Friday, September 29, 2006
The People that You Meet at Starbucks
I like to think I'm more upper-middlebrow than lower-middle brow -- maybe that's the reason I disdain Mitch Albom. I was forced to read Tuesdays with Morrie for a book club I foolishly joined (I barely have enough opinions to sustain my freelance book reviewing -- I can't go spending them in a book club situation, and besides, the only thing I had in common with the other women in the club, all of whom were really nice and smart, was that we were all nursing newborns). That book had more pap than a visit to the gynecologist.
Maybe I'm just cynical. Ten million people can't be wrong, right? At any rate, Albom is about to be Starbucked, as his new heartwarmer For One More Day becomes the first author in the new Starbucks book program. The book, s slightly creepy novel about what would happen if you had one more day to spend with a loved one who died, treads familiar Albom territory of emotions, death, and healing.
Starbucks has done amazingly well in its music partnerships. The CDs sell like hotcakes. Not so much with its movie deal to promote Akeelah and the Bee. (People may be getting tired of the spelling bee thing, what with documentaries, broadway shows, novels, and other media flooding the market) Still, Albom doesn't really need Starbucks to push him, and the people who feel he's too populist and treacly probably are eschewing venti carmel macchiatos and strawberries and cream frappucinos in favor of espresso shots and mugs of shade grown in their locally owned cafe that features freshly roasted beans and housemade pastries.
Maybe I'm just cynical. Ten million people can't be wrong, right? At any rate, Albom is about to be Starbucked, as his new heartwarmer For One More Day becomes the first author in the new Starbucks book program. The book, s slightly creepy novel about what would happen if you had one more day to spend with a loved one who died, treads familiar Albom territory of emotions, death, and healing.
Starbucks has done amazingly well in its music partnerships. The CDs sell like hotcakes. Not so much with its movie deal to promote Akeelah and the Bee. (People may be getting tired of the spelling bee thing, what with documentaries, broadway shows, novels, and other media flooding the market) Still, Albom doesn't really need Starbucks to push him, and the people who feel he's too populist and treacly probably are eschewing venti carmel macchiatos and strawberries and cream frappucinos in favor of espresso shots and mugs of shade grown in their locally owned cafe that features freshly roasted beans and housemade pastries.
Thursday, September 28, 2006
Wes Anderson loved pop-up books
Wes Anderson has obviously been inspired by book on ocean adventure as shown by the significant role that Jaques Cousteau's book Diving for Sunken Treasure played in his filmRushmore. I love that movie so much that many times I've been tempted to pick up a hard back copy of the book. I was reading my copy of the pop-up version of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and came across this illustration and was immediately reminded of the scene in Life Aquatic where we are given a tour of his boat. I'm sure Wes and his brother Eric had this book when they were kids.
Too Much Television
I love projects in which someone immerses themselves in TV for days on end to prove what a shallow medium it is. In the 1990s, environmental critic Bill McKibben wrote The Age of Missing Information in which he recorded all the television available to him on cable and broadcast in a 24 hour period, then watched all 1700 hours of it. He then went into the woods to go camping for 24 hours. Which experience would teach him more -- a day in the woods or 1700 hours of TV? Hint: Camping.
In the latest issue of the The New Yorker, Bill Buford sets himself a comparatively light schedule of watching a mere 72 hours straight of the Food Network. Woozy with overstimulation, he becomes entranced with the visual pleasure of making a salad. Also, he caps on Rachael Ray.
In the latest issue of the The New Yorker, Bill Buford sets himself a comparatively light schedule of watching a mere 72 hours straight of the Food Network. Woozy with overstimulation, he becomes entranced with the visual pleasure of making a salad. Also, he caps on Rachael Ray.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
My, What Big Thoughts You Have ....
The British Guardian Unlimited has a nice piece on the many and varied interpretations of the fairy tale "Little Red Riding Hood" to commemorate the opening of the kids' movie Hoodwinked on that side of the pond. Originally penned in 1697, the story has offered rich material for writers, filmmakers, graduate thesis penners, and other thinkers. Does her red cape represent menstruation? Sin? Is the wolf, well, a wolf? Or merely misunderstood? And what to make of the fact that my 1970s-era CB handle when I was a kid was "Red Riding Hood?"
