Archive: January 2011 (1-10 of 30)

Jan 28 2011 02:34 PM ET

'Facts of Life' star Geri Jewell comes out in new memoir, 'I'm Walking as Straight as I Can'

Categories: Memoirs

Im-Walking-as-Straight-as-I-CanGeri Jewell, who starred as Blair’s cousin Geri on The Facts of Life and became the first person with a disability to have a recurring role on prime-time television, comes out as a lesbian in her upcoming memoir, I’m Walking as Straight as I Can: Transcending Disability in Hollywood and Beyond. According to the press release, the actress/comedienne, who was born with cerebral palsy, covers both her many accomplishments (a performance at the White House in 1985 and the role of abused maid Jewel on HBO’s Deadwood) and her struggles — which include tax problems, drug addiction and an accident that nearly claimed her life. The inspirational autobiography hits shelves April 1.

In 2004, Jewell told EW how she landed the role on Deadwood when the show’s creator, David Milch, spotted her at a Santa Monica pharmacy in 2002. She was getting medication for chronic pain in her neck, which she broke in 1999. ”I haven’t seen you on TV lately. Do you want to do a series?” he asked her, out of nowhere. Recalled Jewell, ”I looked at the ceiling and said, ‘God, you have a really quirky sense of humor. I’m standing here with CP and a broken neck, and David Milch wants me to ride a horse.”’

Jan 27 2011 03:49 PM ET

'O' author revealed to be McCain speechwriter

O-Mark-SalterImage Credit: Jeff Chiu/AP ImagesO, what a trip it’s been. Less than a month after politicos and journalists got themselves all frothed up over an Amazon.com posting for the anonymously written O: A Presidential Novel, the author has been unmasked. Mark Halperin of Time has confirmed that John McCain aide and speechwriter Mark Salter is the pen behind the work of speculative semi-fiction. Well, that was certainly quicker than with Primary Colors: Scribe Joe Klein managed to elude identification for about seven months back in 1996 when that anonymous political novel was published. Salter and Simon & Schuster head Jonathan Karp have yet to confirm this revelation.

Jan 26 2011 12:05 PM ET

What does Stephenie Meyer's publicist do in her spare time? Write YA novels, of course

Prom-and-Prejudice_320.jpg Image Credit: Liz LigonElizabeth Eulberg has quite the day job. Her very intimidating title is Director of Global Publicity for Stephenie Meyer, which means she manages planet Earth’s insatiable demand for the Twilight mega-author. But on the weekends the 35-year-old Wisconsin native turns off the ringer to her vampire phone, holes up in her Hoboken, apartment, and writes 5,000 words a day. (She awards herself a cupcake on Sunday evenings for met word quotas.)

Eulberg, with the full support of her very influential boss, published her first YA novel The Lonely Hearts Club to sweet acclaim last year. Her new book, Prom & Prejudice, is a fun spin on Jane Austen’s masterpiece, told from the point of view of Lizzie Bennett, a junior scholarship student struggling to maintain her sense of dignity at a terribly snobby private school. We recently caught up with Eulberg, who somehow aims to publish a book a year while also handling all things Team Twilight. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 26 2011 12:04 PM ET

On the Books: January 26th

Categories:

Stieg Larsson’s younger brother Joakim fires back at allegations made in the memoir of Stieg’s partner, Eva Gabrielsson.

If e-readers didn’t kill the printed book, this might do it: EBookFling wants to become the Netflix Instant Watch for books, allowing millions of users to lend digital books to each other.

A revamped and polished production of oft-forgotten Tennessee Williams play The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore is opening on Broadway.

Japanese man accused of killing his English tutor fesses up in his new book, Until the Arrest, written from jail.

Jan 25 2011 02:20 PM ET

'Red Riding Hood' director Catherine Hardwicke and novelist discuss the film and book - EXCLUSIVE video

Red-Riding-HoodImage Credit: Kimberly FrenchThe upcoming cinematic reinvention of the classic fairy tale, starring Amanda Seyfried as the crimson-caped protagonist, looks to be a long, long way from Grandma’s house and a lot closer to the violent psycho-sexuality of those fraternal creeps, the Brothers Grimm. While the script was written for the screen, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers is releasing a novelized adaptation in advance of the film — today, in fact — written by first-time author Sarah Blakley-Cartwright. Blakley-Cartwright, Red Riding Hood director Catherine Hardwicke, and screenwriter David Johnson discuss the film and the writing process in some exclusive clips, featured in the enhanced e-book edition of the novel. Check them out below. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 25 2011 01:41 PM ET

