Archive for the ‘2010 – Fall’ Category

Authors on Comedy Central

Monday, October 25th, 2010

This week, Jon Stewart has no interviews with authors scheduled (unless you count the President, who is scheduled to appear on Wednesday — the first time a sitting president has been on the show, although Obama appeared two years ago when he was a presidential candidate).

Stephen Colbert takes up the slack, however, featuring three authors on his show.

The Colbert Report

Tuesday

Outside Looking In: Adventures of an Observer
Garry Wills
Retail Price: $25.95
Hardcover: 208 pages
Publisher: Viking Adult – (2010-10-14)
ISBN / EAN: 0670022144 / 9780670022144

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Wednesday

Zero Regrets: Be Greater Than Yesterday
Apolo Anton Ohno
Retail Price: $26.00
Hardcover: 304 pages
Publisher: Atria – (2010-10-26)
ISBN / EAN: 145160906X / 9781451609066

S&S Audio, UNABR.

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Thursday

And the Pursuit of Happiness
Maira Kalman
Retail Price: $29.95
Hardcover: 480 pages
Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The – (2010-10-14)
ISBN / EAN: 1594202672 / 9781594202674

THE WAKE OF FORGIVENESS

Monday, October 25th, 2010

An EarlyWord debut to watch for the fall, The Wake of Forgiveness by Bruce Machart, was featured on NPR’s
Weekend Edition Saturday and received a ringing endorsement from Susan Salter Reynolds in the Los Angeles Times, in a review that begins with this evocative line about the book’s power, “Lavaca County, Texas — one moment it’s a place you’ve never been, the next it’s a place you can’t forget.”

Thorndike will publish the book in large type in February. Recorded Books is doing an audio version. The anticipated release date is 11/29/10.

The Wake of Forgiveness
Bruce Machart
Retail Price: $26.00
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Trade – (2010-10-21)
ISBN / EAN: 0151014434 / 9780151014439

Large Type; Thorndike; 2/16/2011; 9781410435248; $30.99
Audio; Recorded Books; 11/29/10

CLEOPATRA Triumphs

Monday, October 25th, 2010

There’s been chatter all summer and into the fall about Stacy Schiff’s new bio, Cleopatra, most of it focused on whether James Cameron will direct a movie adaptation (in  3-D, no less), starring Angelina Jolie. Headlines indicate it’s definitely the director’s next project, but Cameron has only confirmed that he is considering it and that Jolie would be “hot” in the role.

The book finally arrives next week. Newsweek says,

Rarely have so distant a time and obscured a place come so powerfully to life. It is a great achievement…Faced with the perplexing question of how to write about a person when the evidence is sketchy and often misleading, Schiff has hit on an ingenious solution. She has written a biography in negative, describing the outlines of what she cannot know by brilliantly coloring around the queen.

It’s also featured in O, the Oprah Magazine; Why Cleopatra Still Matters. Schiff herself writes in the Wall Street Journal about why we are Still Under Cleopatra’s Spell.

Cleopatra: A Biography
Stacy Schiff
Retail Price: $29.99
Hardcover: 384 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company – (2010-11-01)
ISBN / EAN: 0316001929 / 9780316001922

Hachette LARGE PRINT; Hdbk; 9780316120449; $31.99
Hachette Audio; UNABR; 9781607887010; 34.98

Today Show Fall Book Picks

Monday, October 25th, 2010

Eight books are profiled in less than five minutes (including two titles we’ve been watching — Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter by Tom Franklin and Room by Emma Donoghue) on the Today Show.

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Reacher’s New Fans

Monday, October 25th, 2010

A CBS Sunday Morning profile of mystery writer Lee Child brought him new fans, sending the paperback of his first book, Killing Floor up Amazon’s sales rankings to #79 (from #1,704), the second book, Die Trying to #152 and the third, Tripwire to #298. The newest hardcover, number 15 in the Jack Reacher series, Worth Dying For, (Delacorte, 10/19), rose to #12 from #24 yesterday.

NYT BR, 10/22

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

The NYT BR’s cover this week is cleverly topical, but it won’t sell many books. It features two views of American politics today, as reflected in books; “The State of Conservatism” by Christopher Caldwell, senior editor for the conservative magazine, The Weekly Standard and “The State of Liberalism,” by Jonathan Alter, Newsweek columnist and MSNBC political analyst.

Chelsea Cain provides a lively review of John le Carré’s Our Kind of Traitor (sample; “John le Carré is to spy fiction what Lindsay Lohan is to TMZ. It’s hard to imagine one without the other.”) It’s as likely to bring new fans to her writing as to his. Cain’s next thriller, The Night Season, (Minotaur), is coming in March; le Carré hardly needs any help; his book debuts on the Hardcover Fiction list this week at #7.

