their marriage that ended in 1997, and their eventual reunion for three years before Fawcell died from cancer in 2009. The book is excerpted in the new issue of People magazine (5/7).

Top of the Rock: Inside the Rise and Fall of Must See TV by Warren Littlefield and T.R. Pearson (RH/Doubleday; RH Audio; Thorndike Large Print) is an oral history by NBC’s former president of entertainment, with a chorus of voices including Jerry Seinfeld, Kelsey Grammar and Sean Hayes, as they discuss the ups and downs of turning NBC into a multi-billion dollar broadcasting company in the 1990’s. PW says, “these revelatory glimpses of those glory days make this one of the more entertaining books published about the television industry.”

New Title Radar: April 23 – 29th

Friday, April 20th, 2012

Next week, Stephen King returns with a surprise installment in the Dark Tower series that supposedly ended in 2004, and Jonathan Franzen returns with a new essay collection. Meanwhile, British author Rosamond Lupton follows up on her hit debut with a tearjearker thriller, and Sandra Dallas makes her debut by exploring a dark chapter in Mormon history.

In nonfiction, President Obama’s half-sister releases a memoir as does Anna Quindlen and a book about the House of Representatives is set to grab headlines.

Watch List

True Sisters by Sandra Dallas (Macmillan/St. Martin’s) is a work of historical fiction about four women, recruited to Mormonism with Brigham Young’s promise of a handcart to wheel across the desert to Salt Lake City, who help each other survive what turns out to be a harrowing journey. Kirkus says, “readers enticed by the HBO program Big Love will be particularly interested in the origins of this insular community. This fact-based historical fiction, celebrating sisterhood and heroism, makes for a surefire winner.”

Rising Star

Afterwards by Rosamund Lupton (RH/Crown) is the UK author’s followup to Sister, her popular debut. This one is narrated by Grace, a mother whose spirit hovers above her brain-dead body in the hospital after she rescues her 17-year-old daughter Jenny from a school fire set by an arsonist, while her sister-in-law leads the police investigation. LJ calls it “a wonderful mix of smart thriller with tear-provoking literature; a fine blend of Jodi Picoult and P.D. James.”

Usual Suspects

The Wind Through the Keyhole: A Dark Tower Novel by Stephen King (S&S/Scribner; Simon & Schuster Audio) adds a short, eighth installment to the Dark Tower series that appeared to end in 2004. Largely a flashback to hero Roland Deschain’s gunslinger days, it can stand alone or fit between Wizard and Glass and Wolves of the Calla. Kirkus says, “If it weren’t for the profanity which liberally seasons the narrative, it could pass as a young adult fantasy, a foul-mouthed Harry Potter (with nods toward The Wizard of Oz and C.S. Lewis). It even ends with a redemptive moral, though King mainly concerns himself here with spinning a yarn.”

Crystal Gardens by Amanda Quick (Penguin/Putnam; Brilliance Audio; Thorndike Large Print) is a paranormal historical romance featuring an undercover psychic investigator and fiction writer who finds herself fleeing from an assassin for the second time – and into the arms of a man who may be far more dangerous. LJ raves: “Quick infuses her own addictive brand of breathless, sexy adventure with dashes of vengeance, greed, and violence and a hefty splash of delectable, offbeat humor.”

Young Adult

Rebel Fire: Sherlock Holmes: The Legend Begins, Book 2 by Andrew Lane (Macmillan/FSG; Macmillan Young Listeners) pits 14-year-old Sherlock Holmes against assassin John Wilkes Booth, who is apparently alive and well in England, and mixed up with Holmes’s American tutor Amyus Crowe. Kirkus says, “abductions, frantic train rides, near-death experiences and efforts of [Holmes and] friends to save one another increase suspense with each chapter. A slam-bang climax and satisfying conclusion will please readers while leaving loose threads for further volumes.”

Nonfiction

Farther Away: Essays by Jonathan Franzen ((Macmillan/FSG; Macmillan Audio) gathers essays and speeches written mostly in the past five years, including his account of dispersing some of David Foster Wallace’s ashes on the remote island of Masafuera, excerpted in the New Yorker. Kirkus says, “Franzen can get a bit schoolmarmish and crotchety in his caviling against the horrors of modern society, and he perhaps overestimates the appeal of avian trivia to the general reader, but anyone with an interest in the continued relevance of literature and in engaging with the world in a considered way will find much here to savor. An unfailingly elegant and thoughtful collection of essays from the formidable mind of Franzen, written with passion and haunted by loss.”

