Archive for January, 2007

Fantasy Author Inadvertantly Burns Down His Office

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
Bestselling fantasy author David Eddings has inadvertantly burned down his office. Eddings lives in Carson City, Nevada and the newspaper there reported that he threw a lit piece of paper onto some fluid while working on his Excalibur sports cars. The result was disastrous.
Fantasy writer David Eddings, 75, said he was using water to flush out the gas tank of his broken-down Excalibur sports car, when some fluid leaked. In a lapse of judgment he readily admitted, Eddings lit a piece of paper and threw into the puddle to test if it was still flammable. The answer came in an orange torrent.

The fire raged through the garage and a quarter of the way into the office that occupies the lot next door to his home. His 95-year-old mother-in-law inside the home, came outside to find the juniper trees lining the driveway had gone up in flames, too. Eddings said his intention to was to prevent a fire - he was afraid to leave a tank full of gasoline in a car that had gone kaput - but instead he did the opposite. "One word comes to mind," the renowned wordsmith said as he stood in a pajama shirt and slippers. "Dumb."

The author of 27 novels, Eddings said the original manuscripts of most of his work were in the basement of the office building. But his biggest worry was about his fax machine, which is the connection between his home and his wife, Leigh's, doctor. Leigh, co-author of most of his writings, is unable to speak as a result of a series of strokes.
At least no one was hurt. The Excalibur is a total loss, however.

Sidney Sheldon Dead at 89

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
Bestselling author Sidney Sheldon is dead at the age of 89.
Sidney Sheldon had a prolific and award-winning career writing for theater, movies and television, but he often proclaimed his greatest love for another creative outlet. "Writing novels is the most fun I've ever had," Sheldon once said. The best-selling author died Tuesday at 89 at Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage of complications from pneumonia. His wife, Alexandra, was by his side. "I try to write my books so the reader can't put them down," Sheldon explained in a 1982 interview. "I try to construct them so when the reader gets to the end of a chapter, he or she has to read just one more chapter. It's the technique of the old Saturday afternoon serial: Leave the guy hanging on the edge of the cliff at the end of the chapter." Sheldon mostly wrote about stalwart women who triumph in a hostile world of ruthless men. His notable novels included "Rage of Angels," "The Other Side of Midnight," and "If Tomorrow Comes." "I like to write about women who are talented and capable, but most important, retain their femininity," he said. "Women have tremendous power - their femininity, because men can't do without it." Several of his novels became television miniseries, often with the author as producer.

*****

Though he won a Tony, an Oscar and an Emmy (for "I Dream of Jeannie") during his career, Sheldon said he derived the most satisfaction from writing his novels. "I love writing books," he said. "When you do a novel you're on your own. It's a freedom that doesn't exist in any other medium."
Sidney Sheldon was amazing: he created hit shows such as The Patty Duke Show, I Dream of Jeannie, and Hart to Hart, as well as writing bestselling novels. Things were certainly different in television then: he wrote almost every episode of The Patty Duke Show for seven years. That has to be some kind of record. Nowadays, a team of writers work on a hit tv show and it's not uncommon for new writers to be brought in over the course of several seasons. But Sidney Sheldon had an amazing work ethic and he loved to write his incredibly popular potboilers. This is one man who really knew what the public wanted. Oh, and don't try to pretend you didn't read The Other Side of Midnight: because we know you did.

The L.A. Times has a full obituary here.

Hotel California: The True Life Adventures of Crosby, Stills, Nash, Young, Mitchell, Taylor, Browne, Ronstadt, Geffen, the Eagles and Their Many Friends

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
by Hoskyns, BarneyBook Cover
Hotel California by Barney Hoskyns is the backstage pass for the soundtrack of many baby boomers lives. With the subtitle - The True Life Adventures of Crosby, Stills, Nash, Young, Mitchell, Taylor, Browne, Ronstadt, Geffen, the Eagles and Their Many Friends- you expect the inside story and Hoskyns does not disappoint. Hotel California gives you the stories behind the songs fixed in the audio of your memories. Hoskyns has skillfully researched the history of the California sound, conducted an amazing amount of very candid interviews from the artists on the scene, and pieced together a fascinating account of the sex, drugs and rock and roll. Hotel California represents the power of a time in history when music shaped a generation. Hoskyns doesn’t miss a beat.
- reviewed by Susan, Independence Regional, PLCMC