The daily NYT profiled Tom McGuane this week and the Book Review follows with an assessment of his new book, Driving on the Rim (Knopf); “the rambling plot is sustained because the individual episodes are a pleasure, often farcical and always acutely observed, and because the hero is sympathetic in his dissociated journey.”

In best sellers, the Man Booker winner, The Finkler Question (Bloomsbury) hits the Paperback Trade Fiction list at #14; last year’s winner, Wolf Hall is still on the list at #20. Our own award nominees are not faring as well. The National Book Award finalists were announced the Wednesday of the week the lists were compiled. Nicole Krauss’s Great House, (Norton) is the sole title to appear on any of them. It’s on the extended Hardcover Fiction list at #24.

Jane Leavy’s bio of Mickey Mantle, The Last Boy, (Harper), arrives at #4 on the Hardcover Nonfiction list, Condoleezza Rice’s memoir, Extraordinary, Ordinary People (Crown/Archetype) at #9 and Nelson Mandela’s Conversations with Myself (FSG) at #10.

Grisham’s Stands Tall

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

John Grisham‘s new legal thriller, The Confession, is his first to be released in the fall instead of his usual February slot. Another tale of innocence on death row, The Confession involves a guilty man paroled because of an inoperable brain tumor, who decides to confess to a crime he committed for which another man is about to be executed. Libraries we checked have plenty of books on order to meet the voracious demand.

Few publishers are brave enough to put their major titles in direct competition with his – so otherwise it’s a sparse week for major fiction.

The Confession
John Grisham
Retail Price: $28.95
Hardcover: 432 pages
Publisher: Doubleday – (2010-10-26)
ISBN / EAN: 0385528043 / 9780385528047
  • CD: Random House Audio: $45; ISBN 9780739376195
  • Large Print: Random House; $29; ISBN 9780739377895
  • Playaway: $59.99; ISBN 9781616572488

Other Notable Fiction On Sale Next Week

Side Jobs: Stories From the Dresden Files by Jim Butcher (Roc) is a collection of short stories related to bestseling urban fantasy series featuring wizard/private investigator Harry Dresden. PW says fans will “probably want to skip ahead to the last of this collection’s 11 stories, “Aftermath,” set just hours after the end of [the 2010 book Changes]. . . .  The rest of the book is a mixed bag.”

Then, there is the HOT category of Amish fiction, combined with Christmas:

An Amish Christmas by Cynthia Keller (Ballantine)

And, simply, Christmas themed fiction:

Christmas Eve at Friday Harbor by Lisa Kleypas (St. Martin’s) explores the sudden fatherhood of a bachelor after he becomes the guardian of his deceased sister’s daughter

A Christmas Odyssey by Anne Perry (Ballantine) is another Victorian mystery featuring the distinguished mathematician Henry Rathbone.

The Mischief of the Mistletoe: A Pink Carnation Christmas by Lauren Willig (Dutton) is the seventh installment in the Regency romantic suspense series, which moves away from espionage and toward Jane Austen, in a “refreshing” update on the series formula, according to Kirkus.

Young Adult
Three Quarters Dead by Richard Peck (Dial Books)  is a young adult ghost story by the Newbery Medalist and Edgar Award-winning author. Horn Book says, “Peck’s message about the power of the peer group could easily have been more didactic, but wrapping the story in the shrouds of a ghost story was a stroke of genius, making it a creepy tale middle school girls will die for…if they put down their cell phones long enough to read it.”

Childrens

The 39 Clues: The Black Book of Buried Secrets Intro by Rick Riordan (Scholastic) is the latest entry in the series for young readers.

Richards’ Memoir Sticks it to Mick

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

Legendary Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards is setting the tabloid press abuzz over excerpts from his new memoir, Lifein the Times of London, where (big surprise) he says that Mick Jagger has been “unbearable” since the 1980s.

In the New York Times, Janet Maslin calls Richards’ memoir “a big, fierce, game-changing account of the Stones’ nearly half-century-long adventure. . . . some of its most surprisingly revelatory material appears in what Mr. Richards jokingly calls ‘Keef’s Guitar Workshop.’ Here are the secrets of some of the world’s most famous rock riffs and the almost toy-level equipment on which they were recorded.”

Life
Keith Richards
Retail Price: $29.99
Hardcover: 576 pages
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company – (2010-10-26)
ISBN / EAN: 031603438X / 9780316034388
  • CD: Hachette Audio; $34.98; ISBN 9781600242403
  • Large Print: Little Brown and Co., $31.99; ISBN 9780316120364

Other Notable Nonfiction On Sale Next Week

The Mind’s Eye by Oliver Sacks (Knopf) explores how people with impaired senses handle, and even excel at, everyday life, drawing on six case studies including his own loss of depth perception due to a tumor.

