Posts Tagged ‘Books’

Recommended Reading: “The Memory Chalet” by Tony Judt

Sunday, November 7th, 2010

Usually, book-review editors (and I loosely associate myself with that group, since I’m slouching towards making The WETA Book Studio a book-review site) try very hard not to review books from the same publisher or imprint at one time or in a row. No one wants to play favorites — not simply because it would interfere with effort towards objectivity that journalists aim for, but because there are so many interesting books out there. Why not spread the love around a bit?

Thus I was a bit loath to follow my post about Maira Kalman’s “And the Pursuit of Happiness” with one on “The Memory Chalet” by Tony Judt, since both are from The Penguin Press. However, as will become clear in a moment, I have personal reasons for doing so that have nothing whatsoever to do with publisher favoritism.

I wince, now, for is there any phrase more abjured in book reviewing than “personal reasons?” None of us really wants to read a long paragraph about how the critic’s experience at last week’s book party puts her in mind of the author’s amusing anecdote about X. I hope you’ll forgive me in this instance, and I’ll try to get my “personal reasons” out of the way quickly so that I can tell you more about Judt’s remarkable collection of what he calls feuilletons.

The historian and author Tony Judt died in August 2010. He had what the English call “motor neuron disease” and what we call “Lou Gehrig’s Disease:” Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or ALS. (Many people know about ALS because the acclaimed British scientist Stephen Hawking has suffered from it for decades.) As Judt notes in his opening piece, this is a disease unusually cruel in its progress, because it leaves the mind entirely clear and functioning but bit by bit deprives the victim of any and all means of communication. While the course of ALS varies, in the end the person afflicted will most likely have lost the use of legs, arms, hands and fingers, mouth and speech, and often facial muscles as well. The disease is a cruel inversion of “mens sana in corpore sano,” with a “mens sana” imprisoned in a very, very ill and dysfunctional “corpore.”

I know more than a little about ALS because four years ago my own father died of a disease called Multiple System Atrophy, which is most easily described as a combination of ALS and Parkinson’s Disease. I don’t plan to dwell here on the various indignities my father endured. The “personal reasons” I’d like to share are about how, like Judt, my father began gathering conversations, memories, and information eagerly during the all-too-brief and fast months of his decline. He longed for visitors to talk with because we all knew, from research (we are nothing if not avid information gatherers in my family), that he might not be able to talk forever. My mother bought him a laptop with large keys and screen so that as long as his arms and fingers were able to, he could email and surf the web.

He was creating a sort of internal scrapbook, mining as deep as possible for things to pore over in his mind.

My father was a mechanical engineer who loved to learn but held a certain skepticism towards the humanities, believing that they could not illuminate the truths of the universe like his beloved sciences. I wish he had known Tony Judt, whose own education gifted him with the concept of the “memory palace,” a sort of brain-as-database method used by Renaissance scholars to retain huge blocks of information, from complicated grammatical systems to botanical species to mathematical theorems. When Judt was diagnosed two years ago at age sixty with ALS, his academician’s mind quickly turned to how he might cope the loss of communication to come:

“I realized, some months into the disease, that I was writing whole stories in my head in the course of the night. Doubtless I was seeking oblivion, replacing galumphing sheep with narrative complexity to comparable effect. But in the course of these little exercises, I realized that I was reconstructing — LEGO-like — interwoven segments of my own past which I had never previously thought of as related.”

Judt also realizes he has no need of a “memory palace,” but as his thoughts meander often to a particular Swiss vacation in which he was contented, he thinks: “…why not a memory chalet?” Over the course of several months, he dictated these reflections on his childhood, education, and career after turning them over at night, often sleepless in his unmoving physical state, yet free to roam through the past and make new connections between its sometimes patchy sections. 