24 Girls in 7 Days

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
by Bradley, AlexBook Cover
What do you do if you are a senior in High School, without a prom date? Well, if you are Jack Grammar your so-called friends secretly put an ad for your date on the High School classified web site. You see, Jack is kind of a dating geek; he just can’t get it right. Now Jack becomes the dating king, juggling one date after another trying to decide which girl to pick. Did his friends play fair in the advertisement, did he pick the right girl, and did he ever get to the prom? Read this fast-paced novel and find out the surprise ending.
- reviewed by Sherry, Sugar Creek, PLCMC

While Europe Slept: How Radical Islam is Destroying the West from Within

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
by Bawer, BruceBook Cover
Controversial author Bruce Bawer now wrestles with an equally contentious subject of Muslim extremists in Europe. Intrigued by the promise of tolerance and acceptance, Bawer moved to Amsterdam in 1998 with his partner. They settled in a predominantly Muslim neighborhood where Bawer had a firsthand look at what he describes as a “large, rapidly expanding Muslim enclave where women are abused or killed, homosexuals persecuted, ‘infidels’ vilified, Jews demonized, and freedom of speech and religion repudiated.” This is a hard look at part of European society that usually is kept quiet. Bawer states that those who spoke up for liberal values were labeled fascist bigots and their ideas offensive. While this book may offend, it also gives a different look at a difficult subject.
- reviewed by Angela, ImaginOn, PLCMC

Revealed

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
by Alexander, TameraBook Cover
Annabelle is a former prostitute, recent widow, and soon -to -be mother. She needs to find a way to Idaho to claim her deceased husband’s land. Christian friends decide to help her find a guide for the journey. But her new hopes are tainted when her husband’s resentful brother becomes a candidate for the position. After hiring him, despite her reservations and his hostility, they set out on a long, hard journey. Matthew believed Annabelle was not worthy of his brother’s love. But he is by no means guilt-free and there is something that he has done that is catching up with him. The story of how these two very different people become friends and the romance that develops between them makes this a fulfilling, uplifting novel.
- reviewed by Jeanenne, Steele Creek Branch, PLCMC

Lark

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
by Aiken, GinnyBook Cover
Lark, short for Larkspur, is an investigative reporter hot on the trail of the true identity of a famous author. Rich Desmond just happens to be that author, but has kept it a secret from the public and the members of his small Southern town. Ironically, Lark had a major crush on Rich when they were young much to Rich’s dismay! Despite the humiliating situations and numerous arguments they find themselves in, whenever they are together, they begin to be secretly drawn to each other. And this fits into the matchmaking plans of the busybody ladies of the Garden Club. This is a funny, contemporary romance that mixes Christian faith-based issues with lively characters.
- reviewed by Jeanenne, Steele Creek Branch, PLCMC

Game Writing

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
Aeonite writes "Billed as the 'first complete guide to writing for games', Game Writing: Narrative Skills for Videogames provides an excellent overview of the ins-and-outs of writing for the videogame industry. As might be expected from a publication of the IGDA's Game Writers' Special Interest Group, the book is dense with information, addressing everything from high-level narrative theory to the specifics of dialogue engine design and game localization." Read the rest of Aeonite's review.

Inside the Court: An Interview with Jan Crawford Greenburg

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
Somehow, Jan Crawford Greenburg managed to get inside the most secretive and mysterious branch of government to tell a surprisingly personal story about political power. No, I don't mean Dick Cheney's office. I mean the Supreme Court, whose justices deliberate in private, make relatively few public statements outside the court, and speak and write in an often opaque technical language. Greenburg, the legal correspondent for ABC News, gained the trust of justices and clerks--and drew on the remarkable notes of Justice Harry Blackmun--to write one of the most eye-opening and entertaining (at least for a Court dork like me) books I've read in a while, Supreme Conflict. She shows these nine colleagues-for-life making alliances, influencing each other, mocking each other, and often declining to follow the ideological dreams of the presidents who put them on the Court. I asked her a few questions about her book:

Amazon.com: How hard was it to get the access to justices and clerks that you had for this book? Does the culture of the Court promote that kind of openness about their deliberations?

