Archive: July 2010 (1-10 of 22)

Jul 30 2010 10:53 AM ET

On the Books: July 30

Categories: Books

Gee willikers, the unauthorized children’s bio of Sarah Palin planned by Christian publisher Zondervan has been cancelled.

Book agent/literary predator Andrew Wylie issued a threat to publishers balking at his controversial Amazon e-book deal, but it doesn’t seem to be sticking.

Like a hiply designed Big Brother, Apple apparently removed four erotic novellas from its book chart and then declined to comment.

In news that gives one hope for humanity: The AP reports that unauthorized celebrity biographies are selling worse than ever.

And in news that takes away that hope: The personal library of Wittgenstein’s Mistress author David Markson, who passed away in June, was found on sale at a used book store.

Jul 29 2010 04:42 PM ET

Angelina Jolie biography by Andrew Morton: I read it so you don't have to!

angelina-coverBiographer Andrew Morton, known for tackling high profile people in his works, is at it again, this time chronicling the life of Angelina Jolie in Angelina: An Unauthorized Biography, out Aug. 3. Earlier this week, the New York Times published a review which noted the obvious lack of sourcing throughout the book. I set out on a three-day journey to read Morton’s book and see what all the fuss is about.

As it turns out, the critique is not that far off. Although I thought many of Morton’s revelations were interesting, I found myself questioning the credibility of his research throughout all 16 chapters. There are seven pages of ‘source notes’ at the end of the book, but it’s really just a letter from Morton acknowledging the people who would speak with him. (Angelina is not one of them.) Morton said he relied on “original research and interviews with contemporaries” for the most part. But I would say the majority of the book relies on interviews done by other people, including two quotes from interviews Angelina did with Entertainment Weekly in January 1998 and November 1999. (I checked. At least these two quotes were placed in accurate context.) Many of his other sources spoke only with the promise of anonymity. And while that’s fine and dandy, there are too many anonymous sources to make me believe everything he writes. I kept wondering “Who said so?” and “Why should I believe this?” as he drew his many conclusions. For example, he quotes a psychoanalyst who has more than 20 years of experience, but has never treated Angelina. This doesn’t scream credibility to me.

Here’s an abridged list the book’s, um, highlights. (If you do choose to read it, you’d be OK skipping the first four chapters. They’re boring.)

  • Angelina’s mom, Marcheline, had feelings for Al Pacino. Morton claims she was in romantic turmoil over her feelings for Pacino and Jon Voight. When Voight proposed, Pacino begged her not to marry  him. But Marcheline went along with her mother’s wishes, and chose the more successful of the two men at the time and married Voight. (It really is a small world. Even for famous people.)
  • Morton also claims Marcheline gave her children the names Angelina and James because they were anagrams of Al Pacino’s full name, Alfredo James Pacino.
  • During the filming of Voight’s Conrack, he and Marcheline went on a long drive. They saw a church bus with the name “Shiloh Baptist” painted on the back. Voigt wanted to name his next child Shiloh Baptist, but Marcheline said no. She later recommended the name for her first biological grandchild. (For a woman who hated her ex-husband so much, this is quite a big step.)
  • Both Angelina and her brother, James Haven, were given middle names with the intention that they would drop their surname to go into show business. (Well, that plan definitely worked.)
  • At 14, Angelina’s boyfriend, Anton, moved in with her at her mother’s suggestion. Apparently, Marcheline gave up the master bedroom for her teenager daughter. This was all in the name of keeping a close eye on their budding relationship. (WHAT?!)
  • Angelina wanted to be successful without using her father’s famous last name. But her mother told an agent that he could start telling people she was Jon Voight’s daughter, unbeknownst to Angelina. “To this day Angie doesn’t know that it was her father’s name that helped her get her first big break.” (Well, I’m guessing she has a hunch.)
  • After the 1998 Golden Globes, Angelina partied with Leonardo DiCaprio after their agents set them up. They didn’t hit it off in the long run, but they did share a shower together. (Morton actually said Leo didn’t “float her boat.” Eww.)
  • In 1999, Angelina received a tattoo of Billy Bob Thornton’s name way below her bikini line. The book reveals it was tattooed in Helvetica. (A nice sans-serif choice, if you ask me.) That tattoo has since faded.
  • Billy Bob Thornton and his “morbid fear of flying and a hatred of harpsichords, silverware, and antiques, particularly French furniture. Born into poverty, he was literally terrified of putting a silver spoon in his mouth.” (Hatred of harpsichords? )
  • In September 2002, Jolie officially had Voight removed from her name. But Morton said at one point she told a Toronto newspaper, “I actually hate Jolie. I would rather have been Voight.”
  • She’s quoted talking about adopting a child from Russia, but it didn’t work out. (Can you imagine being the almost child of Angelina Jolie? Neither can I.)

