Monday, December 14, 2009

Christopher Moore On Tour

Christopher Moore will soon be releasing the third book of his 'Bloodsucking Fiends' storyline, titled Bite Me: A Love Story. He'll be touring in support of his book - Colleen and I saw him last year on tour for Fool: A Novel, and he's highly entertaining.  But if you want to go, get there early.  The place very quickly filled up.

Tuesday, April 6 at 6:30 PM
BORDERS
5871 Crossroads Center Way,
Baileys Crossroads, VA 22041

Wednesday, April 7 at 7:00 PM
POLITICS & PROSE
5015 Connecticut Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20008




Monday, September 28, 2009

Three Books I'm Looking Forward to Reading

Those of you who know me well may have witnessed my frantic obsession with having a stack of yet unread material in the wings. Unfortunately, since I have never been known to savor a book, but rather inhale it much like Tucker (Colleen's cockapoo) does with any table treat set aside for his consumption, I sometimes wonder if the publishing industry can support my backlog. (this is a foolish conceit - I realize that there are a lot of things published that I won't read, due to snobbery [e.g., anything related to Twilight], laziness [any non-fiction, James Joyce, and David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest], or fear of commitment [anything part a series greater than 3 books in length] - and for some reason, I just can't bring myself to read The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society). So when I happen upon a book that I'm willing enough to buy in hardcover to read (I have a whole separate list of books I'm waiting to get to paperback), I'm excited. And when I find three, I'm near apoplectic and run screaming to my nearest web browser and activate my Amazon.com one-click shipping (tm) (this perhaps explains why I'm driving a 12 y.o. gas guzzler with 193,273 miles on it). So here are three books that have exercised my Amex:

Juliet, Naked - by Nick Hornby

I love Nick Hornby's books - but perhaps my favorite is High Fidelity, a music-centric reminiscence of relationships gone wrong. The protagonist owns a record store (my favorite job ever was the $4.75/hr I made at Kemp Mill Records on a moonlighting gig 20 years ago), has no success in relationships, that he lays squarely at the feet of his partners du jour (something I could relate to), without any consideration of the common denominator in all of his love affairs (again, something I could relate to). Juliet, Naked (reviewed, btw, on Pop Matters, one of my daily go-to sites) follows in Hornby's tradition of using music as a plot lubricant, and follows the 15 year old relationship of Duncan and Annie as they embark on a pilgrimage to find a reclusive musician. Duncan's fascination with the recluse leads to a substitution of music for emotion in his relationship with Annie that comes to a head when an acoustic release of the musician's farewell album (the eponymous Juliet, Naked) appears, followed soon by the musician himself. I'm a sucker for novels that tie in music, and even moreso for Hornby's type of humor and male introspection. And I can already imagine my desire to hear the reclusive (and fictional) musician's album.


How I Became a Famous Novelist by Steve Hely

Another novel reviewed on Pop Matters is How I Became a Famous Novelist. I caught the last few minutes of the author being interviewed on NPR's Fresh Air, and was intrigued. But the Pop Matters review really sealed it for me. In his first novel, Hely (who was a TV writer for shows like American Dad and Letterman) shows the desperation borne out of vengenance (may be too strong a word... is there such as thing as leit vengenance?) a young writer has to become a famous writer. He goes about it through research - not the exhaustive research of his topic, but rather of the attributes of successful (and not neccesarily good) novels. This research gets distilled down into rules (Rule #1 - Abandon Truth... Rule #5 - Must include a 'club'... Rule #12 - Give readers versions of themselves, infused with extra awesomeness) which results in his hopeful best seller - The Tornado Ashes Club. I'm fascinated with what it takes to be a writer and am looking forward to reading a satire of the whole process.

Her Fearful Symmetry - by Audrey Niffenegger

It's only natural that I would anticipate anything new from the author of my favorite book of the last decade - and although I know several that agree with me (if perhaps not to the levels of hyperbole I reach), I also know there are several who don't understand my fawning over The Time Traveler's Wife (and, no - I haven't seen the movie yet). In her sophomore effort, the author places identical twins from Chicago into the home of their recently deceased aunt (whose ghost is still around), next to the Highgate Cemetary in London. As they become involved with their aunt's neighbors, they delve into the mysteries found in the aunt's diaries... okay, okay - I'm failing to build the suspense that drew me to this... but 1) - I loved The Time Traveler's Wife, and 2), from the New Yorker review - 'she has a knack for taking the romantic into the realm of creepiness'...