Greenburg: Hard! And let me tell you it took some time--they weren't flinging open the doors of their chambers for the first few years I was covering the Court. It takes awhile to build relationships and trust, and I was fortunate enough to do that during the dozen years I've been covering the Supreme Court. As for openness, I think the culture of the Court instead promotes anonymity and privacy. The justices aren't like the people across the street in Congress, or down Pennsylvania Avenue in the White House. They don't hold press conferences or solicit media coverage of their views. They speak through their opinions. I was fortunate that they also chose to speak with me for this important book about the direction of the Supreme Court and its role in our lives.

Amazon.com: Harry Blackmun's notes must be a treasure chest for Court historians. Could you describe what you found there?

Greenburg: A treasure chest is an understatement. Harry Blackmun took extraordinarily detailed notes--almost breathtaking in their scope and level of detail. (He would even write down what lawyers were wearing when they'd appear in Court to argue a case.) He recorded the justices' comments during their private conferences--when they discuss cases--and he took down their votes. And he kept all the key memos and letters that the justices would send back and forth when they were discussing a case. It was a tremendous window into the Court's inner sanctum, during some of the most pivotal years for the institution.

Amazon.com: One of the biggest revelations of your book is your characterization of Clarence Thomas as far more influential, even in his first year on the Court, than he's usually given credit for. Could you describe what his role on the Court has been?

Greenburg: Clarence Thomas has been the most maligned justice in modern history--and also the most misunderstood and mischaracterized. I found conclusive evidence that far from being Antonin Scalia's intellectual understudy, Thomas has had a substantial role in shaping the direction of the Court--from his very first week on the bench. The early storyline on Thomas was that he was just following Scalia's direction, or as one columnist at the time wrote "Thomas Walks in Scalia's Shoes." That is patently false, as the documents and notes in the Blackmun papers unquestionably show. If any justice was changing his vote to join the other that first year, it was Scalia joining Thomas, not the other way around. But his clear and forceful views affected the Court in unexpected ways. Although he shored up conservative positions, his opinions also caused moderate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor to back away and join the justices on the Left.
 
Amazon.com: Not every Supreme Court confirmation is a battle, even when the Senate and the President are from different parties.What separates the candidates who sail through from the ones who get put through the wringer?

Greenburg: The recent appointment of Samuel Alito shows a justice with a clearly conservative record can get confirmed--and even pick up some votes from Democrats. Maybe the secret is developing a reputation as a fair and nonpartisan judge on a federal appeals court. At his hearings, liberal and conservative judges who had worked with him on the appeals court testified in his behalf, as did his law clerks--some of whom were self-identified liberals. Alito was the conservative counterpart to Clinton nominee Ruth Bader Ginsburg. She had been an outspoken advocate for liberal causes (including the ACLU), but she'd developed a reputation as a fair and thoughtful judge on the federal appeals court, garnering respect from both sides.

Amazon.com: How much do Americans know about how their federal courts work? What should they know?

Greenburg: Most Americans, understandably, think about trials and drama when the issue of the courts is raised. But the appeals courts--and the Supreme Court--remain mysterious, even though those courts have an enormous impact on American life. The judiciary is one of the three branches of government, but its decisions take on outsized importance at times. It can provide a vital check against abuse of individual rights by government--but it also can usurp the role of the people when it reaches out and takes on issues that more appropriately belong in the purview of the other branches.

Amazon.com: Even though you show how our expectations for where new members will take the Court are so often wrong, I'll ask you anyway: What do you expect in the next few years from the Roberts Court?