So what do you think? Is this a book you want to read? And do you trust Andrew Morton’s research on a person he’s never (to my knowledge) spoken to?

Jul 29 2010 11:15 AM ET

Publishing news of the day

Categories: Books, Tech

In the latest round of e-book pricing wars, Amazon announced its new Kindle, priced at $139. That’s a far cry from the first-generation Kindle, which cost $499. In other Amazon news, the company said that Stieg Larsson has become the first author to sell 1 million e-books.

The grand old Italian hotel that was the setting of Thomas Mann’s A Death in Venice has closed.

Just in time for August vacations, NPR has released a steamy summer reading list: One Nighstand, Six Affairs: Novels of Illicit Love.

Amulet books announced that the fifth volume of Jeff Kinney’s Wimpy Kid series, The Ugly Truth – which goes on sale Nov. 9 — will have a first printing of more than 5 million.

Jul 29 2010 10:42 AM ET

EW exclusive: Read the first two chapters of 'Reckless'

Reckless-by-Cornelia-FunkeYesterday we showed you the trailer for Cornelia Funke’s twisted fairy tale; now, take a gander at the upcoming 10-and-up novel’s first two chapters. It looks like Funke is returning to the genre’s more ominous and sinister roots, which I like. I know as a kid, I used to love books that were darker than the average Judy Blume, like Roald Dahl’s The Witches or Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. (I still have nightmares about this childhood-scarring picture. Why, oh, why would someone put that in a children’s book?!) Click on the link below to read the beginning of Reckless and tell us what you think.

Click here to read the first two chapters of Cornelia Funke’s Reckless.

Jul 28 2010 10:52 AM ET

Cornelia Funke's 'Reckless' trailer: EW exclusive

Categories: Book Trailers, Exclusive!, YA

Welcome to the warped world of Reckless, the latest novel for readers ages 10 and up from Inkheart author Cornelia Funke. The dark book puts a twist on traditional fairy tale conventions with the story of Jacob Reckless, a young man who, for years, has been traveling to a mysterious world through the customary enchanted portal: A mirror. However, he eventually finds that taking all this magic for granted may not have been the best idea. Take a look at the exclusive book trailer below. It doesn’t tell you all that much, but what do you think?

Jul 26 2010 02:59 PM ET

Literary agent Andrew Wylie signs controversial exclusive deal with Amazon

Andrew Wylie is one of the book world’s most notorious agents who, in reality show parlance, definitely isn’t here to make friends. Dubbed “the Jackal,” if that gives you an idea of how he’s viewed, Wylie is best known for successfully extracting enormous advances from publishers for his big-name clients, as well as poaching authors from other agents. Now the highly visible agent, whose stable includes the likes of Dave Eggers, Salman Rushdie and Philip Roth (as well as the estates of Nabokov and Updike) is creating a stir in the realm of e-books.

Last week Wylie signed a deal with Amazon for exclusive e-book rights to his clients’ novels, including such classics as Roth’s Portnoy’s Complaint and Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man. For at least two years, these works will only be available via the online retailer and only on Amazon’s Kindle or devices with the downloaded Kindle app. Many are considering this a literary monopoly, vertical integration for a medium barely into its infancy. And where even the famously hermetic and anti-third party iPad permits users to download e-books from a variety of sources, the Kindle only allows readers to access digital copies from Amazon. Random House, which published a number of the titles covered by the deal, has since announced their intentions to dispute its legality. Random House spokesman Stuart Applebaum issued a statement which said, in part, “The Wylie Agency’s decision to sell e-books exclusively to Amazon for titles which are subject to active Random House agreements undermines our longstanding commitments to and investments in our authors, and it establishes this Agency as our direct competitor. Therefore, regrettably, Random House on a worldwide basis will not be entering into any new English-language business agreements with the Wylie Agency until this situation is resolved.”

