Archive: February 2010 (1-10 of 22)

Feb 25 2010 10:00 AM ET

Kid Lit 101: Deconstructing 'Little Quack'

Categories: Books, Children's Books

As a new parent, I’ve recently started paying more attention to children’s story books. Bear cubs at bath time. Lost little llamas looking for their mamas. That sort of reading material. But what I’ve discovered is that in even the world of kiddie lit, you can never judge a book by its cover, no matter how cloyingly cute and cuddly the baby animal on it is. Indeed, there is often more literary subtext padding these chunky little children’s tomes than in a Jonathan Franzen novel.

Take, for instance, the new Little Quack series from Little Simon, written by Lauren Thompson and illustrated by Derek Anderson. Its protagonist is a young, impetuous duckling named Little Quack, who wanders through the woods around his idyllic pond on a seemingly innocent journey of self-discovery. In Little Quack Loves Colors, for instance, Little Quack is joined by another duckling named Piddle, and the two frolic through the forest pointing out different colors they each love. Little Quack loves “yellow buttercups,” but Piddle prefers “red ladybugs.” Over the next 16 pages, though, the tension builds and the mood darkens. As the two characters continue to pick different colors, it becomes increasingly clear they can never agree on anything. They both become locked in their own color bias. The metaphor for American political bifurcation is all too obvious; each duckling is totally unable to see past his own ideology, and therefore unable to pass meaningful health care legislation for the pond. In the end, Little Quack and Piddle finally agree that they both love “oozy brown.” But is that a sign of hope? Or are they both merely slinging mud?

Little Quack Counts, thankfully, offers a more upbeat storyline. In this volume, Little Quack has a different sidekick, a Sancho Panza-esque duckling named Widdle, and together they embark on an ambitious mathematical quest to count everything they see in the woods. “Little Quack and Widdle see 1 butterfly.” “Little Quack and Widdle see 4 flowers.” Little Quack’s name always comes first, establishing the social hierarchy of the relationship, but it’s still more of a partnership than with Piddle. There’s no way they can ever complete their assignment of counting everything—it is, ultimately, an existential mission—but at least they count together, not at each other. And when crisis strikes—“5 bees! Oh, no!”—the two friends hug each other for comfort, before paddling away to a safer part of the pond, into the warm waiting wings of “1 Mama Duck.” As with every classic literary journey, this one ends by returning home.

Feb 23 2010 09:00 AM ET

Penguin gets tatted up with new 'Penguin Inks' series

Categories: Misc.

Tattoos aren’t always the product of a good decision. That cursive text on your left bicep might look like the name of your ex-girlfriend, but what it really spells is “regret.” And imagine how you’ll feel at 60 when you look in the mirror and see Dr. Evil staring back at you from your chest. However, Penguin Books upcoming “Penguin Inks” series, in which the publisher commissioned tattoo artists and illustrators to re-imagine the covers of six modern classics in the style of body art is actually pretty inspired. And the resulting designs are pretty cool.

There are some recurring tattoo tropes (mainly women and roses), but each of the images remains distinct, from a serene and detailed portrait for J.M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians to an appropriately vulgar farrago of sailor-arm art for Martin Amis’ Money. And the choice to include Keri Hulme’s The Bone People in this project makes sense, considering the book’s Maori themes. The new editions are set to art up bookshelves this June.

Do you like the tattooed look? Does it depend on how you feel about the six novels themselves, or do you tend not to judge a cover by its book?

Feb 22 2010 11:25 AM ET

Win this auction, and Thomas Jane will deliver a pizza to you

Categories: Celebrity, Comic Books, Gifts

Add this to the many reasons I wish I were in California this winter. L.A.’s premiere horror bookshop, Dark Delicacies, is in the midst of hosting an online auction, which includes the following prize: One lucky high bidder will win a free pizza — delivered to your door by none other than Hung‘s Thomas Jane.

Yes, there are plenty of other awesome prizes for the horror and comic book fan — dinner with 30 Days of Night creator Steve Niles, a rare preview program for Evil Dead, among others — but really, it’s difficult to pass up on prize that sounds vaguely like a plot for a pornographic movie.

So who’s tempted to bid? (Right now, the bid is at just $94!) And who else would you like to deliver you pizzas?

Feb 22 2010 10:50 AM ET

What's an e-book really worth?

Oh, if only Johannes Gutenberg could read the Amazon message boards, he would probably be…horrified. Readers turning against authors, publishers, and each other; readers lamenting $10 price tags because new books just aren’t worth that much; readers admitting that they read more from a screen than they ever would on paper. The value of the printed word that Gutenberg invented, some 500 years ago, just isn’t what it used to be.