There's lots to think about in this article, but perhaps its raison d'etre is this line, about the 1980s Neil Jordan film The Company of Wolves:
"A movie so Freudian that you keep expecting it to grow a beard and move to Vienna..."
Barnes & Noble stock jump on analysist upgrade
Barnes & Noble stock jumped when Goldman Sachs upgraded to "neutral" and removed the bookseller from its Americas Sell List. That reminds me of the gag on Arrested Development when their company's stock goes from "triple sell" to "Don't Buy" and everyone cheers.
Nevertheless, this is mostly good news for the book industry as one of the reasons cited for the upgrade is the slew of new blockbuster books planned for release this Fall.
Nevertheless, this is mostly good news for the book industry as one of the reasons cited for the upgrade is the slew of new blockbuster books planned for release this Fall.
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
History for Dummies
The [Blank] for Dummies series is 15 years old now, and the New York Times celebrated this past Sunday with a juicyish insider's piece on the series.
Starting with the DOS for Dummies book in 1991 (which surprisingly has no value today, if the prices on Ebay are any indication), IDG has more than 1000 For Dummies titles. That's a lot of stupidity, from Opera for Dummies to Diabetes for Dummies. Best of all? They call the process of editing the book to their style "dummifying" it.
Starting with the DOS for Dummies book in 1991 (which surprisingly has no value today, if the prices on Ebay are any indication), IDG has more than 1000 For Dummies titles. That's a lot of stupidity, from Opera for Dummies to Diabetes for Dummies. Best of all? They call the process of editing the book to their style "dummifying" it.
Pictures of Sony's eBook Reader
There's some cool pictures of Sony's new ebook reader over at Gizmodo. I'm amazed at how thin it is. Combine it with something like the Million Books Project and you have something very interesting.
Monday, September 25, 2006
Gone to New York, by Ian Frazier
Just finished Ian Fraizier's Gone to New York. Great book. I got the first edition hard back cuz I'm such a book geek but I just love the cover to the paperback version. It is instantly recognizable to any reader of the New Yorker as his bag snatcher story.
I love books with lots of different stuff in it, particularly books that feature stuff from the New Yorker or other magazines. Books from Steve Martin and David Rakoff come to mind. What I love most about this book is how it holds together so well. It builds up short bits (from his Talk of the Town column) and other things into a large narrative about his life growing up in Ohio, moving to New York city, then to Brooklyn, and finally moving to Montclair, New Jersey.
His mind seems to work very much like my own, becoming obsessed with historical details and the unexplored underbelly of all the places he lives. His stories of living in a loft above an Army surplus store on Canal Street is like shooting fish in a barrel, but who would have though that New Jersey could be so interesting.
As someone who was born in Queens and lived many years in lower Manhattan, this book really satisfies a craving I'd had recently. As some might suggest it doesn't make me long to visit any time soon. In many ways it makes me even happier to be living in Portland right now.
While Ian Frazier is able to bring a rare sense of sanity to New York, Portland is the kind of place where it isn't a struggle to find the sanity. It's right there where you live, surrounded by your friends and community. It's when you leave Portland that you discover the insanity, which only makes life here even more satisfying.
Don't Let Me Buy Any More Books (At Least Not This Week)
What do you do if you're faced with an enormous tableful of (outdated but still pretty cool) children's hardback ex-library books? And what would you do if you had a child who loves books? And they were charging only a quarter for them?
Yes, you'd dive right in. Even though your daughter's shelves are bursting with books and the basement is overflowing with them and there's a stack of not-ex-library books that need to be read and returned so you can check out more.
This Saturday, the Twi-Night Rummage Sale at the Eagles featured just such a table. The woman who runs the sale rescued the books just as the school system was getting ready to throw them in the trash. I chose 16 books -- 14 for my kid and two for resale. They included such gems as About the B'nai Bagels by E.L. From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler Konigsburg and a photo-illustrated book on owning and caring for horses by Jill Krementz, A Very Young Rider, and a Robert McClung books on salmon. When I was a kid, I loved his Luna: The Story of a Moth.
Yes, you'd dive right in. Even though your daughter's shelves are bursting with books and the basement is overflowing with them and there's a stack of not-ex-library books that need to be read and returned so you can check out more.