Square Books, an independent bookstore in Oxford, Mississippi, has a compelling take on the whole situation.

What do you think about the issue, Shelf Lifers?

Jul 26 2010 02:51 PM ET

Pope Benedict XVI publishes children's book

Categories: Book Covers

Gli-Amici-di-GesuCelebrities writing children’s books? That’s nothing new — the list is a mile long. Madonna and Tim McGraw have done it. So have Brooke Shields, Julianne Moore, Jerry Seinfeld, Jay Leno, Jimmy Buffett, and Whoopi Goldberg, to name a few. So why not the leader of the Catholic Church?

The Vatican press announced the children’s book Gli Amici di Gesu (The Friends of Jesus) has been published under Pope Benedict XVI’s name. Although it’s not the first time the Pope has authored books, it is first children’s book. (And the first children’s book by any Pope , as far as I can find.) The Pope, a native German, wrote the book in Italian. It features a collection of the Pope’s descriptions of Jesus’ relationship with his “first companions,” including the original 12 apostles, Matthias, and St. Paul.

Lorenzo Murnigotti, editorial coordinator of the Piccola Casa Editrice publishing house, hopes to publish English and Spanish versions soon.

Jul 26 2010 11:59 AM ET

Would you pay $75,000 for an 82-pound book with blood in the pages? Me neither.

Basic economics are pretty predictable. Typically, when selling a product, the lower the price, the higher the number of people that want it. It’s really very simple. Every once in a while, though, a product comes along that’s so audaciously overpriced that it transcends the basic rules of buying. There’s Serendipity’s famous $1,000 ice-cream sundae, the defunct $1,000 “I Am Rich” iPhone app, and now, super-gimmicky, “enhanced” coffee-table books selling for $75,000 or higher.

The Globe and Mail reports that publishers are creating luxury novelty books about sports, celebrities, art, and culture, lacing their pages with various substances, and slapping astronomical price tags on them. I mean, who wouldn’t want one of the ten copies of a 37 kg book about Indian cricket star Sachin Tendulkar which has pages made up of a mix of paper pulp and the athlete’s own blood? It only costs $75,000! And who wouldn’t be over the moon at the chance to own a gigantic picture book about the lunar landing? For just $112,500, you could own a volume that has real bits of moon rocks in the pages!

What’s next? A memoir about the Kardashians featuring authentic samples of Bruce Jenner’s lifted skin or injections of fat from Kim’s rear? Shelf Life readers, are you as appalled by this phenomenon as I am?

Jul 22 2010 03:26 PM ET

Hyperion cancels book by Elizabeth Gilbert's ex

Michael Cooper, ex-husband of best-selling author Elizabeth Gilbert—of Eat Pray Love fame—will not be publishing his side of the story. At least not yet. Cooper had struck a deal with Hyperion to write Displaced, his version of the divorce, but the New York Post reported this morning the project has been scuttled.

EW confirms with Hyperion spokeswoman Marie Coolman that “Hyperion had a deal with Michael Cooper, and the book has been cancelled.” Coolman did not give a reason for the cancellation, but the Post reported Cooper saying Hyperion wanted to “push the book in a more controversial direction,” which he said he was not willing to do.

The movie version of Eat Pray Love, starring Julia Roberts, opens Aug. 13.

Jul 21 2010 02:58 PM ET

E-books outsell hardcovers on Amazon: Which format do you prefer?

Categories: Amazon, Books, E-Books, E-Readers

With Amazon’s announcement that the online retailer now sells more e-books than it does physical hardcovers, it seems as good a time as any to gauge where the battle-lines are being drawn. Some of the more tech-savvy among us may prefer the large storage capacities and easy portability of e-readers (anyone with a sizable library who has had to move can appreciate that), while others believe that you’ll never be able to beat the feeling of holding a book in your hands. Which side are you on?

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