Until the iPad came along, that is, and breathed new life into a wilting publishing industry. The device’s iBook store follows an agency model approach to selling electronic copies, meaning publishers can set their own prices (from $12.99 to $14.99) and keep 70 percent of the profits. Naturally, five of the country’s six biggest publishers—Hachette, HarperCollins, Macmillan, the Penguin Group, and Simon & Schuster—cut deals with Apple to be part of its new e-book marketplace even before the iPad launched. These newly empowered publishers also began rethinking their deal with Amazon.com, which has dominated the e-book market since the Kindle’s 2007 debut. Despite competition from Barnes & Noble and Sony, the company still enjoys 90 percent of the e-book market, thanks to a $9.99-per-book mantra that helped lure millions of customers to the Kindle store (and also pissed off publishers, who had to settle for a much-slashed “cover” price until the iPad’s promise of pricing autonomy went public).

So the publishers took their post-iPad bargaining chip—their revalued content—straight to Amazon and demanded more per e-book for the Kindle. First it was Macmillan, who won their case when Amazon agreed to raise consumer prices; and then it was HarperCollins and then Hachette Book Group. All of them argued for higher price points that, as Hachette CEO David Young said, “reflect the value of our authors’ works.” In other words, something that the Amazon.com bargain-basement prices do not.

Another wrinkle in the saga, according to last Thurday’s New York Times, is that Apple may have added its own discounting terms into their contracts to keep its competitive edge. Which begs the question at the heart of this pricing melee between publishers and Amazon (and now, frustrated readers and authors): What is an e-book really worth, when you can’t share it or store it on a (physical) shelf once you’ve finished it? Does a higher price tag validate an author’s craft, or just make it more inaccessible to the audience?

If you just looked at the Kindle store, and examined which titles are flying off the virtual shelves, books would seem to be one of the company’s least valuable commodities: 15 of Amazon’s top 25 e-book bestsellers are free, and eight more cost less than $9.99. There’s no doubt these deep discounts also help sell the Kindle itself—the lower the book prices, the more useful the device is, so more people buy the e-reader and the company can compensate for the lower per-book price. It’s great for the devoted reader—many commenters on the company’s Macmillan deal discussion thread say they read way more on a Kindle than they ever did before.

What do you think, Shelf Lifers? Do you think that e-books devalue the published word or promote authors and reading itself? Would you pay $14.99 for an e-book?

Feb 19 2010 01:48 PM ET

Comic books you need to read: 'DMZ'

DMZ (Vertigo/DC) is an extremely clever comic book series that regularly transcends mere cleverness. Created by writer-artist Brian Wood, it presents a future New York City as a demilitarized zone surrounded by a civil war. The combatants are the federal government versus the “Free States Army.”

The book’s hero, Matty Roth, began the series a callow photo-journalism intern but has developed into a shrewd go-between and chronicler of the opposing sides.

The new 50th issue of DMZ is a good place to hop into the series if you haven’t read it before, presenting a series of vignettes that touch on various major characters and plotlines. You can also read various trade-paperback collections of the series.

DMZ takes what could have been a trite notion — the idea of “bringing the war home” literally, by turning America into a war zone similar to those in Iraq or Afghanistan– and on the strength of a complex imagination, turns it into a comic book that needs no superheroics, because the heroism is performed by ordinary people you come to care about quickly.

Feb 18 2010 04:21 PM ET

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks: The best book I've read in quite awhile

Categories: Misc.

You know that feeling you get when a book captivates you from the very first page? For me, it’s pretty much all-consuming. I’ll miss my stop on the train, never hearing the conductor bellow out my town. I’ll stay up, even though I’m exhausted. When I’m reading something I really love, I just want to lose myself, utterly and completely, in the pages. (Sometimes I go into the bedroom and shut the door, telling my teenagers they can disturb me only if there’s blood involved.) That kind of reading can be almost bittersweet — sometimes, as I near the end, I consciously try to slow down so I don’t finish too quickly. I’ve been lucky enough to have the feeling twice recently — first with Brady Udall’s new novel, The Lonely Polygamist, which doesn’t come out until April (sorry), and then with Rebecca Skloot’s The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, reviewed in this week’s issue.

How about the rest of you? What’s the last really terrific book you read?

Feb 17 2010 08:00 AM ET

Exclusive: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt announces new 'Best American' guest editors

Categories: Anthologies

I’ve always loved Houghton Mifflin’s “Best American” anthologies and find myself dipping in and out of most of them during the course of the year — especially Best American Short Stories, which is flavored differently each year, thanks to the varied guest editors. Here, below, is Houghton’s lineup for 2010. I loved that they tapped Bill Buford (Heat) to edit Best American Travel Writing, and I’m pretty excited about Richard Russo and Lee Child, too.

The Best American Short Stories 2010: Richard Russo

The Best American Essays 2010: Christopher Hitchens

The Best American Comics: Neil Gaiman

The Best American Nonrequired Reading: Dave Eggers (guest introducer: David Sedaris)

The Best American Science and Nature Writing: Freeman Dyson

The Best American Mystery Stories: Lee Child

The Best American Travel Writing: Bill Buford

The Best American Sports Writing 2010: Peter Gammons

The Best American Noir of the Century: Otto Penzler and James Ellroy (this title, a hardcover, won’t be a part of the annual series — it’s a stand-alone)

How about it, Shelf Lifers? which one will you be most interested in?