'Fantastic Four' Death: Regretting cynicism about Marvel's latest character assassination

Fantastic-FourImage Credit: Marvel EntertainmentLast week, I posted my disdain for the comic book industry’s penchant for killing iconic superheroes for the sake of spurring sales and media attention, especially when those deaths don’t stick and are reversed by equally ballyhooed resurrection stories. The latest culprit: Marvel Comics, which not long ago murdered/revived Captain America, today publishes Fantastic Four #587, which will bump off a member of the crime-fighting quartet. Mr. Fantastic? Invisible Woman? The Thing? The Human Torch? The answer is for sale — sealed in plastic (no free peeks!) — at a comic book store near you…or available on the Web, via news outlets who’ve decided to spoil the news. If you wish to be spoiled, I direct you to the very cool Geoff Boucher of The Los Angeles Times, who has an interview with the comic’s writer, Jonathan Hickman. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 25 2011 11:22 AM ET

On The Books: January 25th

Frank Cascio, once personal assistant to Michael Jackson, signed a deal with William Morrow to pen My Friend Michael. The book promises to be “uplifting and definitive” while exposing the dark side of the late superstar’s fame.

Orson Scott Card launches two new “boy on the run” fantasy series, almost simultaneously.

We all judge a book by its cover—but why isn’t there more original, creative cover art these days?

From a London art exhibit to the Dalai Lama, manga gets some major respect.

Have you had enough the “Tiger Mother” yet? Me neither. So much has been said about Amy Chua’s parenting that her book can get lost in the discussion. Here’s a roundup of critical reviews of her controversial memoir.

Jan 22 2011 06:26 PM ET

National Book Critics Circle Awards finalists announced

Jonathan Franzen — whose Freedom was snubbed last November by the National Book Awards — was nominated today for the more prestigious National Book Critics Circle award. Other fiction finalists include Jennifer Egan (A Visit From the Goon Squad), David Grossman (To the End of the Land), Hans Keilson (Comedy in a  Minor Key), and Paul Murray (Skippy Dies).

Nonfiction finalists include Barbara Demick (Nothing to Envy), S.C. Gwynne (Empire of the Summer Moon), Jennifer Homans (Apollo’s Angels), Siddhartha Mukherjee (The Emperor of All Maladies) and Isabel Wilkerson (The Warmth of Other Suns).

Finalists in the autobiography category are Patti Smith (who nabbed a National Book Award for Just Kids), Christopher Hitchens (Hitch-22), Darrin Strauss (Half a Life), Kai Bird (Crossing Mandelbaum Gate), David Dow (Autobiography of an Execution) and Rahna Reiko Rizzuto (Hiroshima in the AM).

The winners will be announced March 10.

Jan 21 2011 02:25 PM ET

Marvel Comics icon to die (meaningless?) death one day earlier than previously announced. Yay.

Categories: Comic Books

Marvel Comics created a media stir last month when the publisher announced that it would be killing off a member of the Fantastic Four in an upcoming issue of the super-group’s long-running comic book. According to Comic Book Resources, Marvel issued a notice yesterday to retailers giving them permission to make this story available for purchase one day earlier than planned. Fantastic Four #587 was supposed to go on sale Wednesday, Jan. 26; now you can buy it on Tuesday, Jan. 25. In an advisory to retailers obtained by CBR, Marvel explained: READ FULL STORY »

Jan 20 2011 01:13 PM ET

'O' by Anonymous review: It's no 'Primary Colors'

OLet’s just put the Primary Colors thing to rest right away, OK? It’s been very savvy of Simon and Schuster to mention O in the same breath as Joe Klein’s iconic 1996 novel about Clinton’s 1992 campaign. (In fact, S&S has launched the most skillfully-executed marketing campaign in recent publishing history to promote O, but that’s another story.) Primary Colors brimmed with sharp, funny, sly satire. Americans were all too aware of the Clintons’ foibles by the time it came out, so that made it even more compulsively readable.

O, set during the 2012 campaign, hits all the right inside-politics note. I’m not a Washington journalist — I suspect the Beltway crowd will be able to weigh in better than I can about whether the nuts and bolts of running a campaign are portrayed correctly. But it almost doesn’t matter. You didn’t read Primary Colors to learn how to execute a crippling “ad buy” or how to draft a candidate’s message. You read it for the dirt. And that’s what’s conspicuously missing from O. READ FULL STORY »

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