Archive: November 2009 (1-10 of 31)

Nov 30 2009 11:08 AM ET

Talking Books: Week of 11/30

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Welcome back to your weekly belletristic bellwether. Here’s the skinny on where the writers are:

11/30

Kathy Griffin, Official Book Club Selection: A Memoir According to Kathy Griffin, on Chelsea Lately (E!, 11 p.m. EDT)

12/1

Hank Stuever, Tinsel: A Search for America’s Christmas Present, on On Point (NPR, check local listings)

Thomas Friedman, Hot, Flat, and Crowded 2.0: Why We Need a Green Revolution and How It Can Renew America, on The Daily Show With Jon Stewart (Comedy Central, 11 p.m. EDT)

Sherman Alexie, War Dances, on The Colbert Report (Comedy Central, 11:30 p.m. EDT)

12/2

Lance Armstrong, Comeback 2.0: Up Close and Personal, on The Daily Show With Jon Stewart (Comedy Central, 11 p.m. EDT)

12/3

Michael Specter, Denialism: How Irrational Thinking Hinders Scientific Progress, Harms the Planet, and Threatens Our Lives, on The Daily Show With Jon Stewart (Comedy Central, 11 p.m. EDT)

Malcolm Gladwell, What the Dog Saw: And Other Adventures, on Tavis Smiley (PBS, check local listings)

Nov 29 2009 09:48 AM ET

Poetry You Need To Read: H.L. Hix's "Incident Light" and David Lehman's "Yeshiva Boys"

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H.L. Hix, Incident Light (Etruscan Press)

When a friend of the poet’s learned, at age 49, that her dad was not her biological father, Hix used some of her comments and memories to craft this collection: a “biography that loosens reality’s hold, releases the life into lyric.”

The result is a sustained feat of emotional and intellectual representation, cast in poems that are frequently no longer than eight lines. Hix writes in his friend’s voice, and the delicate skipping from image to image creates a complete thought or picture in poem after poem. Each poem’s title is a question about or comment on the woman’s life, as in “I see now where your features come from”:

Dad loved cars, would have studied engineering,

but they could send only one son to school, so

he stayed, worked in the family bakery.

That’s why they look so happy to meet me here: his

fedora tilted toward the black sedan,

the buttons on their coats echoing headlights

and hubcaps, arm in arm, her calves and ankles

bare, her weight on one foot, the other tiptoe.

Incident Light is of a piece with Hix’s earlier, exceptionally alert and vivid poetry.

David Lehman, Yeshiva Boys (Scribner)

Lehman, at once one of our most playful and thoughtful of poets, demonstrates an unprecedented range here. The book’s title derives from a sequence of 12 poems about growing up a religious Jew constantly trying to square his spiritual training with the absurdity, the sensuality, and the evil in the world.

Elsewhere here, Lehman uses many conveyances — including the prose poem, the sestina, and curt rhymes (“When I got out of the shower/the money was missing from my wallet./I bent down and picked up a spent bullet/with no memory of the previous hour”) — to travel across the writing life of a poet whose instinctive romanticism is always bracing and tough-minded, brimming with a rare generosity that never seems drippy or forced:

You’re in love and you’ll do anything

You’ll lie beg threaten to join the army

join the army get shot come home

wounded and embittered you’ll do it

For a taste of her jam you’ll agree to it

Agreed but wisdom isn’t survival

well maybe it includes survival but

it isn’t only survival it has to exalt

something else such as love

the love that led you

to abandon all wisdom

Nov 25 2009 06:08 PM ET

Stephen King on proposed 'Shining' sequel: 'People shouldn't hold their breath'

Filed under: News and tagged:

On the heels of the news that best-selling horror master (and EW columnist) told the audience at a Toronto book signing that he was considering writing a sequel to The Shining, King tells EW.com that he’s got no immediate plans to revisit the character of Danny Torrance. “It’s a great idea, and I just can’t seem to get down to it,” says the author in an e-mail. “People shouldn’t hold their breath. I know it would be cool, though. I want to write it just for the title, Dr. Sleep. I even told them [at the book signing], ‘It will probably never happen.’” Still, King — whose most recent novel is this month’s Under the Dome — can’t quite shut the door on the Shining sequel, adding, “But ‘probably’ isn’t ‘positively,’ so maybe.”

