Posts Tagged ‘Books’

Bookswim Giveaway Winners!

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

Ah, what a sweet sound: The sound of me settling into my armchair because I don’t have to go and ship any books this week. Thanks to the wonderful folks at Bookswim (you really need to know about this “Netflix for Books” if you don’t already), I am giving five lucky Friday Reads participants from August 20th one-month memberships to Bookswim and ONE lucky FridayReads participant from August 27th a $50 gift card to Bookswim.

The five winners of the one-month memberships are:

@Stefaniya

@knittingmomof3

@pookster

@wholewidewords

@rmhbikes

Congrats!

Now, drumroll, please: The winner of the $50 Bookswim gift card is…

@jocemiller

Wheeeee! Now, all you each have to do is send me your email and snailmail addresses: thebookmaven at gmail dot com is my email addy. Shortly thereafter, you’ll hear from the good folks at Bookswim. 

What could be easier, or more in keeping with the holiday spirit of Labor Day? ;)

The Great “Mockingjay” Giveaway on #FridayReads

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

If you’re on Twitter, and you’re reading “Mockingjay” by Suzanne Collins, I want to know.

Why? Because I think it will be fascinating to gather as many of you who helped this title “trend” yesterday on Twitter and count you up. So if you’re part of the #Mockingjay hashtag, I want your help: Tell me so by adding my weekly #fridayreads hashtag to a tweet with #mockingjay in it, and I’ll automatically enter you in a giveaway.

The prize? I thought long and hard about this, and decided that in the spirit of Katniss, I would offer something that gives the winner freedom. If you are the winner (I choose winners of all of my giveaways using Random.org), I’ll give you a $50 gift certificate TO THE BOOKSTORE OF YOUR CHOICE.

That’s right! It can be an indie, a big-box, an online retailer — whatever makes YOUR life easier.

There is one catch: I need to hear from at least 500 of you to make this giveaway happen. Tell your reading friends! Remember: ALL you have to do is tweet “I’m reading #Mockingjay/#fridayreads.”

That’s it! One line to win $50 worth of books…I hope you can’t resist.

Twitter Book Tour: Paul Greenberg, FOUR FISH

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Please help me welcome Paul Greenberg, AKA @4fishgreenberg, to his first live event on Twitter. At noon Eastern on Thursday, August 12th (that’s today!), he’ll be chatting with readers using the hashtag #4fish; I’ll moderate and answer any questions you may have about the process. I’ll also handle giveaways of Paul’s book!

More about “Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food” can found on this Indiebound page

More about Paul Greenberg.

New York Times Book Review front-page review of “Four Fish.”

Coffee with Justine van der Leun

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Sometimes author interviews are cut and dried. A tired author shows up, kind but also fatigued media escort in tow, and provides 15 minutes of answers to prepared questions. There’s nothing precisely wrong with this scenario, but it doesn’t necessarily make for an inspired back and forth.

Other times, author interviews are a more organic kind of thing. Two weeks ago I was privileged to enjoy two of these laid-back meetings, and today I’m going to share the results of one of them…

Justine van der Leun’s debut as an author, “Marcus of Umbria: What an Italian Dog Taught an American Girl About Love,” is a recentl release from Rodale Books. Its darling cover led me to believe that the book might be a cute, light paean to a beloved pet, nothing more.

Fortunately, I’ve been around books and publishing long enough to know better than to judge a book by its cover. Just a few pages in to “Marcus of Umbria,” I knew I was reading something much better than a cutesy animal tale. I also knew that I wanted to meet the author.

Since my friend and colleague Bill Thompson of Eye on Books was also planning to chat with Justine, the three of us arranged to meet at my local Le Pain Quotidien. We wound up having such a great conversation that we shut down the lunch crowd, and I became so happily overcaffeinated that I didn’t sleep that night…but that’s another story.

Justine’s story can be summed up quickly: Girl hates NY media job, girl takes trip to Italy and see handsome stud, girl returns to Italy to live with handsome stud, handsome stud turns out to be a drip, girl gets dog, girl learns true meaning of love and independence, girl returns to NY but eschews real job for life as a writer.