Broke: The Plan to Restore Our Trust, Truth and Treasure by Glenn Beck and Kevin Balfe (Threshold) outlines the economic ideas of the Fox News pundit.

Memoirs and Biographies

Cleopatra by Stacy Shiff (Little, Brown). Sure, it’s a bio of a fascinating historical figure by a Pulitzer Prize-winning author, but the buzz around this book has focused on its adaptation as a movie, with Scott Rudin producing, James Cameron in talks to direct (in 3-D!), and Angelina Jolie possibly starring.

The Elephant to Hollywood by Michael Caine (Holt) “revisits familiar territory” from his first memoir, according to Kirkus, “including childhood poverty, the deprivations of World War II, faltering first steps in show business before signature roles in The Ipcress File (1965) and Alfie (1966) made him an international film star—but his warm, wry delivery keeps the material interesting, even though many of the anecdotes have a distinctly practiced feel.”

You Had Me at Woof: How Dogs Taught Me the Secrets of Happiness by Julie Klam (Riverhead) is about a “slightly wacky person who, instead of looking inward for answers [to how to be happy], decided to help others — specifically, Boston terriers,” according to the 11/1 issue of People, where the book is a People Pick and garnered 3.5 of 4 stars.

My Nest Isn’t Empty, It Just Has More Closet Space: Adventures of an Ordinary Woman by Lisa Scottoline and Francesca Scottolini Serritella (St. Martin’s Press) is a collection of true life stories originally written for the Philadelphia Inquirer by the popular suspense writer and her daughter.

Twisted Sisterhood: The Dark Side of Female Friendship by Kelly Valen (Ballantine) is based on the author’s New York Times “Modern Love” column about the lasting scars of her sorority sisters’ betrayal, which attracted lots of reader mail from other women. She is scheduled to appear on Good Morning America on October 26.

Franklin and Eleanor: An Extraordinary Marriage by Hazel Rowley (Farrar, Straus and Giroux) examines the relationship between FDR and his wife.  PW says “Despite Rowley’s cheerleading that the cousins’ conflicts brought out their courage and radicalism, and that they loved with a generosity of spirit that withstood betrayal, FDR emerges as a narcissist while Eleanor carved a spectacular life.”

First Family: Abigail and John Adams by Joseph J. Ellis (Knopf) gets praise from PW: “Ellis’s supple prose and keen psychological insight give a vivid sense of the human drama behind history’s upheavals.”

Cookbook Season
The major gift-giving season will soon be upon us, bringing a raft of new cookbooks.

Barefoot Contessa How Easy Is That?: Fabulous Recipes & Easy Tips by Ina Garten (Clarkson Potter) focuses on simplifying meals without sacrificing quality. The Food Network guru will appear on the Today Show October 26  and 27.

The Essential New York Times Cookbook: Classic Recipes for a New Century, Amanda Hesser (W.W. Norton) ; long before the Contessa became barefoot, the NYT was publishing recipes. In what is sure to be THE gift cookbook of the year, Amanda Hesser examined the NYT recipes since the newspaper began running them in the 1850’s, chronicling the effort in the NYT Magazine series Recipe Redux (the latest is about readers’ “most stained” recipes).

Keys to Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the Best of Foods and Recipes, Harold McGee (Penguin Press) was featured on NPR’s Fresh Air last night, shooting the book to #15 on Amazon sales rankings.

JFK’s Secret Service Agents Talk

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

Secret Service agents are supposed to carry their stories to the grave. That code was broken earlier this year when several former and current agents spilled some juicy secrets to Ron Kessler for his book In the President’s Secret Service.

In a book coming out next month, the code is broken again. In The Kennedy Detail, Gerald Blaine, who was guarded JFK for three years, draws on his own memories and those of fellow service agents, to give new details about the Kennedy years. He reveals he almost shot LBJ in the confusing days after Dallas, creating headlines in newspapers around the world today,

Ex-Agent: I Almost Shot LBJ Hours After JFK Murder, The Associated Press

US agent nearly shot President JohnsonBelfast Telegraph

I nearly shot Lyndon Johnson after JFK was killed: Secret Service agent claims, The Australian

Secret service almost shot Lyndon B. Johnson by accident hours after JFK’s.death..New York Daily News

Blaine’s claim that JFK did not have an affair with Marilyn Monroe is also mentioned, but doesn’t grab the headlines.

The book was embargoed and therefore not available to the prepub review media, so few libraries have ordered it.

The Kennedy Detail: JFK’s Secret Service Agents Break Their Silence
Gerald Blaine, Lisa McCubbin
Retail Price: $28.00
Hardcover: 448 pages
Publisher: Gallery – (2010-11-02)
ISBN / EAN: 1439192960 / 9781439192962

Unabridged audio available from Tantor Audio

Inside the White House

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

Two former White House insiders got together on Monday’s GMA, when George Stephanopoulos, who was White House Communications Director for Bill Clinton, interviewed Nicolle Wallace, who held the same position under George W. Bush.