So that's what's on my nightstand... (or will be as soon as shipped). How about yours?

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Quick Summer Reviews

Hey everyone - it's been a while since I've posted any reviews. I've been reviewing some of the books I've read over at Visual Bookshelf on Facebook, and thought I'd post a couple of those here. Also, at some point in the near future, I'm going to get another eVite out for the next book club, a la fresco (am I using that correctly), at Laura's suggestion... so here are a couple of the better or more entertaining books I've read this summer.

The Likeness - Tana French

The Likeness is Tana French's 2nd novel. Like In the Woods, The Likeness is told in the first person and concerns a murder investigation outside Dublin. However in this case, French's protagonist is not Rob Ryan - who in the first book played a likeable murder detective with a dark past, but rather Cassie Maddox - a former undercover officer, and also Rob's partner, best friend, and in many ways, his soulmate. Cassie is on her own now, the fallout from the case covered in In the Woods driving her out of the murder investigation department and into domestic violence. She gets pulled back into both murder and undercover when a woman wgi us a doppelganger for Cassie, and using an identity Cassie used undercover, is found murdered. What follows is Cassie's deep undercover work, investigation, and delving into the odd relationship the murdered women had with her four housemates and university mates.

I really enjoyed In the Wood - a great blend of a crime procedural, mystery and psychological suspense novel. French's characters came off the pages and became real - to the point you could almost (almost!) predict how they would react in a given situation. Her settings were vivid, and the suspense palpable. I was having a hard time buying the concept of an undercover officer being able to insinuate herself into a group of very close friends and pulling it off, so I had little hope for The Likeness... but somewhere along the line, I started buying the plausibility of the undercover work, much as the dead woman's flatmates did. And then I was hooked. Cassie Maddox is a fantastic character, and the isolated group of friends she infiltrates were all colorful in their own right. As if this isn't enough, French manages to bring in the lingering resentment of the brutal British rule in the Irish countryside, and intelligent, esoteric and academic conversations... in a lot of ways, this reminded me of Donna Tartt's The Secret History - but since I already knew the protagonist from the previous book, I felt more at home with this novel.
Tana French won a well-deserved Edgar Award for In the Woods and I wouldn't be surprised to find that The Likeness also picks up the award for mystery writing. If you haven't read In the Woods - read it... and then read The Likeness. Both are excellent.

Nine Kinds of Naked - Tony Vigorito

This book was just pure, metaphysical fun... Linking an angry priest turned undercover agent, the overly intelligent and buxom love-child stripper of a sexually repressed man and free-spirited woman, an ex-con/ex-Army/ex-FDA policy wonk/purveyor of pipes and wisdom with a transcendental, time-traveling serf/sometimes prison guard and his ass, this book delves into chaos, awareness and meteorological phenomena. At times, this book was very reminiscent of Tom Robbins - perhaps Tom Robbins on acid.

I had a difficult time early on following the narrative, as it jumped from one character to the next, without any clue of how they would be linked and actually put this book down for about a week and read something else. When I came back to it, the characters were just as fresh in my mind. I had more time to devote to it per reading, and found myself sucked into the vortex of synchronicity prevalent throughout the book. The dialogue and 'coincidences' between the characters were hilarious, everything tied together and the cover art explained. What more could you want in a humorous novel?