This Saturday, the Twi-Night Rummage Sale at the Eagles featured just such a table. The woman who runs the sale rescued the books just as the school system was getting ready to throw them in the trash. I chose 16 books -- 14 for my kid and two for resale. They included such gems as About the B'nai Bagels by E.L. From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler Konigsburg and a photo-illustrated book on owning and caring for horses by Jill Krementz, A Very Young Rider, and a Robert McClung books on salmon. When I was a kid, I loved his Luna: The Story of a Moth.
Friday, September 22, 2006
Ban the Bomb
Here's an idea -- have a banned books party and have everyone come as their favorite character in a banned book! Personally, I'm planning to go as Captain Underpants.
Or maybe I'll choose the perenially-banned Judy Blume book Forever and go as the hot-to-lose-it Katherine. So many choices!
Or maybe I'll choose the perenially-banned Judy Blume book Forever and go as the hot-to-lose-it Katherine. So many choices!
Banned Books Week
Tomorrow kicks off Banned Books Week, sponsored by the American Library Association. The list of most frequently challenged books of 2005 includes the ususally suspects like Catcher in the Rye and many books that educate people about sexuality. I image this might be a big deal in places like Florida, but such a book-centric city such as Portland mostly takes such an event in stride.
No More Homework
My daughter brought home some homework this afternoon that was actually pretty cool. She has to interview us about how we chose her name. That's nice because it fosters creativity, family history, and literacy all at once.
On the other hand, I'm kind of opposed to homework for first graders. Slate reviewed three new books that take on the controversy about homework this week and writer/mama Emily Bazelton concludes that, for elementary school students, homework is at best, just something to do instead of turning on the T.V.
Alfie Kohn, in his new book, The Homework Myth , argues that the elementary level, homework is mere drudgery and kills intellectual curiosity. I tend to agree a little -- would you rather help your kid memorize the multiplication table or support his avid interest in learning all he can about yucky bugs? Even more damning, Kohn seems to believe that the only thing homework is good for doing is instilling the unquestioning obediance and tolerance for drudgery to turn our kids into the 60-hour-a-week worker-drones that are the necessary engine for our fading economy.
Sara Bennett and Nancy Kalish's The Case Against Homework makes many of the same points as Kohn, but its authors also offer stragegies for dealing with the homework, and with the school.
The third book, Harris M. Coopers The Battle Over Homework crunches the numbers of a 700-family study to find out shocking facts like the fact that in younger students there is a negative corelation between the amount of homework a student does and his grades.
Everyone seems to agree, however, that the best homework a kid can do is to (voluntarily) curl up with a good book.
On the other hand, I'm kind of opposed to homework for first graders. Slate reviewed three new books that take on the controversy about homework this week and writer/mama Emily Bazelton concludes that, for elementary school students, homework is at best, just something to do instead of turning on the T.V.
Alfie Kohn, in his new book, The Homework Myth , argues that the elementary level, homework is mere drudgery and kills intellectual curiosity. I tend to agree a little -- would you rather help your kid memorize the multiplication table or support his avid interest in learning all he can about yucky bugs? Even more damning, Kohn seems to believe that the only thing homework is good for doing is instilling the unquestioning obediance and tolerance for drudgery to turn our kids into the 60-hour-a-week worker-drones that are the necessary engine for our fading economy.
Sara Bennett and Nancy Kalish's The Case Against Homework makes many of the same points as Kohn, but its authors also offer stragegies for dealing with the homework, and with the school.
The third book, Harris M. Coopers The Battle Over Homework crunches the numbers of a 700-family study to find out shocking facts like the fact that in younger students there is a negative corelation between the amount of homework a student does and his grades.
Everyone seems to agree, however, that the best homework a kid can do is to (voluntarily) curl up with a good book.
Cody's Books bought by Japanese book distributor
Cody’s Books, which recently suffered the loss of its flagship store in Berkeley, announced that it had been acquired by Yohan, Inc., the largest distributor of foreign books in Japan. This past May, Cody’s closed its flagship Telegraph Avenue store. The Yohan CEO assured that all employees at the San Francisco store in Union Square and the Berkeley store on Fourth Street will be retained and the bookseller will continue its writer’s events and book services for schools, libraries and companies.