And Then Life Happens: A Memoir by Auma Obama (Macmillan/St. Martin’s) is a memoir by President Obama’s half-sister, who was born a year before her brother to Barack Obama Sr.’s first wife, Kezia. Auma’s meeting with her brother in Chicago in 1984 “marks the brightest moment in this eager-to-please work,” according to Kirkus, “and paved the way for his subsequent trips to Kenya and warmly unfolding relationship with his African family.”

My Happy Days in Hollywood: A Memoir by Garry Marshall (RH/Crown Archetype; Random House Large Print; Random House Audio) expands on film and television producer Marshall’s 1997 memoir, Wake Me When It’s Funny, but Kirkus complains that Marshall “isn’t very funny. Or at least this book isn’t. Nor is it serious, mean, scandalous or particularly revelatory. It’s just nice. Marshall has gotten along fine with some difficult actors–including his sister, Penny, and the beleaguered Lindsay Lohan–and has apparently remained friends with everyone with whom he has ever worked…This is a Fudgsicle of a showbiz memoir.”

Sweet Designs: Bake It, Craft It, Style It by Amy Atlas (Hyperion Books) interwines baking and crafting, showing home cooks how to make beautiful sweets, based on the author’s award-winning blog, Sweet Designs.

Do Not Ask What Good We Do: Inside the U.S. House of Representatives, Robert Draper, (S&S), is by the author of Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush. This one is described by the publisher as “a revealing and riveting look at the new House of Representatives.” No pre-pub reviews indicate it’s embargoed. It will be featured on many news shows next week, including NPR’s Weekend Edition, CBS This Morning, and The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.

Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake by Anna Quindlen (RH/Crown; RH Large Print; BOT Audio) will, of course, be featured on many shows next week, including CBS This Morning and The Charlie Rose Show (PBS). An NPR Fresh Air interview is in the works.

Wiley Cash Chat on Tuesday

Thursday, April 19th, 2012

We’re seeing holds stack up in some libraries as attention builds for  Wiley Cash’s debut novel, A Land More Kind than Home (HarperCollins/Morrow; Blackstone Audio), published on Tuesday. Holds are particularly heavy in libraries in the author’s home state of North Carolina.

Good news; you can join us for a chat with the author this coming Tuesday, April 24.

This week, Cash was profiled in USA Today. His book also received several  great reviews:

Kansas City Star (syndicated); “Wiley Cash delivers a lyrical, poignant debut that melds crime fiction with Southern gothic for an emotional story about two brothers.”

St. Augustine Record, “For an author to settle so comfortably into the skin of a character that he can bring them to life as real as any person you’ve actually known is a special talent… and Cash does it times three.”

Milwaukee Journal Sentinal; compares it favorably to Tom Franklin’s Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter, adding, “Cash writes with confidence and compassion about a part of America ‘where people can take hold of religion like it’s a drug”…Cash’s story layers all of this into a beautifully written morality tale.”

Hope to see you on Tuesday for the chat.

New Title Radar: April 16 – 22

Friday, April 13th, 2012

Among the books you’ll need to know about next week is The President’s Club, which is already moving up Amazon’s sales rankings. A title to watch is Wiley Cash‘s novel about a North Carolina holy roller (join us for a chat with the author on April 24th), and the second and third installments in E.L. James’ bestselling erotica series. UK favorites William Boyd and Graham Swift also return, along with usual suspects David Baldacci, Iris Johansen, Nora Roberts, and Stuart Woods. In nonfiction, Jenny Lawton, a.k.a. “The Bloggess,” delivers a tongue-in-cheek memoir of her Texas upbringing.

WATCH LIST

A Land More Kind than Home by Wiley Cash (HarperCollins/Morrow; Blackstone Audiobooks) is a debut novel set in a small North Carolina town, where an ex-con and born-again pastor who uses snakes and poison in his ministry sends the town into a religious frenzy. PW calls it “compelling, with an elegant structure and a keen eye for detail, matched with compassionate attention to character.” Cash was on the debut novelists’ panel at PLA. NOTE:  EarlyWord AuthorChat with Wiley Cash is scheduled for April 24th.

 

ALREADY A WORD-OF-MOUTH HIT

Fifty Shades DarkerFifty Shades Trilogy #2 and Fifty Shades FreedFifty Shades Trilogy #2 by E L James (RH/Vintage) are the middle and final volumes in the bestselling erotica trilogy, republished by Vintage after it the series became a huge word-of-mouth success. The e-books are available from OverDrive.