Downtown Owl - Chuck Klosterman

Maybe it's because I grew up in the midwest (albeit in a town of 40,000) and was exposed to the simple lives of the agricultural society... My mother's parents lived on a farm outside Annawan, IL - a town of 800 people and 1 stop light. Owl, ND has more bars than Annawan... and probably a better high school football team, but I'd be willing to bet if you peel back the oak veneer on either of the two bars Annawan did have, you'd find characters just as interesting as those in Klosterman's Owl. Chuck Klosterman goes beyond the stereotypical small town venue to show the reason behind the stereotypes. His characters strive for what we all strive for - security, companionship, sense of worth - and are as befuddled by day to day life as anyone is... but mostly, Klosterman reminds us that they are human - with all of their small internal glories, fears, secrets... and mortality. While he's showing us this portrait of small town life from the inside, he's keeping us entertained with the principle characters' dialogue, humor, and their day to day hopes and fears... yet he reminds us that the outside image of a small town (or anything) is but a narrow slice of the depth and breadth of the people living on the inside.

The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook - A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal - Ben Mezrich

I'm not familiar with Mezrich's work - other than having seen the fictionalized movie adaptation of Bringing Down the House... but I was somewhat familiar with the origins of Facebook. The Accidental Billionaires is a dramatized account of this, told without the contributions of Mark Zuckerberg - the 'inventor' of Facebook (the author is up front about this). Although Mezrich does not disclose his sources, it's obvious that Eduardo Saverin and Tyler Winklevoss - both of whom at one point had lawsuits against Mark Zuckerberg - were his primary 'inside' sources. Conversations, impressions, events surrounding those two figurethe most prominently - and as you can imagine, they paint a sometimes less than flattering portrait of Mark Zuckerberg. I'm sure there's another side to this story...

But as a story, I was riveted. When I first picked up The Accidental Billionaires, I was not sure what to expect... but I didn't set it back down until I had read 125 pp - and I was hooked. Knowing Facebook as I do now, the 'humble' beginnings (if truly anything that begins in Harvard's hallowed confines could be considered humble) were fascinating, and the characters involved were interestingly dull and human. Mezrich even manages to make the ultra-elite Winklevoss twins (in addition to being in the 'elite' category of the socio-economic scale, they are also Olympic athletes) accessible and human. The one character in the book that seems somewhat less so is Mark Zuckerberg - and this is perhaps the biggest disappointment for me. As the primary inside sources become more marginalized (which, if you read as far as the subtitle of the book, you can figure out), there is less detail around the meteoric rise of Facebook. Still, the story kept me interested throughout and I'd recommend to anyone reading this - as you, by default, are Facebook users. As I said before, though- I'm sure there's another side to this story. Perhaps Sarah Lacy's forthcoming book The Facebook Story: The Stories of Facebook, MySpace and YouTube, which purports to be constructed from interviews with the founders will present the other side. In the meantime, The Accidental Billionaires is an interesting and fun read.

As a post-mortem note, the movie rights for The Accidental Billionaires have been picked up with David Fincher (Fight Club, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Zodiac) attached to direct, and Aaron Sorkin (Sports Night, The West Wing, Charlie Wilson's War) writing the screenplay.

That's all for now - I've read several other books, some good, some bad, one great that I'll post at a later date. Happy reading!

Friday, July 10, 2009

National Book Festival

I've lived in DC for 23 years now, and it was only last year that I became aware of the Library of Congress' National Book Festival. This year's festival is September 26 and features, among others, Junot Diaz (The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao), John Grisham (if you don't know what John Grisham wrote, you must've been under a rock for the last 20 years), John Irving (one of my favorite authors - The Cider House Rules, The World According to Garp, The 158 Pound Marriage, etc.), Jodi Piccoult (My Sister's Keeper), David Wroblewski (The Story of Edgar Sawtelle), some great mystery/thriller writers (David Baldacci, Lee Child, Walter Mosley, Michael Connelly, Lisa Scottoline), and some great non-fiction/historical writers (Ken Burns, Sue Monk Kidd, Jon Meacham). Information for the 2009 National Book Festival, including a full list of authors can be found at:

http://www.loc.gov/bookfest/

Friday, February 13, 2009

Library book sale

I've discovered a great way to get "new" books for less while making a contribution to our local library -- the library book sale! You'd be surprised at how badly our libraries need additional funds. Please give Brad your sympathy, as he had to lug the bags of books after waiting patiently while I shopped. The only down sides are that you've got to search a bit (though this can help you take some reading risks - what the heck, I'll try it, it's $1!) and take a dust rag to some of the books once you get home.

I'm itching for another book club meeting!