Wallace’s debut thriller, Eighteen Acres (insider slang for the White House) broke into the Amazon Top 100 after the appearance and strong reviews in both USA Today and the Washington Post.

Where ordering is light, holds are heavy.


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Eighteen Acres
Nicolle Wallace
Retail Price: $25.00
Hardcover: 336 pages
Publisher: Atria – (2010-10-19)
ISBN / EAN: 1439194823 / 9781439194829

Cooking the California Way

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

The NYT Dining & Wine section takes a look at Sunset magazine’s role in promoting the California life style. The article says that Sunset can be thought of as “the Betty White of food magazines,” getting a new life after being eclipsed by celebrity chefs and flashy cooking shows because of

… its extreme dedication to regional food, its reputation among readers for reliable recipes honed in a skilled test kitchen and its forays into the D.I.Y. ethos of backyard beekeeping and home vinegar making has helped with a rehabilitation.

A new collection of recipes from the magazine came out this week. It was not reviewed prepub and is not owned by most libraries we checked.

The Sunset Cookbook: Over 1,000 Fresh, Flavorful Recipes for the Way You Cook Today
Sunset Books, Margo True
Retail Price: $34.95
Hardcover: 816 pages
Publisher: Oxmoor House – (2010-10-19)
ISBN / EAN: 0376027940 / 9780376027948

Restoring Sanity?

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

In the “who would have thunk it” category, the conservative magazine, The Weekly Standard tears apart Dinesh D’Souza’s best-selling The Roots of Obama’s Rage in a review titled “The Roots of LunacyHow not to understand Obama”

Further, conservative political commentator Andrew Sullivan, calls the review, “satisfyingly brutal…” on his blog on The Atlantic‘s web site, and refers to D’Souza’s book as a “hallucinogenic hate-fest.”

The book was not reviewed prepub (nor elsewhere in the mainstream press to date) and is currently at #4 on the NYT Hardcover Nonfiction best seller list.

The Roots of Obama’s Rage
Dinesh D’Souza
Retail Price: $27.95
Hardcover: 258 pages
Publisher: Regnery Press – (2010-09-27)
ISBN / EAN: 1596986255 / 9781596986251

Audio available from Blackstone

PRISON LIBRARIAN Breaks Out

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Maybe the public is more interested in us than we realized. Earlier this year, This Book is Overdue brought media attention to libraries in the digital age. Before that, Dewey brought small-town libraries to best seller lists.

Now, it’s prison librarians’ turn. In today’s NYT, Dwight Garner reviews Running the Books, saying,

[Steinberg’s] memoir is wriggling and alive — as involving, and as layered, as a good coming-of-age novel.

The author was also interviewed  on NPR’s Talk of the Nation yesterday and Laura Miller gave the book a thoughtful review on Salon on Monday.

The book is now up to #413 on Amazon’s sales rankings, putting it ahead of  most of the National Book Award nominees.

Running the Books: The Adventures of an Accidental Prison Librarian
Avi Steinberg
Retail Price: $26.00
Hardcover: 416 pages
Publisher: Nan A. Talese – (2010-10-19)
ISBN / EAN: 0385529090 / 9780385529099

EIGHTEEN ACRES

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Debut novelist Nicolle Wallace sets her thriller, Eighteen Acres, in Washington, D.C. She knows the territory; she was the White House Communications Director for George W. Bush.

USA Today says this first-hand experience stands her well. Patrick Anderson concurs in the Washington Post,

To say that Nicolle Wallace’s Eighteen Acres is one of the best novels I’ve read about life in the White House may be faint praise — there haven’t been many good ones — but her book is both an enjoyable read and a serious look at what high-level political pressures do to people.

The title of the book comes from D.C. insiders’ slang for the White House. One important aspect of the story is not based on real life; it features a female president.

Eighteen Acres
Nicolle Wallace
Retail Price: $25.00
Hardcover: 336 pages
Publisher: Atria – (2010-10-19)
ISBN / EAN: 1439194823 / 9781439194829

Prison Librarian’s Memoir

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

In SalonLaura Miller says that Avi Steinberg’s Running the Books stands out from other stories by people who have worked with prisoners; rather than discovering that the inmates are like us, Steinberg exposes “a darker truth: We’re just like them.

Running the Books: The Adventures of an Accidental Prison Librarian
Avi Steinberg
Retail Price: $26.00
Hardcover: 416 pages
Publisher: Nan A. Talese – (2010-10-19)
ISBN / EAN: 0385529090 / 9780385529099