Greenburg: To be more conservative than the one led by Chief Justice William Rehnquist. John Roberts himself is a solid judicial conservative who believes the Court has too often taken on issues that belong in the realm of elected legislatures. He is advocating a more restrained approach, with greater consensus among the justices. In addition, Justice Alito replaced key swing-voter Sandra Day O'Connor, the Court's first female justice. O'Connor's vote often carried the day on the closely divided Court--and she typically sided with liberals on social issues like abortion, affirmative action, and religion. Alito is more conservative, and I expect to see the Court turn to the right on those and other issues.

--Tom, Amazon Bookstore

Frost on the Edge

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
Robert Frost has the best supporters an American poet can have: non-American poets with jobs in American universities.

Big Brother Gets A Laptop

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007
The Unbinding by Walter Kirn, a review from Esquire by Snowden Wright.

Harry Potter and the Troubled Stablehand

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
Those of you Potter fans planning a U.K. vacation this summer to celebrate the release of the final book in the series may want to move your travel plans up a few months. As nearly every website in the universe has been mentioning, Daniel Radcliffe is taking advantage of the downtime between filming installments five and six of the Harry movie series by starring onstage in a production of Peter Shaffer's avant-standby, Equus, which features, along with a horse, full male nudity.
Radcliffe's spokesman Vanessa Davies said: 'Daniel does not want to step away from Harry Potter but he does want to show he is an rounded actor capable of very different and diverse roles.
Not missing a trick, the Gielgud Theatre has posted a set of early production photos, the most clothed of which I have posted here.

In one more I'm-not-just-Harry-Potter career move, Radcliffe also just guest-starred on HBO's Extras as a child actor on the make. --Tom, Amazon Bookstore

Media Job Cuts Jumped 88% in 2006

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
A UPI news story is citing a survey from Challenger Gray & Christmas that found media job cuts climbed 88% in 2006. 17,809 media jobs were lost last year compared to 9,453 job cuts in 2005. If with the big increase 2006 was still well short of the total in 2001 when there were 43,420 media job cuts.
The media industry slashed 17,809 jobs last year, a nearly two-fold increase from the 9,453 cuts in 2005, outplacement consultancy Challenger Gray & Christmas said.

The figure was the industry's largest annual job-cut total since 43,420 media job cuts accompanied the collapse of the technology bubble in 2001, the survey said.

"A sea change in the way people get and read news, not to mention the way they search for jobs, used cars and consumer products, was the primary contributor," the company said.

Media companies, including the New York Times Co. and Time Inc., have already laid off 2,000 employees in 2007, Challenger noted, saying the cuts suggested the downsizing trend would continue.
Unfortunately, this year has picked up where last year left off. Recently there have been jobs cuts at Time Inc. and at Lagardère, a large French magazine publisher.

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Windows Vista Books Hit Bookshelves

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
Windows Vista BooksWindows Vista, the new operating system from Windows, was released today and for the publishing industry that means it is time to sell lots of new computer books about how to best use Windows Vista. A book by Microsoft Windows experts Brian Livingston and Paul Thurrott called Windows Vista Secrets (Wiley) has become the bestselling Windows Vista book on Amazon.com.

"With all of the talk around Windows' latest release, it's clear that people want to know what they're getting into," said the book's co-author, Brian Livingston. "Vista is definitely a big improvement over previous software, but it helps to know how to make it work best for you."

Windows Vista Secrets includes hidden Vista commands that can enhance and simplify how users experience Vista. For those not buying a new PC the book also instructs consumers on how to install Vista while preserving Windows XP on their computers before completely converting to the new operating system.

Brian Livingston is the editorial director of WindowsSecrets.com and Paul Thurrott is editor of Paul Thurrott's SuperSite for Windows so the two authors keep readers informed about Windows products on a daily basis.