My little attempt at writing a review of “The Memory Chalet” is already running on longer than web-savvy readers might like, and I’ll admit that I am lazy about adding pages to blog entries, but please bear with me for just a few paragraphs more so that I can share why this book is more than just a Paul Harvey-esque “The Rest of the Story” sort of thing. One of my favorite of Judt’s pieces in the book is titled “Mimetic Desire,” and it perfectly captures the way I have always felt about trains:

“As a child, I always felt uneasy and a little constrained about people, my family in particular. Solitude was bliss, but not easily obtained. Being always felt stressful — wherever I was there was something to do, someone to please, a duty to be completed, a role inadequately fulfilled, something amiss. Becoming, on the hand, was relief. I was never so happy as when I was going somewhere on my own, and the longer it took to get there, the better. Walking was pleasurable, cycling enjoyable, bus journeys fun. But the train was very heaven.”

I’d marked “Mimetic Desire” as a piece to read again — and was both pleased and moved by its connections to the final “Envoi” titled “Magic Mountains.” I won’t spoil anything more, because Judt has managed, in the midst of facing his own mortality, to help us all see something new about our humanity. That his capacious and sympathetic intellect is no longer with us is a real loss, but in constructing his “memory chalet” Tony Judt demonstrates that there is more to be discovered even when there is no more to be experienced.

Recommended Reading: “And the Pursuit of Happiness” by Maira Kalman

Sunday, November 7th, 2010

Recently someone described “And the Pursuit of Happiness” by Maira Kalman (The Penguin Press) as a graphic novel. 

That brought me up short. I’d just finished Kalman’s book and had absolutely loved it, yet never once thought of it as a graphic novel (or “GN,” as many book lovers refer to these illustrated narratives). 

Why not? The book is lavishly illustrated and has a clear arc. However, Kalman is not a comic-book artist, and her pages do not reflect the sort of cell-driven storytelling that so many GNs rely on, hearkening back to their comic-book roots. “And the Pursuit of Happiness” feels more like a romp in the author’s psyche, more like a Victorian collage scrapbook, than anything “graphic.” 

Before I further discuss this book’s delightful and unpredictable contents, however, I’d like to discuss its heft. That’s right, I said “heft.” In an age of e-books and digital publishing and terrible groundwood-laden pages (shoutout to my homegirl @PermanentPaper!) and flimsy bindings, it is a rare and unexpected pleasure to receive and handle a modern tome that feels heavy, has deliciously thick pages that are easily turned, and smells (even more deliciously) of ink and rag paper and libraries…

Ah, libraries. They’re represented in “And the Pursuit of Happiness,” (p. 35), as are: TV dinners. The Soldier’s Creed. A Jell-O light bulb. Thomas Jefferson’s coat lined with socks, “for warmth.” Sludge containers in Manhattan. A portrait of the Capitol Building’s tram operator, sporting “a spiffy yellow hat.” There is so much of the minutiae of the United States contained within these pages — in the hands of a lesser author and artist, it might remain that way, simply a collection of witty apercus.

But Kalman uses pen and paintbrush (not to mention camera) to tie all of her observations together into a heartfelt paean to what makes our country great. She doesn’t ignore sludge, or war, or homely meals, or small corners. She includes a double-truck spread of a primitive-style  painting of a bobby pin along with the same of a perfect room designed by Thomas Jefferson, yet gives each proper importance (not the same, but proper). 

How did she decide when to include a photo and when to include a sketch, when to write 100 words and when to write just five? This is Kalman’s particular genius. Like any good novelist, she knows when to “go wide” and when to hone in on a tiny detail. She also knows that providing structure to a form as free-form as her own is essentail, so she divides the book by twelve months of the year as well as by themes for each month, which vary from Washingtoniana (our first president on a lollipop!) to thoughtful eating (the organic pizzas look a heck of a lot better than the McGriddles) to urban planning (hence the sludge containers).

Of course, Kalman is not, in this instance, truly a novelist because her book is nonfiction. This is why I wish we had a different name for GNs that are based on reality. How about “graphic narratives?” Yes! Maira Kalman’s “And the Pursuit of Happiness” is a graphic narrative, and one that you should read quickly, before relatives marauding your house during the upcoming holiday season hog it all to themselves. Better yet, buy a copy or three to give away. I cannot think of a home of any size that would not be enriched by this idiosyncratic take on how individuals from Thomas Edison to contemporary schoolchildren make our nation a place where this title is possible.

