Archive for February, 2009

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An instant best-seller, the New York Times has called David Sanger’s THE INHERITANCE: The World Obama Confronts and the Challenges to American Power: “Dazzling and mordantly hilarious….The product of extraordinarily diligent reporting….A Woodwardian trove of inside dope….Devastatingly effective.”

I’m not sure how much better it can get when your book is deemed a “Woodwardian trove of inside dope” but if you don’t want to take their word for it, check out the author video below.

Also, John Stewart fans rejoice. You can watch his appearance on the Daily Show.

-Marie

Black Wave authors tell their story on CBS 48 Hours tomorrow night at 10PM. Don’t miss it!

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more about “Live To Tell: Black Wave – CBS News“, posted with vodpod

 

-David

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Congrats to Knopf Publishing Group author, Joseph O’Neill!

His novel, Netherland, has won the 2009 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction.

Award judge Rendall Kenan says, “["Netherland"] is about the new and continuing immigrant story, about New Americans and the making of new American traditions, which has always been New York’s function in the world. O’Neill has created a powerfully entertaining novel, but also a new emblem for our time.”

Past PEN/Faulkner winners include Philip Roth, E.L. Doctorow and the late John Updike.

-Marie

I tend to dabble in the romance genre, whenever the mood happens to strike.  Or when I hear about Mary Balogh’s latest series of novels coming this spring!  I so thoroughly enjoyed my first introduction to Mary Balogh with her Simply series, featuring the teachers of Miss Martin’s School for Girls in Bath.

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Our lovely romance enthusiasts and experts at Library Journal, Kristin Ramsdell and Bette-Lee Fox, recently had the envious opportunity to chat with the beloved Mary Balogh.

-Erica

Don’t miss our very own stars of Random House Library Marketing, Marcia Purcell and Jen Childs, participating in Library Journal’s Spring Book Buzz Webcast!

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Register for this FREE webcast today at www.LibraryJournal.com/bookbuzz
Join Library Journal for a one-hour webcast event as we host four outstanding publishers as they present their newest, hottest, must-have titles and authors for Spring!
You’ll hear HarperCollins, Kensington, W.W. Norton and Random House as they discuss their top fiction and non-fiction picks for the season. This hour-long presentation is designed to help guide your collection development and selection decisions, as well as give you the inside scoop on author appearances, tours and reading group information.

The webcast is also brought to you by Baker & Taylor, who will provide a complete list of presented titles and ordering information.

For expert information and advice, register today!
Can’t make it on March 10? No problem!
LJ webcasts are archived for 12 months after the live event. With your webcast registration, enjoy the ability to access this event on-demand as often as you’d like.

-Erica

If you aren’t already a fan of Irish fiction author Maeve Binchy, the video below, in which she discusses her newest novel, just might convert you. Her accent is too charming to resist. Check your lists for Heart and Soul. It’s available now.

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Gerald Kolpan’s first novel, Etta is due on bookshelves March 24th.

It’s a sprawling work of historical fiction portraying the imagined life of the mysterious Etta Place, legendary girlfriend of the Sundance Kid. Very little is actually known about the beautiful outlaw queen, although there are literally dozens of theories and clues, not to mention plenty of Etta’s fans that claim to know all the facts.

Gerald wanted the book to be as true to the known story as possible, but still tell the exciting tale that was unspooling in his head.

He decided he needed a methodology and worked one out for himself.

Seeing as how he’s an author, we’ll let him pick up the story.

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There were a lot of historical figures to keep track of in Etta’s story. And keeping them all straight was something of a challenge.

I had to keep track of where everyone was at a given time and what they were doing there, as well as imagining what they might have been up to at any given time.

I had to know the differences in all the characters’ ages. I had to keep track of the seasons. I needed to make sure that all technology and inventions (especially the weapons) were correct for the period. Historical fiction readers hate anachronisms.

My solution was to make (to borrow a phrase from Gilbert and Sullivan), “a little list.”