Again, that could sound mighty superficial — but Justine doesn’t stay on the surface. Her Italian fidanzato (“Everyone is a fidanzato or fidanzata in Italy,” she told me. “No one is actually engaged; it’s just a catchall term for ‘They’re together’”) Emmanuele, moves her in with his family, and Justine learns what it means to both belong to a larger one (she was largely raised as an only child of a single mother) while being a complete outsider.

I told Justine I thought her book was less the story of a dog and its owner than it was a study of modern Italian family life. “You’re right,” she said. “When Emmanuele and I broke up, Marcus became my sort of ‘way in’ to continuing to participate in Italian family life.”

It’s evident that Justine truly integrated into her Italian family of choice; she’s so comfortable with their favorite phrases, their rituals, and their way of welcoming people into their lives yet allowing those same people to move on while maintaining the status quo. One character is constantly using the interjection “Eh….beh…” which can be loosely translated as “What are you gonna do? Life goes on…” 

From her sojourn in a different country, Justine van der Leun learned that her own life would go on even after it had been entirely changed. “Marcus of Umbria” is a profound look at changing, the kind of memoir that restores your faith in that genre.

Twitter Book Tour: William Eamon, “The Professor of Secrets”

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Today, tomorrow, and Friday I’ll have the delight of conducting a Twitter Book Tour for William Eamon and his new release from National Geographic Books, “The Professor of Secrets: Mystery, Medicine, and Alchemy in Renaissance Italy.” 

What’s a Twitter Book Tour? Basically, it’s a clever name for a live online author chat. At 3:00 p.m. Eastern time today (all times listed below), William Eamon and I will hop on Twitter and start chatting, using hashtag #ngsecrets. (For those of you who aren’t sure, a “hashtag” is simply the “hash mark” or “#” sign combined with any word or phrase relevant to a particular discussion. Adding the hashtag to a tweet makes it possible for people to search on that tweet. If you just want to see tweets in the chat, I recommend TweetChat.com, a site that is quite simple to use.)

Now, more important: Allow me to introduce Eamon and his book!

William Eamon is Regents Professor of History and dean of the Honors College at New Mexico State University. A specialist in the history of science and medicine in Renaissance Italy and Spain, he is the author of “Science and the Secrets of Nature: Books of Secrets in Medieval and Early Modern Culture” and the co-editor of “Beyond the Black Legend: Spain and the Scientific Revolution.” In addition, he has written more than 50 scholarly articles, essays, and book chapters.

“The Professor of Secrets: Mystery, Medicine, and Alchemy in Renaissance Italy” is Eamon’s latest book, from National Geographic, and it’s a fascinating look at a Renaissance doctor named Leonardo Fioravanti who hoped to find the ancient panacea that would cure all illnesses. One of my favorite aspects of this historical jigsaw puzzle Eamon puts together is how much Fioravanti had to struggle against the political and academic mores of his day — just like modern mavericks in medicine. 

Join William Eamon today at 3 p.m. Eastern, Thursday at 11 a.m. Eastern, and Friday at noon Eastern. Each day we’ll have a one-hour chat about Fioravanti, mysteries, medical history, and more. There will be giveaways, too — so even if you don’t have a specific question, stop in using #ngsecrets. Anyone who visits is eligible to win a copy of “The Professor of Secrets.”

If you have any questions, find *me* on Twitter: @thebookmaven. “See” you soon!

Recommended Reading: “The Frozen Rabbi” by Steve Stern

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

For some reason, three of the most interesting books I’ve read this season have been about the 20th-century Jewish experience. Each of these treats the central tragedy of the Holocaust in an utterly different way. Julie Orringer’s “The Invisible Bridge” is a lush historical novel that follows a young Hungarian architect through Europe before, during, and after World War II; the book doesn’t skirt any horrors, but it is all about continuity of narrative. “Day for Night,” by Frederick Reiken (which I reviewed last week) takes a wholly different approach, circling a central mystery about a character who may or may not have survived a mass killing through the perspectives of over a dozen other characters.

