The Read This! pick is…Jamestown by Matthew Sharpe! Guess who nominated it? Yep, I did. I’m so happy that the rest of the LBC liked this book. It’s so different, but I really think it works. You can read here more about why I nominated it. Over the next few weeks, we’ll be discussing all of the nominees, which include Triangle by Katherine Weber and Always by Nicola Griffith. I enjoyed the other two books immensely. The discussions should be good all around.
Monthly Archives: July 2007
Among Other Things
Last night I had the good fortune to see Aiobheann Sweeney read at my store from her debut novel Among Other Things I’ve Taken Up Smoking. The room filled up with Sweeney’s many friends and family—she’s a native Cantabrigian as it turns out. I had written about this strong book some months ago and was looking forward to meeting the author. She was nervous as this was her first reading, but she did a terrific job reading the packed room the first chapter.
The question period began with many of the people in the room asking her about the title, feeling like it had nothing to do with how the book ends. The publisher came up with the title, she says, and as long as it didn’t have some thin girl on the cover smoking, she didn’t mind it. I personally like the title and didn’t see what the fuss was about. I had read Ron Hogan’s account of meeting her for lunch and had a few questions about the book, mainly about her novel being considered gay literature. It hadn’t struck me as a “gay” novel, more of a coming of age and it just so happens that Miranda likes girls. She appreciated this and says that it could be a sign that the times have changed, since none of the reviews so far had even mentioned the gay aspect of the novel. Speaking of reviews, she kindly mentioned how much she enjoyed litblogs more so than the “canned” book reviews (she even thanked me out loud).
All in all, it was a really nice reading ,full of exuberant people. I’m glad that my store got to be her first stop for a reading.
Open Letter Open for Business
Three Percent, the blog of the University of Rochester’s new publishing house Open Letter, started up a month or so ago it looks like. This project was begun by Chad Post, recently of Dalkey Archive. Their focus is works in translation and I can’t wait to see what they put out.
Vacation Reading Round Up
I chose two not so great books to bring with me to Boliva, along with one pretty good and one really great book. Trail of Crumbs by Kim Sunee had seemed so interesting—a Korean woman, abandoned by her mother at the market in Seoul, writes on never quite fitting into her life. Her adoptive American parents never quite understand her. She flees to Europe as soon as she can, where she flits from relationship to relationship, falling in love with the man who founded L’Occitane. This was supposed to be a biography about finding oneself and yet at the end I found it a flat portrait of a very unhappy woman, with some lovely descriptions of food.
I didn’t expect much from the next book either, Bar Flower by Lea Jacobson, her story of being a nightclub hostess in Tokyo. I didn’t learn more than I already knew about the hostess scene in Tokyo and the stories of Jacobson’s alcoholic mishaps grew tiresome.
I had brought Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures by Vincent Lam based on some good word of mouth buzz, and I was not disappointed by this debut story collection. The comparisons to the television show Grey’s Anatomy will be rampant, but that’s merely because all of the stories deal with medical personnel and their lives. Don’t let that dissuade you from reading this powerful collection.
The book I couldn’t put down, even while roaming around La Paz, turned out to be Stephen Carter’s mammoth novel New England White. Carter writes about the country’s most influential African-Americans and opens the novel with a murder. Lemaster Carlyle, the new president of a prestigious New England university, and his wife Julia, who serves as the dean of the divinity school, happen upon the corpse of the notorious economics profession Zellen Kant (who also happens to be Julia’s ex-lover) on a drive home one evening. This sets in motion a slew of events for the large cast of characters. This is more than a literary whodunit. This is a deft portrait of upper crust African-Americans, a sect of the US that goes largely unnoticed, and also an exploration of the complexities of human nature. Carter doesn’t let the plot get too out of control and ably fleshes out all of the characters, big and small, so well that I found myself digging this 550 page book out of my bag at every opportunity.
Want to See Some Mummified Alapaca?
Then take a look at my vacation photos: ![]()
Here are all of the pictures I took while in Bolivia. Doesn’t Bolivia look great? We had so much fun. I even read 4 books! I’ve got to catch up on some emails and work before I can mention them.
Off to O-Bolivi-on
Lame title, I know, but I’m off to Bolivia tomorrow morning to visit Mr. Bookdwarf’s brother in La Paz. I’m not sure about our itinerary. I’m more worried about the altitude sickness (less worried about random diseases because the thorough nurse at the doctor’s office gave me 3 shots plus malaria medication). I also hope I get to pet some alpaca, like the cute ones below:
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I’m bringing along plenty of good reading material: New England White by Stephen Carter, Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures by Vincent Lam, Trail of Crumbs by Kim Sunee, and possibly Denis Johnson’s new book Tree of Smoke, if I can convince Mr. Bookdwarf to carry it. Wish me luck!
Some Good Reads Finally
I complained recently about being in a reading slump. I’m glad to say that I finally dragged myself out of it. Or rather that several books got me through it. I’m hoping people will pick up this first book because of the awesomeness of the title—Foreskin’s Lament by Shalom Auslander. Perhaps they’ll read the back and the flap copy before flipping through the first few pages. Those lucky enough to get this far will find themselves in for a delectable treat. Auslander’s funny, bleak prose reminded me that there are still some fine writers out there. Go to Nextbook, do a search for Auslander, and you’ll get a great intro to his style. The New Yorker is also printing excerpts from this book. I’m hoping that he’ll come read at my store this Fall. I haven’t even mentioned what the book is about yet. It’s his memoir, of sorts. As he learns that his wife is pregnant, he reflects on his own childhood, growing up in an Orthodox community. His love/hate relationship with God begins at an early age. It sort of made me feel like my own dabblings with religion were just that, dabblings.
The second book that helped drag me back to the rich, literary landscape is Junot Diaz’s forthcoming novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Mao. I loved the stories in his impressive collection Drown and cheered whenever I saw a story of his in the New Yorker. Finally, we get a novel—a good, hefty one at that. Even though the title of the book says it’s about Oscar, a first generation Dominican-American, we also get the stories of his sister, mother, and grandfather, moving around in time and place. The narrator, a friend of the family, addresses the reader directly throughout the book, giving you the feeling that this story is being told to you over a long afternoon on a hot summer day (give me a break, I read it over several hot days). Diaz mixes in lots of Spanish phrases as well as sci-fi and literary references with no explanation. He does include a lot of footnotes, some tongue in cheek, about the reign of Trujillo over the Dominican Republic. If I can quote Matthew Sharpe, the author of one of my favorite books this year Jamestown, who said “this fierce, funny, tragic book is just what a reader would have hoped for in a novel by Junot Diaz.”
Litminds Interview
Literary site Litminds asked me a few questions recently. I’m always nervous about interviews—afraid I’ll start gushing and say something really stupid. Even though I emailed the answers and was able to edit myself, I guess I’m a little self-conscious. Odd, considering I write this blog.