Feb 16 2010 02:59 PM ET

What I'm Reading: Denis Leary

Denis Leary called it like he saw it in his 2008 book Why We Suck: A Feel Good Guide to Staying Fat, Loud, Lazy and Stupid. The Rescue Me star recently chatted with EW about his favorite book of all time, who should write his life story and which literary topics fascinate him most.

What books are you reading now?

When The Game Was Ours by Larry Bird and Magic Johnson with Jackie MacMullan; Sixty Feet, Six Inches by Bob Gibson and Reggie Jackson with Lonnie Wheeler; A Death In Belmont by Sebastian Junger; Clint Eastwood: Interviews edited by Robert Kapsis and Kathie Coblentz; and Chocolate Frosted – The History Of The World’s Greatest Donut by Denis Leary. Okay – so I made the last one up. But I’m actually thinking of writing it. If only for the research.

Any you can’t put down?

I can never put down anything to do with football, baseball, hockey, basketball, the Kennedys, the Kennedy assassinations or dogs.

What’s your ultimate beach read?

I don’t really read at the beach. I’m too busy smoking as I worry about sharks and other angry fish.

What was the first book you remember reading?

YAZ: The Story Of Carl Yastrzemski – my favorite baseball player of all time. I also ate YAZ bread, had a YAZ baseball glove and would have drank YAZ whiskey – if it existed.

What’s your favorite character?

John F. Kennedy. A handsome, football playing Harvard grad who became a hero in World War II then a senator and then the President of the United States and slept with Marilyn Monroe WHILE he was married to one of the most beautiful women in the history of women? Wow. Talk about fiction.

Who would you want to write the story of your life?

The story of my life should be written by my wife Ann. That way I know it would be funny.

What is your favorite book of all time?

It’s a tie between Without Feathers by Woody Allen and Orr On Ice. Okay – it’s Orr On Ice, which is a giant hockey book about Bobby Orr – the greatest hockey player of all time – and what he eats, how he skates, what he wears, how often he eats, how he scored, how many times he scored, etc. etc. It’s big and dumb and stupid and I read it at least once a year. It was published in 1972. That really shows you where my literary interests lie. Although I do think the Woody Allen book is incredibly well written and funny.

Feb 16 2010 11:31 AM ET

Rocker Josh Ritter to release first novel via Random House

Categories: Music, Stephen King

Dylan-esque folkie Josh Ritter, 33, has signed on with Random House imprint The Dial Press to publish his first work of fiction, Bright’s Passage, in summer 2011. Ritter told EW, “It was while I was writing song for my new record, So Runs the World Away (coming out May 4th) that the story came into my head for Bright’s Passage.  Several of the songs on So Runs the World Away are fairly complicated narrative songs, so my first instinct was to try and make Henry Bright’s story into a song.  As I thought about it, though, I realized this was my chance to try my hand at a novel.” He added, “I’ve written lots of longer-form fiction before, but none that I’d ever think to show anyone.  I’ve always thought that one of the most important talents a good writer can have is the knowledge of when to share a work and when to leave it locked in your desk. Besides my songs, Bright’s Passage is the first work I’ve I wanted anyone to see.”

Ritter says that for him, songwriting and novel-writing bring the same challenges: “While the audience may not be in the room with a novelist, they still demand the same kind of attention as they do from the performance of a song.  They ask that you give them your full attention, that you are generous with your time and that you don’t over stay your welcome.  They give you their trust, and if they can tell your efforts have been for the right reasons, they’ll give you the room for whatever flights of imagination you’re willing to take them on.” Who does he like to read? “Muriel Spark, Pete Dexter, Dennis Lehane Stephen King, Mordecai Richler, Philip Roth and Daphne du Maurier and Flannery O’Connor. I like anyone who is willing to burn their own dollhouses down.”

Ritter, a favorite of EW columnist Stephen King, will be touring throughout the spring to promote So Runs The World Away.

Feb 16 2010 08:34 AM ET

Exclusive: Tori Spelling to write a children's book

EW has learned that Simon & Schuster — publisher of Spelling’s two previous best-sellers, sTORI Telling and Mommywood —has signed the actress to her first children’s book, Presenting…Tallulah, the tale of a spunky little girl who is constantly told what not to do: not to wear jeans, not to get dirty. Tallulah, illustrated by Vanessa Brantley Newton, goes on sale September 21 (Spelling’s third adult title, uncharted terriTori, will be out in June). “I love reading to my kids. It’s our special time together,” Spelling said. The book’s jacket looks very much like a young Tori. But the name? According to S&S, Spelling just likes the name Tallulah.

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