LITERARY FAVORITES

Waiting for Sunrise by William Boyd (Harper; Thorndike Large Print; Audio, Recorded Books) is the Costa/Whitbread Award winner’s latest novel, about a young English actor seeking psychoanalysis in 1913 Vienna, who enters an affair with a woman who cures his sexual problem, but accuses him of rape. British diplomatic authorities come to his rescue, leading to further mysteries and complications. PW says, “as in all of his novels, Boyd speculates about luck and chance and the unpredictable events that can determine a persons life. With its adroit plot twists and themes of deception and betrayal, this is an absorbing spy novel that raises provocative questions.” Following in the footsteps of Sebastian Faulks and Jeffrey Deaver, it was just announced that Boyd has been chosen by the Ian Fleming estate to write the next in the Bond series, to be published some time next year.

Wish You Were Here by Graham Swift (RH/Knopf; Blackstone Audio) is set on the Isle of Wight in 2006, when caravan park proprietor Jack Luxton discovers that his brother Tom, not seen for years, has been killed in combat in Iraq, and makes the journey to receive his brother’s remains. LJ says, “Swift has written a slow-moving but powerful novel about the struggle to advance beyond grief and despair and to come to grips with the inevitability of change. Recommended for fans of Ian McEwan, Michael Ondaatje, and Kazuo Ishiguro, authors with a similar method of slowly developing an intense interior narrative.”

USUAL SUSPECTS

The Innocent by David Baldacci (Hachette/ Grand Central; Hachette Audio) features hitman Will Robi, who is usually called in when the FBI and the military can’t stop an enemy – but this time, he may have made the first mistake of his career.

What Doesn’t Kill Youby Iris Johansen (Macmillan/ St. Martin’s Press; Brilliance Audio; Thorndike Large Print) features Catherine Ling, the CIA agent introduced in the Eve Duncan novel Chasing the Night (2010), as she tracks a Chinese master herbalist who has disappeared with the formula to his potent and untraceable poison. PW says, “the intrigue spans the globe and involves superhuman characters from earlier Johansen novels with long histories together. The authors trademark dry wit bolsters the bombastic story line.”

The Witness by Nora Roberts (Penguin/Putnam; Putnam Large Print; Brilliance Audio) is the tale of a woman living under an assumed identity to avoid the Russian mob after witnessing a double murder – but attracts the interest of the local police chief. LJ says, “a brilliant, slightly socially awkward heroine meets a puzzle-loving, protective hero in a taut, riveting drama that’s guaranteed to keep the adrenaline flowing.”

Unnatural Acts by Stuart Woods (Penguin/Putnam; Penguin Audio; Thorndike Large Print) finds the usual cast – lawyer Stone Barrington, senior associate Herbie Fisher, and NYPD Lt. Dino Bacchetti – overcoming obstacles with aplomb. However, Baldacci can’t bring himself to arrest a former FBI director who turns out to be a serial killer and a great lover. PW says, “Woods’s well-tested formula ensures that the action purrs along fueled by good food, good liquor, good sex, and plenty of wealth.”

MOVIE TIE-IN

Snow White and the Huntsman by Lily Blake, Evan Daugherty, John Lee Hancock, Hossein Amini (Hachette/LBYR/Poppy) is a novelization tying into the film release slated for June 1, 2012, starring Kristen Stewart, Chris Hemsworth and Charlize Theron. The book cover, which features Stewart as a knife-wielding warrior princess, ran on Entertainment Weekly in an exclusive “cover peek,” in which they felt they had to explain the concept of novelization: “a kind of reverse-adaptation.” Guess they haven’t seen one in a while.

NONFICTION

The Presidents Club: Inside the World’s Most Exclusive Fraternity, by Nancy Gibb and Michael Duffy, (S&S) will be getting strong media attention, including this week’s Time magazine cover; no surprise, since the writers are at the top of that publication’s masthead. Networks are competing for “exclusives” about it; CBS This Morning looked at the four-story D.C. brownstone that serves as the ex-presidents’ “clubhouse” (Barbara Bush characterized it as “a dump”). NBC begins its coverage with the Andrea Mitchell Reports today. The book has already moved to #41 on Amazon sales rankings.

Let’s Pretend This Never Happened: A Mostly True Memoir by Jenny Lawson (Penguin/Einhorn; Penguin Audio), by the popular internet personality “The Bloggess,” makes hay out of her mostly uneventful upbringing in rural Texas, which involved taxidermy, panic attacks, and a 15-year marriage. Kirkus says, “While Lawson fails to strike the perfect balance between pathos and punch line, she creates a comic character that readers will engage with in shocked dismay as they gratefully turn the pages.”