Dirty Sugar Cookies by Ayun Halliday
I still haven't decided if I'm going to Ayun Halliday's reading at Powell's Books. I usually wait for the author reading before picking up a book I'm thinking of reading, but I grabbed a copy early and finished it in a few days. While it's lacking the intimacy of her zine, The East Village Inky, I liked the book very much. It's more about her life growing up and her years attending college than current tales of raising kids in New York City.
While my favorite parts are certainly the few chapters about life in New York, I also enjoyed her tales of college life -- getting her first apartment, cooking for a series of boyfriends, and hanging out in greasy spoon diners.
While I'm not usually a big fan of vegetarian conversion stories, her's was very enjoyable. I particularly liked the honest intimacy of falling off the wagon during her travels and big family meals. I don't recall exactly how long she remained a vegetarian for, but her intimate relationship to food is typical of vegetarians and oozes throughout every chapter.
Thursday, September 21, 2006
Chocolate Magazine
Came across this magazine at the local back date magazine shop.
It seems very much like a British version of Chocolatier Magazine. I don't know how many issues they published. This is the first one, dated April 1999, and might very well be the only one.
It's got all the standard stuff you'd expect the first issue of a chololate magazine to have; chocolate history, how it goes from bean to bar, and an overview of chocolate themed books.
As short lived as it might have been, it's still a fine publication. Really nice production with bright photos on high-quality paper. The chocolate tasting runs four pages and has some nice objective comments from multiple tastings on a wide variety of (mostly European) chocolate bars.
Their domain at http://chocolate-magazine.co.uk has been taken over by squaters but the editor Arthur Martin is still making the rounds.
Turkish Novelist Acquitted
Elif Shafak, the Turkish novelist who was arrested for "insulting Turkishness" because her novel had a character talking about the turkish slaughter of Armenians in the early part of the last century (uh-oh, now I've insulted Turkishness) has been acquitted in Turkey.
Although the concept of "insulting Turkishness" may sound funny, her trial and its implications was no laughing matter. Several Turkish writers and journalists have been charged under Article 301.
What if the U.S. adopted a law like this? I'd wager we'd have a lot fewer books about the U.S. history of slavery and a radically reduced amount of dissident political views. On the other hand, even though I'm no fan of George W. Bush, the bookstores are getting kind of overloaded with anti-Bush books. Just the other day I picked up The I Hate Bush Cookbook, The Idiot's Guide to Why George Bush Is an Idiot, and Ramona Quimby, Anti-Bush Activist.
Although the concept of "insulting Turkishness" may sound funny, her trial and its implications was no laughing matter. Several Turkish writers and journalists have been charged under Article 301.
What if the U.S. adopted a law like this? I'd wager we'd have a lot fewer books about the U.S. history of slavery and a radically reduced amount of dissident political views. On the other hand, even though I'm no fan of George W. Bush, the bookstores are getting kind of overloaded with anti-Bush books. Just the other day I picked up The I Hate Bush Cookbook, The Idiot's Guide to Why George Bush Is an Idiot, and Ramona Quimby, Anti-Bush Activist.
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
Corrections!
Although I've read most of Jonathan Franzen's new book already, since lots of it previously appeared in the New Yorker, I'm excited to check out The Discomfort Zone: A Personal History because goodness knows, it's hard to find any memoirs out there. Franzen's ability to make readers squirm makes him a great candidate to chronicle his self-loathing adolescence.
And speaking of memoirs, I'm re-reading Judith Moore's haunting Fat Girl. As you can imagine, it's even more poignant since her death a few months ago.
And speaking of memoirs, I'm re-reading Judith Moore's haunting Fat Girl. As you can imagine, it's even more poignant since her death a few months ago.
Portland Library book sale coming up on October 6
The big Portland Library book sale is coming up October 6, 7, 8, 9. Pay $30 at the door to become a member and get in to the preview sale on Friday night.
British phone books go online
I've been fascinated with old phone books for many years. While I've never actually collected any, I've heard of old NYC phone books where you can look up Edgar Allen Poe's phone number. British Telecom is posting British phone books dating back to 1880, the year directories were introduced. I only wish the U.S. phone company/ies would do that. Look for it at ancestry.co.uk.
Kid's Book Fair
This looks like fun. A kid's book fair sponsored by the Multnomah County Library. A good event to check out before the Sunnyside Art Stroll.
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