Nov 25 2009 10:26 AM ET

Stephen King is considering writing a 'Shining' sequel

Filed under: News and tagged: ,

Redrum backwards spells “sequel.” Thirty-two years after Stephen King’s third novel, The Shining, was published, the prolific horror maestro has announced that he’s considering penning a follow-up.

The Torontoist reported that King dropped the news at a book reading for his new novel Under the Dome moderated by movie director, and brother in horror, David Cronenberg. According to the author, the second novel would center on Danny Torrance, the young boy from the original story with the gift (or curse) of being able to communicate clairvoyantly with ghosts, and who is now an appropriately aged 40-year-old. All these years after being tormented by the spiritual inhabitants of the Overlook Hotel and his father’s alcoholism/homicidal rage, Danny is now working at a hospice using his supernatural powers for palliative purposes. King even offered a tentative title: Doctor Sleep.

King mentioned that he began working on the idea last summer, but that he isn’t entirely committed to writing it quite yet.

UPDATE: Stephen King tells EW.com “People shouldn’t hold their breath” for Shining sequel

Nov 25 2009 09:00 AM ET

Who needs Kindles or Nooks? In praise of the old-fashioned book

Filed under: Book Trailers and tagged: ,

This amazing stop-motion animated film, created for the New Zealand Book Council, reminds me of all the reasons I love books — the old-fashioned ones, that call for turning actual paper pages. This clip, produced by the creative team of Line and Martin Andersen for the ad firm Colenso BBDO, features a passage from Maurice Gee’s 1992 book Going West. Trust me, it’s worth two minutes of your time:

Try doing that with a Kindle! Electronic readers may be popular, and they may even shrink my cumbersome wallful of literary treasures into a single portable hand-held device. But the book remains a pretty efficient content-delivery system that’s served us well for centuries.

Nov 24 2009 12:15 PM ET

'Ice Storm' author Rick Moody Tweets a short story!

Why write another novel when novelty beckons? Rick Moody, the author of novels like Garden State and The Ice Storm, will be tweeting his newest short story in a series of 140-character bursts for the online zine Electric Literature. Beginning Monday, Nov. 30, Moody’s “Some Contemporary Characters” will be “published” over the course of 153 tweets, sent out over three days. (Moody fans and the curious can subscribe to Electric Lit‘s Twitter feed at its Twitter page.) “It really was like writing Haiku,” says Moody of the story, which follows the relationship of an older man and younger woman. Here are the first two tweets of “Some Contemporary Characters,” which Electric Lit shared with EW exclusively:

There are things in this taxable and careworn world that can only be said in a restrictive interface with a minimum of characters:

Saw him on OKCupid. Agreed to meet. In his bio he said he had a “different conception of time.” And guess what? He didn’t show.

How did Moody come to tweet a work of fiction? Credit the clever folks at Electric Literature, whom we’ve written about before (most recently for a Michael Cunningham story in the premiere issue). “We approached Rick Moody because we admire his writing, and knew he has an inventive side,” explains Electric Lit co-founder Andy Hunter via e-mail. “The Twitter story was his idea. In a lot of ways Rick is the perfect writer to take on the project of writing a story specifically for Twitter. He’s a great storyteller who has often set formal constraints for himself in the past, particularly in his short fiction. … Some of his other stories have eschewed certain important punctuation marks, like the period. In a way, the Twitter story helps to highlight the extreme attention to language a great short story writer is likely to pay.”

Are you curious enough to read more?

Photo credit: Thatcher Keats/Retna

Nov 24 2009 09:05 AM ET

Barnes and Noble's Nook sells out before release

Filed under: News and tagged: ,

If you were waiting until after Thanksgiving to start shopping for the holidays (silly you) and were hoping to pick up Barnes & Noble’s new e-reader, the Nook, for the technophilic book-lover in your family, you may be out of luck. According to the B&N website, “the hottest holiday gift is out of stock.”