New Title Radar: April 9th – 15

Friday, April 6th, 2012

Ron Rash’s The Cove, goes on sale next week, but critics have already been vying to review the latest novel from the author of the acclaimed Serena. Two buzzed-about debuts will also arrive: Regina O’Melveny‘s historical novel The Book of Madness and Cures and Patrick Flanery‘s exploration of contemporary South Africa Absolution, plus a new novel from Katherine Howe.  Usual suspects include John Grisham, Seth Grahame-Smith and Barbara Taylor Bradford. In nonfiction, there are new books from economist and foodie Tyler Cowen, Brad Meltzer and Edward O. Wilson.

BOOK OF THE WEEK

The Cove by Ron Rash (Harper/Ecco; Thorndike Large Print) features a love affair doomed by the turmoil of WWI, set in Appalachia. Critics have been competing to review it early: People gives it 4 out of 4 stars, saying “In Rash’s skilled hands, even farm chores take on a meditative beauty” and Entertainment Weekly gives it a straight A. However, the Washington Post‘s Ron Charles expresses disappointment: “Maybe anything Ron Rash published after Serena would seem pale… Only at the very end do these pages ignite, and suddenly we’re racing through a conflagration of violence that no one seems able to control except Rash.” The New York Times‘ Janet Maslin also doesn’t find it as good as the ” dazzling” Serena. In any case, the attention offers readers advisors the opportunity to lead people to the earlier book, which is being made into a movie, starring Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence.

WATCH LIST

The Book of Madness and Cures by Regina O’Melveny (Hachette/Little, Brown; Hachette Audio; Thorndike Large Print) is a debut novel about a female doctor in 16th-century Italy that is one of BookPage’s most-buzzed about releases. As the Boston Globe‘s early review notes: “Women physicians playing the sleuth in hostile terrain have been a burgeoning club in the recent field of fiction, led by popular new works from Ann Patchett and Téa Obreht…. [This] story makes for a confounding hybrid, one that speaks to devotees of high-end historical romance from one side of its mouth and the fan base of Dr. Oliver Sacks from the other.”

Absolution by Patrick Flanery (Penguin/Riverhead) is a debut about a celebrated novelist in contemporary Cape Town, South Africa who believes she betrayed her anti-apartheid activist sister. It’s part literary detective story, part portrait of an uncertain society new to freedom. LJ notes that the author, an American living in London, has been called “the next J.M. Coetzee,” and declares that this “assured, atmospheric novel perfectly reflects the tenuous trust being forged among South Africans as they look to the future.”

The House of Velvet and Glass by Katherine Howe (Hyperion Books; Hyperion Audio; Thorndike Large Print) is a historical mystery with a romantic twist by the author of the 2009 debut hit The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane. Set in Boston in 1915, Boolklist says, “it offers a poignant look at spiritualism during the Great War and the comfort it brought to people who had lost loved ones.” LJ recommends it  for fans of Tracy Chevalier and Diana Gabaldon.

USUAL SUSPECTS

Calico Joe by John Grisham (RH/Doubleday; Random House Large Print; Random House Audio) is a baseball-themed book timed for the opening of the season.  Booklist calls it  “a solid baseball story but one that never delivers the emotional payoff readers will expect.”

Unholy Night by Seth Grahame-Smith (Hachette/Grand Central; Hachette Audio) is the latest from the “master of the mashup,” as the Wall Street Journal calls him in a long feature today. Not so much a mashup, this new title plays with history, turning the Three Kings into escaped thieves who happen upon the manger and reluctantly help the Holy family escape to Egypt.  Entertainment Weekly calls it “a fantasy action-adventure akin to fusing Game of Thrones with the Gospel of Luke…Grahame-Smith’s depiction of sacred figures as flawed humans that makes the book feel like a secret account of events that have been sanitized by legend.” Following in the footsteps of the author’s other books, this one has been optioned for the movies. The 3-D film based on his Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter arrives in theaters in June.

Letter from a Stranger by Barbara Taylor Bradford (St. Martin’s Press; Center Point Large Print; Macmillan Audio) is another of the author’s signature multigenerational novel. PW says, “Gardens, food, clothing, and accessories – everything in Bradford’s world shows taste. If the plot turns simplistic at times, loyal fans will still tear up at the descriptions of enduring friendship and familial love.”

