Author: Thom Geier (61-65 of 65)

Jul 24 2009 09:00 AM ET

Lookalike Book Covers: High on Grass!

Over the last five years, Henry Sene Yee’s vivid, playful cover design for the paperback edition of Tom Perrotta’s 2004 novel Little Children has clearly inspired many lawn-care-obsessed copycats, including this year’s dust jackets for Secrets to Happiness and Perfect Life. Consider some of the evidence…

original-grass-covers_l

The trend seems to have gotten so out of hand that we imagine publishers might soon extend the idea to their backlist titles, for classics both recent and not so recent. How long before we see covers like these on the shelves? (Three clicks for EW designer Jennifer Laga for creating these.)

new-grass-covers

Jul 23 2009 10:45 AM ET

'Diary of a Wimpy Kid': Details on fourth book

Layout 1Amulet Books today announced details of the fourth book in Jeff Kinney’s hit illustrated kids’ series about supposedly lame middle-schooler Greg Heffley. The new book, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days, is due in stores Oct. 12 with a first printing of 3 million copies. Since the publication of the original Diary of a Wimpy Kid in 2007, more than 20 million copies of the series are in print in the U.S. The third book, The Last Straw, was released in January of this year. “I didn’t want my fans to have to wait a year for a new book,” Kinney said in a statement. “I’m very excited about Dog Days, because it takes Greg out of the school setting for the first time. It’s been a lot of fun to write about the Heffley summer vacation.”

This week, Fox 2000 also announced the casting of Zachary Gordon (National Treasure: Book of Secrets) in the title role of the movie version of the first book. The live-action film is tentatively scheduled for release in April 2010.

Jul 22 2009 09:00 AM ET

Quote of the Day from bookworm Emma Watson

“It sounds so geeky, but I really do like studying and reading, and if I’m not working on Harry Potter, then my greatest relaxation is to sit with a book. That’s how I escape stress — in literature. I always have several books on the go at any one moment, so it’s no good you asking ‘What’s on the bedside table at the moment, Emma?’ because often I can’t even see the table! I think that all that reading is just about the only similarity I have with Hermione, if you ask me.” — Harry Potter star Emma Watson, who plans to enroll at Brown University to study literature, to Paste Magazine

Photo Credit: Robert Pitts/Landov

Emma Watson: Growing in Style

Jul 21 2009 03:45 PM ET

Why aren't there more bookish types on TV?

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Thanks to book blogger Maud Newton, I caught up to this amusing year-old clip for a fake TV show about young intellectuals (‘llectuals — “it’s summer reading you can watch”) that’s part of a supposed effort to sex up PBS (“the Peeb”) with CW-style Gen Y cheesiness.

But it got me thinking, why don’t we see more genuine intellectuals — or even just plain old book readers — in movies and TV shows? Ever since Rory Gilmore graduated from primetime, it’s rare to find a character engaging with the printed word in any meaningful way. (Even the actors in this ‘llectuals clip seem to be uttering the “intellectual” terms as if they’re in italics, for future SAT test-prep purposes.)

Jul 21 2009 08:00 AM ET

Amazon deletes purchased e-books - sign of things to come?

Last week, hundreds of Kindle owners discovered that an e-book they had bought had been deleted from their Kindles overnight, though Amazon credited their accounts for the purchase. (The titles affected included George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty Four or Animal Farm, ironically enough.) It seems that these were unauthorized editions offered on the Kindle site and the “publisher” had no legal right to sell the titles. Fair enough. (Amazon is fairly diligent about purging other unauthorized titles from its site, including pirated Harry Potter books.)

But the action raises a lot of questions about the future of e-books. Just how permanent are these products if we can’t share them with friends, import them to other devices, and the company can effectively sneak into our homes and confiscate them at will? Some of my proudest possessions are rarities like David Leavitt’s While England Slept and Kaavya Viswanathan’s How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life, novels that were withdrawn from stores shortly after publication due to separate plagiarism charges (Leavitt’s novel was later reissued in a “revised” edition). I can imagine a not-too-distant future when such treasures won’t exist at all.

Of course, I can also imagine a future in which textbooks and timely nonfiction titles can be revised remotely with more up-to-date information without readers having to go out and buy a new updated edition. (Why do I suspect that publishers will want to charge an extra fee for this privilege?) But is anyone else a little disturbed by these new developments regarding Kindle and e-books?

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