In “The Frozen Rabbi,” accomplished novelist Steve Stern attacks the quandary of how the Jewish past affects the Jewish present, and while his book is on the surface the least connected to the Holocaust of these three, in its heart it is as conscious of that event as any Eli Wiesel book. The rest of the book deserves attention, but allow me to spend a few moments explaining why Stern’s approach is different and why I believe these books are appearing now.

Stern traces the history of a family we first come to know as the Karps of Memphis. It’s the late 1990s, and young scion Bernie has just discovered something in the basement Kelvinator. Bernie’s find and what happens next take up about half of the novel. Its other half is about how an Old World family survives the traumas inflicted on European Jewry over the last century.

Yet pogroms and kibbutzniks get more time than the Holocaust, which is relegated to the experience of Shprintze, Israeli immigrant and Ruben “Ruby” Karp’s short-lived first wife whose first-born son dies with her. Obviously, there is a lot of symbolism resting on Shprintze’s frail shoulders, and even more on her forearm’s “blue-inked tattoo.” By laying her to rest, is Stern saying that America’s Jews have forgotten something? Or repressed something? Or something else entirely?

It isn’t easy to tell from Stern’s treatment, but if the reader pays attention, she’ll see that this author is less interested in explaining how something so horrible happened than in tying it in to the larger story of where some American Jews come from and where they are today. That’s what I found in these three contemporary novels by Orringer, Reiken, and Stern: They are discovering new ways to write about an unspeakable thing with which they have little direct experience. As the years roll on and fewer and fewer of us have any links to survivors or liberators of the death camps, we have a choice about whether to remember or forget.

“The Frozen Rabbi” urges us to remember not just the tragic parts of Jewish history in the West (pogroms, stereotyping) but also the productive ones, like entrepreneurial spirit and resilience. A large part of that resilience, it would seem from Stern’s vigorously funny novel, is humor. From the moment young Bernie Karp finds 19th-century Rabbi Eliezer ben Zephyr’s icy sarcophagus in his family’s deep freeze (Bernie is — what else? — searching for a piece of liver with which to abuse himself, inspired by a certain novelist), the book’s action mixes magical realism with historical storytelling with huge, broad, Marx-Bros.-style laffs. At one point, the unfrozen, newly hip Rabbi tells Bernie that the answers he seeks “It’s all in the book…which it’s twenty-four ninety-five retail.” 

HA! What self-respecting American Jew would pay retail? But I digress…this is a book which it simply defies description. Stern is by turns solemn, gleeful, wry, sorrowful, and manic, yet it all works. I rarely wanted to put “The Frozen Rabbi” down. Even when one Karp ancestor turns to a life of mob crime and seems utterly unsympathetic, the author has a trick up his sleeve to redeem the moment. However, through all of the hijinks, the author also has a much more meaningful purpose: He shows that Judaism isn’t a mere matter of appearances. The Rabbi himself discards his shtreimel and phylacteries for Hefner-esque lounge garb, but remains a man of words. Characters may be Russian peasants clad in homespun or modern teenagers wearing tee-shirts, but they’re still Jewish. 

Somehow, Stern seems to be saying, it doesn’t matter how much we forget. What matters most is what we remember.

I Hereby Proclaim July 14th Read What You Love Day

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

For my 25,000th tweet, I asked the Twitterverse what I should proclaim. One waggish tweep said “A national holiday?”

Why not? I may not be able to issue a federal edict, but I’ll just declare today — known as le jour de la Bastille in more Gallic quarters — National Read What You Love Day.

Read What You Love Day is all about its self-explanatory title. Stop reading what you think you should read and pick up a book you can’t wait to start.

I want to help, of course. I’ve put together a set of five 2010 books I simply love, and will give them away to a random reader who tells me here which book she’ll choose for this inaugural holiday celebration.

Here are the five books you could receive:

A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan
The Passage by Justin Cronin
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
Matterhorn by Karl Marlantes
The Possessed by Elif Batuman

Ready, set…GO!

UPDATE: 5:07 Eastern time — Random.org selected April Hawkins (Comment #30) as The Winner! April, please email your address to me: thebookmaven at gmail dot com. Congrats! Thanks to everyone who entered…READ WHAT YOU LOVE!