October 29, 2010 Friday Reads Winners: “You Had Me At Woof,” Chocolate, AND Free Books!

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

Here is the link to the archives of last week’s #FridayReads on Twitter. (BTW, we’ve got some cool treats in the works, including some regular, bigger giveaways; a new logo; a Facebook page for the Twitter-averse; and even more!)

You MIGHT notice that we hit 3,000 participants this week. Thus we have extra giveaway treats. More on those in a moment!

The winner of @JulieKlam’s INSCRIBED copy of “You Had Me at Woof” is…

@LBinBH20!

There are SIX WINNERS of “You Had Me at Woof,” and Julie Klam has graciously offered to sign these copies:

@TerraceBooks

@sarahfparsons

@eclair111

@lenahuxley

@Gripemaster

@mamawordnerd

Email me: thebookmaven at gmail dot com — Send your snailmail address. Riverhead Books will get your copies out asap!

Now, the winner of #FridayReads M&Ms, courtesy of @ErinFaye…

Remember, this is one I got to pick, rather than using Random.org…

Yes, it’s @adamslisa!

Lisa Bonchek Adams has been a tireless supporter of #FridayReads for MONTHS. 

Now, there is still a fabulous prize to give away, and it is being given away w/Random.org — that’s the $100 worth of free books from @NovelBooks and his lovely Maryland shop Novel Places. 

The winner is….

@rebeccakross!

#FridayReads Winners from October 13, 2010

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Apologies for the late posting. These six lucky tweeps each win a four-book bundle from @JasonAshlock and his Movable Type Literary Agency:

@mad_sunshine

@DebWorldofBooks

@waltpascoe

@smodak

@andy_keyser

@SplatsReads

Please send me your email addresses AND snailmail addresses: thebookmaven at gmail dot com. I’ll get those to Jason and he’ll have your books en route lickety split!

I also promised a $25 bookstore gift card and a $50 bookstore gift card.

The winner of the $25 bookstore gift card is:

@evenstar13

The winner of the $50 bookstore gift card is:

@inkwellHQ

Again, email me with your deets!

Congrats to all of the winners. Onward, this week, to 3,000 participants…and an even bigger gift card!

Rare Books and Rare Conversation at the Library of Congress, Part I

Monday, October 18th, 2010

One of my earliest followers on Twitter — and of my earliest follow backs on Twitter — was one @LuxMentis, also known as Ian J. Kahn, proprietor of Lux Mentis Antiquarian Books and president of the Maine Antiquarian Booksellers Association

From his tweets, I knew Ian was passionate about books and very smart — so when he sent me a message asking if I would be his guest as a dinner for the National Collegiate Book Collecting Championships at the Library of Congress, I didn’t want to miss the chance to see what he was like in real life and to be introduced to his colleagues at the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America

I’ll tell you more about those colleagues and about Ian in a minute. First I have to tell you about What I Saw at the Library of Congress. Originally, all of us attending had been promised a trip inside the Library’s Rare Book Vault, but as Rare Books Librarian Mark Dimunation was battling back pain, we were instead treated to a sit-down showing of treasures from that vault. We gathered at one end of the Lessing J. Rosenwald Room, which houses the “working library” of this rare-book collecting giant (more on some of Rosenwald’s treasures shortly). 

Dimunation started by reminding us that the Library of Congress is built from one man’s book collection, and that man is Thomas Jefferson. The first treasure he showed us was a small volume bound in British tan leather — Mr. Jefferson’s personal copy of The Federalist Papers, including a front sheet covered in Mr. Jefferson’s own handwriting, detailing who was “Publius” on which essay (unfortunately, the various authors do not agree on all of the essays, leaving historians still battling it out on a few). We also gazed on another of Jefferson’s books and were let in on the secret of how to know if a book actually belonged to him. I can’t tell you that, now, because I will be busy checking out 18th-century books at every jumble sale, hoping that I find something similarly inscribed…

While Dimunation wanted to impart professional expertise  and curiosity to the college students who won the ABAA prizes, I was merely along for the storytelling ride, so I can’t tell you all of the details about why particular collectors are so important to the rare-book world. I can tell you that the ext item he showed us was an impeccably preserved incunable, each page a large, gorgeous combination of text and illustration. When you actually remember that a book like this is the result of scores of intricately carved woodblocks, the mind boggles. Were the people who produced these beautiful objects the video gamers of yesteryear?