According to a statement issued earlier today Windows Vista Secrets was the top selling Windows Vista book as of 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time with a Amazon sales rank of 300. It was followed by Windows Vista Inside Out (Microsoft Press) ranked 756th and Windows Vista: The Missing Manual (O'Reilly), which was ranked 991st. There are dozens of others Windows Vista help books out as well including Microsoft Windows Vista Step by Step, Alan Simpson's Windows Vista Bible and Windows Vista For Dummies. Many more Vista titles will be released by publishers in the coming months.

A Jew at Harvard

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
Louis Begley’s latest protagonist is a Holocaust survivor in the 1950s.

Paris Confidential

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
Exposing the dark side of the City of Light, Andrew Hussey tells the story of Paris from the point of view of “insurrectionists, vagabonds, immigrants, sexual outsiders, criminals.”

Short Cuts :: John Lanchester: The Rise and Rise of Spam

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

At the Movies :: Michael Wood goes to see Babel

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007

Iran and the Bomb :: Norman Dombey: Don’t Do It

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
On 7 June 1981, Israeli aircraft bombed and completely destroyed the Iraqi nuclear research reactor Osirak. The French government, which had sold the reactor to Iraq, protested. Bertrand Barre, its nuclear attaché in Washington, explained that the reactor posed no proliferation risk and that 'it was intended to be used . . . for testing or converting materials into isotopes, which have specialised uses in medicine.' The UN Security Council strongly condemned the attack as being 'in clear violation of the charter of the United Nations and the norms of international conduct'. The United States, however, objected to the imposing of any sanctions on Israel.

Belgravia Cockney :: Christopher Tayler on Being a le Carré bore

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
When John le Carré published A Perfect Spy in 1986, Philip Roth, then spending a lot of time in London, called it 'the best English novel since the war'. Not being such a fan of A Perfect Spy, I've occasionally wondered what Roth's generous blurb says about the postwar English novel. As a le Carré bore, however, I've also wondered how Roth managed to overlook Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974), the central novel in le Carré's career, in which George Smiley - an outwardly diffident ex-spook with a strenuously unfaithful wife and an interest in 17th-century German literature - comes out of retirement to identify the turncoat in a secret service that's explicitly presented as a metaphorical 'vision of the British establishment at play'.

Russia’s Managed Democracy :: Perry Anderson: Why Putin?

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
Under lowering skies, a thin line of mourners stretched silently outside the funeral hall. Barring the entrance, hulking riot police kept them waiting until assorted dignitaries - Nato envoys, an impotent ombudsman, Anatoly Chubais - had paid their respects. Eventually they were let in to view the corpse of the murdered woman, her forehead wrapped in the white ribbon of the Orthodox rite, her body, slight enough anyway, diminished by the flower-encrusted bier. Around the edges of the mortuary chamber, garlands from the media that attacked her while she was alive stood thick alongside wreaths from her children and friends, the satisfied leaf to leaf with the bereaved. Filing past them and out into the cemetery beyond, virtually no one spoke. Some were in tears. People dispersed in the drizzle as quietly as they came.

Old Media Monday: This week’s newsmaking books

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
The latest news, reviews, and appearances:

The New York Times:
  • Sunday's Book Review cover: Thomas Hardy, the "excellent new biography" by Claire Tomalin: "Tomalin comes through, recounting Hardy's life with the amiable authority of a 19th-century novelist, unafraid of gentle, but firm, pronouncements."
  • Wish I Could Be There: Notes From a Phobic Life by Allen Shawn: "Mr. Shawn has written a brave, eccentric and utterly compelling book that's as revelatory and candid as anything ever written by Joan Didion, and as humane and scientifically fascinating as any one of Oliver Sacks's case studies."
  • The Burning by Bentley Little: "In a sense, his whole career--16 previous novels and a short-story collection--has been an elaborate self-conducted anger management program, from which he has yet to graduate. 'The Burning' is just the latest in a series of Little novels in which boiling-mad victims of one social injustice or another set out to redress the wrongs done to them, and go way too far." (GalleyCat likes this quote too.)
  • The Birthday Party: A Memoir of Survival by Stanley N. Alpert: "Precisely how this nebbishy Brooklyn boy, partial to peach-flavored Snapple iced tea and chocolate chip cookies, induced reverse Stockholm syndrome and maneuvered his way to freedom makes 'The Birthday Party' one of the most exhilarating, improbable New York stories ever told."
The Daily Show:
Oprah®:
Fresh Air:
All Things Considered:
The New Yorker:
--Tom, Amazon Bookstore

Classic Review

Tuesday, January 30th, 2007
A Tramp Abroad (Modern Library Classics) by Mark Twain, a review from The Atlantic Monthly by William Dean Howells .