The devices have been disappearing like $259 hotcakes, selling out well before Black Friday and the device’s predicted release date, Nov. 30. Those who order the color-screen reader after last Friday will not receive theirs until the New Year, with the site currently predicting a ship date of Jan. 4.

This initial sales success positions the Nook as a top alternative to Amazon’s Kindle, especially since Sony recently announced possible delays for its own e-reader, the Daily Edition. The Kindle experienced similar stock depletions during last year’s holiday season.

With all these units being sold, it’s clear that e-readership is up and the phenomenon is more than just a passing literary fad. Even with hardcovers selling at $9 a pop, consumers are still flocking to get their hands on these portable libraries, and, I’ll admit, even a Luddite like myself has entertained jumping on board the biblio-file bandwagon.

How about you guys? Will e-readers be the new iPhones, ascending rapidly from luxury techno-gadget to completely ubiquitous companion? Or will you give up your glue-and-paper copies only when the librarians pry them from your cold, dead hands?

Nov 24 2009 08:55 AM ET

Pop-up entrepreneur Waldo Hunt dies

Filed under: News and tagged: ,

Chances are you enjoyed Waldo Hunt’s work when you were a child. After all, Hunt — an entrepreneur who revived the art of the pop-up book in the 1960s — was the man who brought us the awe-inspiring 3-D imagery in such famous books as David Pelham’s The Human Body and Jan Pienkowski’s Haunted House (pictured at left). Sadly, the we will see no more new work from Hunt: On Nov. 6, the pop-up king died of congestive heart failure in Porterville, Calif., at age 88, the L.A. Times reported. But his legacy continues to live on. Along with creating the art in the pop-up books listed above, Hunt produced 1,000 3-D books under his company, Intervisual Books, which counted Disney as a client. He also built up an impressive 4,000-title collection of antique and contemporary pop-up and movable books.

Nov 23 2009 04:41 PM ET

Talking Books: Week of 11/23

Here are the authors who like to chat as much as they like to write. As always, Talking Books and speaking volumes:

11/23

Robert Darnton, The Case for Books: Past, Present, and Future, on The Diane Rehm Show (NPR, check local listings)

11/24

Orhan Pamuk, The Museum of Innocence, on The Diane Rehm Show (NPR, check local listings)

Chesley Sullenberger, Highest Duty: My Search for What Really Matters, on The Oprah Winfrey Show (check local listings)

Carrie Fisher, Wishful Drinking, on the Late Show With David Letterman (CBS, 11:35 p.m. EDT)

11/26

Bon Jovi, Bon Jovi: When We Were Beautiful, on The Tonight Show With Conan O’Brien (NBC, 11:35 p.m. EDT)

Nov 23 2009 09:45 AM ET

John Hillcoat, director of 'The Road,' on adapting the Pulitzer-winning novel

T.S. Eliot predicted that the world would end with a whimper rather than a bang, but this month it will have ended with both onscreen. Just weeks after the release of the destruct-o-thon 2012, John Hillcoat’s adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s grim and muted postapocalyptic novel The Road hits theaters Nov. 25. And where the former revels in the anonymity of pulverized cities and massive explosions, Hillcoat’s film faithfully relates the very personal tale of a father and son wandering the barren landscape of earth’s postscript. The book garnered nearly every accolade under the sun when it came out in 2006 and has topped a number of greatest books lists, including our own. Shelf Life spoke with the director about his experience adapting such formidable source material.

When I saw your first film, The Proposition, the first thing that came to my mind was that it was semi-apocalyptic. So you seemed like a good choice to adapt The Road.

Well, The Proposition was influenced by [McCarthy's] Blood Meridian, which is somewhat apocalyptic itself.

So I guess you were a big fan of Cormac McCarthy from the start.

Oh, yes. Definitely.

How did you get involved with The Road?

Well, it was because of that connection. I wanted to do a film in L.A. and I was talking about what authors I liked, and this was before No Country for Old Men, and I said that I loved McCarthy. So then I was very fortunate when I managed to get my hands on the manuscript of The Road before it was published. READ FULL STORY »

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