YOUNG ADULT

The Calling (Darkness Rising Series #2) by Kelley Armstrong (HarperCollins) is the second installment in a teen fantasy series. Booklist says, “the lightning-fast plot leaves little room for character development, and Armstrong keeps the focus on the motion rather than the emotion while paving the way for the series finale. Fans of the first book, The Gathering (2011), won’t find any reason not to stay on board.”

The Extraordinary Education of Nicholas Benedict (Mysterious Benedict Society Series) by Trenton Lee Stewart (Hachette/LBYR; Listening Library) is a prequel to the popular series, focusing on the backstory of the narcoleptic genius founder of the Mysterious Benedict Society. Booklist says, “The novel is long, true, but many readers will find themselves reluctant to reach the end; and while Stewart leaves an opening for sequels about Nicholas as a child, this invigorating novel stands on its own.”

NONFICTION

An Economist Gets Lunch: New Rules for Everyday Foodies by Tyler Cowen (RH/Dutton) is a gastronomic treatise by an economist best known for The Great Stagnation. PW says, “Cowen writes like your favorite wised-up food maven, folding encyclopedic knowledge and piquant food porn… into a breezy, conversational style; the result is mouth-watering food for thought.” According to Forbes, Cowen is “America’s hottest economist” (remember when that would have been an oxymoron?). Maybe it’s true; he’s spoken at TED. FastCompany recently listed a few of his intriguing “new rules.”

Heroes for My Daughter by Brad Meltzer (Harper) is a compilation by the popular thriller author, of stories of 55 people who dedicated their lives to improving the world, from Eleanor Roosevelt to Amelia Earhart, Anne Frank to Randy Pausch, Theodore Roosevelt to Lucille Ball, Rosa Parks to the passengers on United Flight 93. His Heroes for My Son was published in 2010.

The Social Conquest of Earth by Edward O. Wilson (Norton) is the Pulitzer Prize winning Harvard scientist’s answer to life’s big questions; “Where did we come from? What are we? Where are we going?” Kirkus says, “Group selection–as opposed to kin selection, i.e., the ‘selfish gene’ a la Richard Dawkins–is the author’s big idea…Wilson succeeds in explaining his complex ideas, so attentive readers will receive a deeply satisfying exposure to a major scientific controversy.”

New Title Radar: April 2 – 8

Friday, March 30th, 2012

Next week, another historical novel arrives that’s well-timed for the centenary of the sinking of the Titanic; Charlotte Rogan’s debut, The Lifeboat. Usual suspects include Christopher Moore, Adriana Trigiani, Anne Tyler, Mary Higgins Clark and Lisa Scottoline. And there’s a TV tie-in to the BBC film adaptation of Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks that will air on PBS in April. In nonfiction, there’s a warm reminiscence of Yogi Berra‘s friendship with Yankees pitcher Ron Guildry by Harvey Araton, plus new memoirs from Eloisa James on living in Paris and journalist A.J. Jacobs on living healthy.

Watch List 

The Lifeboat by Charlotte Rogan (Hachette/Little, Brown/Reagan Arthur; Hachette Audio) begins on an elegant ocean liner carrying a woman and her new husband across the Atlantic at the start of WWI, when there is a mysterious explosion. Henry secures Grace a place in a lifeboat, which the survivors quickly realize is over capacity. PW calls it “a complex and engrossing psychological drama.” This one was picked by Waterstones as one of 11 debuts expected to win awards and have strong sales in the UK.

Usual Suspects

Sacre Bleu: A Comedy d’Art by Christopher Moore (Harper/Morrow; Harperluxe; HarperAudio) mixes humor and mystery in a romp through the 19th century French countryside when Vincent van Gogh famously shot himself in a French wheat field. Library Journal says, “Don’t let Moore’s quirky characters and bawdy language fool you. His writing has depth, and his peculiar take on the Impressionists will reel you in. One part art history (with images of masterpieces interspersed with the narrative), one part paranormal mystery, and one part love story, this is a worthy read.” Moore will be interviewed on NPR’s Weekend Edition Saturday.

The Shoemaker’s Wife by Adriana Trigiani (HarperCollins) begins in the Italian Alps, where two teenagers, Enza and Ciro, share a kiss that will linger across continents and time. Both land in New York City, where Enza makes a name for herself as a seamstress, eventually sewing for the great Caruso at the Metropolitan Opera, while Ciro develops into a skilled shoemaker and rake of Little Italy. Booklist calls it “an irresistible love story.”