Windflower

Monday, January 29th, 2007
by Bantock, Nick and Edoardo PontiBook Cover
Ana must dance to save her people. The Capolan have always been a nomadic tribe. They move from place to place led by one who feels the magnetic tides deep inside the Earth, is in touch with the winds and dances the people to their new home. Now they have become stuck. Many feel no need to move on, but to stay would betray their heritage and, Ana believes, mark the death of their collective soul. Yet she is not ready to take on the burden of leading them to a new home. First she must journey to a better understanding of herself and become more at one with the world above and below her. Bantock’s magic explores the power of music and of one woman’s convictions.
- reviewed by Mark, Main Library, PLCMC

Good Artists Copy, Great Artists Steal

Monday, January 29th, 2007
The new (February) issue of Harper's has a wonderful couple of pieces on originality and plagiarism: one a paired response to a controversy over artistic ownership from the painter Joy Garnett, who used a photograph of a man about to throw a Molotov cocktail as the basis for a painting, and Susan Meiselas, the photojournalist who shot the original photo of a Sandinista rebel and who objects to its use out of historical context. (You can see Garnett's painting here (scroll down); the original photograph I believe was in Meiselas's book Nicaragua, the first edition of which is currently going for $1498.87 on our site, so originals do still retain some value!)

The other is novelist Jonathan Lethem's "The Ecstasy of Influence," a rather thrilling defense of the artist's right (and duty) to borrow, steal, allude, echo, repeat, rework, and rob. Art, he argues, is part of the gift economy as well as the market economy, and he closes with this call:
Don't pirate my editions; do plunder my visions. The name of the game is Give All. You, reader, are welcome to my stories. They were never mine in the first place, but I give them to you. If you have the inclination to pick them up, take them with my blessing.
I also liked another passage a little earlier in the piece:
The kernel, the soul--let us go further and say the substance, the bulk, the actual and valuable material of all human utterance--is plagiarism. For substantially all ideas are secondhand, consciously and unconsciously drawn from a million outside sources, and daily used by the garnerer with a pride and satisfaction born of the superstition that he originated them; whereas there is not a rag of originality about them anywhere except the little discoloration they get from his mental and moral caliber and temperament, and which is revealed in characteristics of phrasing.
Well put, Jonathan, I thought. And then I read on to the "Key" at the end of the article, where he reveals [SPOILER ALERT!] the tissue of ideas and direct quotations he borrowed, stole, echoed, etc., to create his article. In this case, the putting was well done first by Mark Twain (in a letter to Helen Keller defending her from her own plagiarism drama). Credit to Lethem, though, for putting this passage so appropriately into his own work.

By the way, you'll notice no links above to the Harper's pieces. Funny enough, the two pieces on appropriation don't live (yet, at least) on the limited Harper's website, preventing them from being easily appropriated by the likes of me.


Meanwhile, at the same time I happened to be reading Lethem's upcoming novel, You Don't Love Me Yet, due out in March (that must be a young Lethem on the cover, looking very Jason Schwartzman). It's a slight thing after the intense, chewy drama of The Fortress of Solitude, and I think intentionally so: a "romantic farce" about a fledgling LA rock band. It's about originality and ownership too (no one's sure who's responsible for creating the band's songs). I read it happily in a single night. I'm not sure how long it will stay with me, and it can't bear much comparison to Lethem's major books, but I thought it was notable at least for bravely (and, to me, successfully) making its most dramatic moments out of two of the hardest things to write well (and originally) about: sex and rock & roll. --Tom, Amazon Bookstore