Those geeks of antiquity had to have had a hand in the folio-sized book Dimunation showed us next, a printed text full of colored charts and tables and working rotary paper navigation tools — all based on Euclidean geometry and all intended to help soldiers work out their armaments plans. Unfortunately, a year or so after this magnificent book was produced, Copernicus shared his astronomical findings with the world. Every calculation, measurement, and tool in the manuscript was suddenly false.

Next: A story to give you goosebumps — and a decidedly non-book Rare Book Room object

October 8, 2010 #FridayReads Giveaway Winners

Monday, October 11th, 2010

Last week we had 2,063 #FridayReads participants on Twitter.

I promised a $25 prize at 750, a $50 prize at 1500, and so on…of course, we never made it to 2250, so there’s no $75 prize..

EXCEPT. There is! Long story, but someone chose not to claim a $75 prize from a previous giveaway, so I’m going to give it away today to say THANK YOU to all of you. Remember, I always choose giveaway recipients randomly, using Random.org

Winner of the $25 worth of free books: @craigtimes

Winner of the $50 worth of free books: @kmgovier

Winner of the $75 worth of free books: @megveglibrarian

Email me: thebookmaven at gmail dot com — and we’ll make arrangements! Congrats to all of the winners and many many thanks to all of you who make each Friday to much fun for me and other readers on Twitter via #FridayReads.

October 1, 2010 #FridayReads Giveaways from @NovelBooks

Monday, October 4th, 2010

A little over a year ago I began asking all of my Twitter followers (at that time I had a few hundred) what they were reading on Friday. With great originality, I called this Twitter meme “#fridayreads.” (For those of you who haven’t experienced the joys of Twitter, anything with a hashmark is known as a “hashtag;” the hashtag “#fridayreads” signifies that you can put the phrase into Search on Twitter and find all of the other tweets so tagged.)

There was a tiny bit of method to my madness (or perhaps it’s the other way around?): I wanted to emphasize reading rather than books, because we’re currently in the midst of a great upheaval in the book world. Notice I said “upheaval,” and not “transition:” I for one firmly believe that paper books and electronic books will continue to coexist for many decades, if not centuries. However, I didn’t want my meme to wind up as a way for people to continue debating bound books versus e-readers. I wanted it to be a place where people could simply share books, stories, poems, magazine articles, ANYTHING they were reading.

It’s taken a while for #FridayReads to take off. There are many reasons for this, and I won’t digress much further in a post which has as its ultimate purpose the announcement of giveaway winners. However, it is my enormous pleasure to be able to share with everyone that this week for the first time, #FridayReads topped 2,000 participants! In fact, we made it to 2,113.

We’ve been making such strides (and I do mean “we;” I could not do this without the support of each and every person on Twitter who participates) with #FridayReads that people in the publishing world are taking notice. This week, Patrick Darby of Novel Places Books in Clarksburg, Maryland put up $250 worth of free, new books in support of #FridayReads reaching 2K for the first time. What a great carrot, Patrick! THANK YOU. 

Here’s how it works, and here are the winners:

– 500-participant mark, $25 worth of free books: @book_nut

– 1,000-participant mark, $50 worth of free books: @ReidIsRead

– 1,500-participant mark, $75 worth of free books: @Hudsonette

– 2,000-participant mark, $100 worth of free books: @Perednia

To claim your prizes, please contact @NovelBooks! I cannot thank Patrick enough for this amazing giveaway, and you all deserve kudos for getting #FridayReads to this point. 

If you have any questions or would like to sponsor or donate to #FridayReads, you can reach me at thebookmaven at gmail dot com.

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.”