The Beginner’s Goodbye by Anne Tyler (RH/Knopf; RH Large Print; RH Audio) explores how a middle-aged man, ripped apart by the death of his wife, is gradually restored by her frequent appearances — in their house, on the roadway, in the market. PW calls it “an uplifting tale of love and forgiveness. By the end of this wonderful book, you’ve lived the lives and loves of these characters in the best possible way.”

The Lost Years by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon & Schuster; Thorndike Press; S&S Audio) follows Mariah Lyons’s investigation of the brutal murder of her father, a well-respected academic, who comes into the possession of an ancient and highly valuable parchment stolen from the Vatican in the 15th century. Mary and her daughter, Carol Higgins Clark, will both appear on the Today Show on Wednesday. Carol’s book Gypped: A Regan Reilly Mystery, also published by S&S, is coming out on the same day.

Come Home by Lisa Scottoline (Macmillan/St. Martin’s; Thorndike Press; MacMillan Audio) is the Edgar-winning author’s second character-driven standalone thriller with a family saga at its core. LJ says it “deftly speeds readers through a dizzying labyrinth of intrigue with more hairpin turns and heart-pounding drops than a theme-park ride.”

Sidney Sheldon’s Angel of the Dark, Tilly Bagshawe, (Harper/Morrow; Dreamscape Audio) is the third in the series written by Bagshawe in Sheldon’s style. Says Booklist, “Although clearly aimed at Sheldon’s legion of fans, the book should appeal equally to the broader range of thriller readers.”

TV & Movie Tie-Ins

Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks (RH/Vintage) ties in to the BBC version starring Eddie Redmayne, Clémence Poésy and Matthew Goode, which will air on PBS on April 22 and April 29, 2012. When it was shown in the UK, the British tabloid, The Daily Star, referred to it as a “raunchy adaptation” and an “X-rated hit.” Critics applauded the first episode, but were divided over the second. Audiences, while strong, was not a large as those for Downton AbbeyCheck out the trailer here.

The Pirates! Band of Misfits by Gideon Defoe (RH/Vintage) ties into the animated feature by those wonderful folks who gave us Chicken Run and Wallace & Gromit, with voiceovers by Hugh Grant, Salma Hayek and Jeremy Piven. The first stop-motion clay animated feature film to be shot in Digital 3D, it’s based the first two books in a series by British author Dafoe (collected in this tie-in edition), which has had a stronger following in the UK than here.  Treat yourself; watch the trailer. The movie opens on April 27th.

Nonfiction

Driving Mr. Yogi: Yogi Berra, Ron Guidry, and Baseball’s Greatest Gift by Harvey Araton (Houghton Mifflin) is the story of a unique friendship between a pitcher and catcher, starting in 1999, when Berra was reunited with the Yankees after a long self-exile after being fired by George Steinbrenner 14 years before. It’s already picking up buzz from the Wall St. Journal, which mentions Houghton’s television ads for the book within the VIP areas of Yankee Stadium, as well as ads during the live game feed, and in the New York Times. The authors will appear on NPR’s Weekend Edition Saturday as well as on ESPN’s Baseball Tonight.

Paris in Love: A Memoir by Eloisa James (Random House; Books on Tape) finds the bestselling author of 24 historical romances (who is actually Mary Bly, daughter of poet Robert Bly and associate professor and head of the creative writing department at Fordham University) living in Paris with her family after she survived both cancer and the death of her mother. LJ says, “Not just for Francophiles or even James’s legion of fans, this delectable confection, which includes recipes, is more than a visit to a glorious city: it is also a tour of a family, a marriage, and a love that has no borders. Tres magnifique!”

Drop Dead Healthy: One Man’s Humble Quest for Bodily Perfection by A. J. Jacobs (Simon & Schuster; Thorndike Press; Simon & Schuster Audio) is the fourth book in the One Man’s Humble Quest series, and finds the experieintial journalist trying to become the healthiest man in the world by following a web of diet and exercise advice, most which is nonsensical, unproven, and contradictory. LJ says it’s “engrossing and will have readers chuckling.”

Trickle Down Tyranny: Crushing Obama’s Dream of the Socialist States of America by Michael Savage (Harper/Morrow; Thorndike Press Large Press; Brilliance Audio) is a rant against “Barack Lenin” by the host of the No. 3 radio program in the nation, heard by nearly eight million listeners a week and syndicated across the United States in over 300 markets. “Not a book to make everyone happy,” says LJ, “but the 250,000-copy first printing and one-day laydown on April 3 indicates that the audience will be large.”