First, I researched all that I could on the principal characters. Etta Place was the easiest, because most of the information on her was speculative. She had no affirmed birth date; no birthplace and she disappeared from history in 1909. I looked at the different stories: that Etta was really a woman named Eunice Grey; that she was actually Harry Longbaugh’s (The Sundance Kid’s) cousin; that they married and had a child or children; that she was a prostitute and lover of Sundance and Butch Cassidy and Lord knows who else. And then of course, there was the schoolteacher role portrayed in the film, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. I decided to throw all of these out, instead portraying Etta as Philadelphia’s richest and most beautiful debutante. I thought it was more fun; and I figured that if the book was fun for me to write, then it would be fun to read.

Butch and Sundance themselves are well documented. Their births, parentage and lives are all a matter of record as are those of Buffalo Bill, Annie Oakley, Eleanor Roosevelt, restaurateur Fred Harvey and others in the story.

Using information gathered from books, articles and on the Internet, I created a timeline that began with each character’s birth and ended with their deaths. This I typed in black and in a roman font (Palatino). A typical passage might read…

1867, Phoenixville, Pa
Sundance Kid born Harry Longbaugh
Parents: Josiah and Annie Place Longbaugh
Brothers: Elwood and Harvey

…all of which is true. These parts of the list contain where a character was at a particular time, what crimes they committed, if they appeared in the media or were written up by the Pinkerton detectives: anything historically accurate was included.

Once all the real stuff was completed, I began filling in the holes with fantasy, this time in red and in san serif type (Helvetica). So a fictional passage would look like this:

1880, Philadelphia, Pa
Lorinda Reese Jameson is born to G. David Jameson and Anna Pepper Reese on their estate, The Cedars, Chestnut Hill, Germantown Ave. and Etta Place, Philadelphia, Pa. Jameson is a banker, hunter, horseman and explorer. He is also a gambler and womanizer. Anna dies giving birth to Lorinda.

The above is the “list” item pertaining to Etta’s birthplace, “real” name and family. Absolutely all of it is made up: from the estate’s address to the circumstances of Lorinda’s birth. David Jameson is a fictional character, as is Anna. No one really knows for sure who Etta’s father and mother were.

The original outline goes on for thirteen pages, constantly alternating between the black (facts) and the red (fantasy). It actually ends with the death of Butch and Sundance although the book carries on for a considerable time after that.

This “red and black” list served me well. It functioned as my guiding outline and allowed me to use the facts as a way to create fiction while keeping all the characters, both real and invented, within my control. That is, until I actually began writing the book and they started living lives of their own.

After that, all I could do was follow them.

Gerald Kolpan is the author of Etta. For more information about the book (including an excerpt), visit www.geraldkolpan.com.

Fans of 30 Rock rejoice. Coming in October 2009 from Spiegel & Grau, the publisher who brought you Too Fat to Fish, is Tracy Morgan’s memoir, I Am the New Black.  Equally heartbreaking and hilarious, the SNL alum tells his astonishing life story here for the first time.   This superstar is a talk show favorite and will get plenty of national media, so be sure to prepare for plenty of demand. We know October is a long way away, so below is a video of Tracy talking about the book to whet your appetite!

-Jen

I was thrilled to watch Kate Winslet win the Oscar for her performace in THE READER.  And when I recently read an article in which she describes her well worn copy of Bernard Schlink’s haunting novel, I instantly knew I would read those same passages and for a moment be connected to the brilliance that is Kate Winslet.

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-Erica

 

Lost cities have fascinated mankind for centuries. Percy Fawcett, possibly the last of these explorers, went looking for one (called “Z”) in the endless Amazonian rainforest almost a century ago. And he never came out.

Now, New Yorker staff writer David Grann has gone after him and uncovered his story (a story worthy, it seems, of a new Brad Pitt film). There’s murder and poison darts and lots of intractable flora. An Indiana Jones-type tale, but perhaps less successful.

Mr. Grann is now telling his unbelievable story on the NPR circuit, his On Point interview now available to listen to here, and his Talk of the Nation interview airing today.

-David