Friday, January 24, 2014

On My Radar*

A Wilderness of Error: The Trials of Jeffrey MacDonald
by Errol Morris
Penguin
Trade Paperback



In this profoundly original meditation on truth and the justice system, Errol Morris—a former private detective and director of The Thin Blue Line—delves deeply into the infamous Jeffrey MacDonald murder case. MacDonald, whose pregnant wife and two young daughters were brutally murdered in 1970, was convicted of the killings in 1979 and remains in prison today. The culmination of an investigation spanning over twenty years and a masterly reinvention of the true-crime thriller, A Wilderness of Error is a shocking book because it shows that everything we have been told about the case is deeply unreliable and that crucial elements of the case against MacDonald are simply not true.

*On My Radar signifies a book that is not in my to-be-read stack, but looks very interesting.




Thursday, January 23, 2014

In My TBR Stack:

Letter to a Prohibitionist
by Barry Lyons
Obladi Press
Trade Paperback (Revised and Updated)


I have long been a proponent of legalizing marijuana.  It remains the hardest drug I've ever tried and it clearly did not function as a "gateway drug" for me.    I do not have a problem admitting that I've inhaled.  The world will not end and the tax base will be widened by marijuana legalization.

Of course the politicians will act like it's not their money (it isn't) and will spend it like a married businessman in Vegas.

My twitter friend Barry Lyons has written Letter to a Prohibitionist, a nod to all the various "Letter to..." books we've all seen.  He graciously sent me a copy and, in between the stacks of books I'm working through, I have been reading and learning.

There is a lot of passion and commitment in Barry's book.  If you want to know more about the weed legalization debate you would be doing yourself a favor by grabbing Letter to a Prohibitionist.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

In My TBR Stack:

Happier at Home: Kiss More, Jump More, Abandon Self-Control, and My Other Experiments in Everyday Life
by Gretchen Rubin
Three Rivers Press / Crown Publishing /  Random House
Trade Paperback


Excerpt from Happier at Home


From the publisher's website:



One Sunday afternoon, as she unloaded the dishwasher, Gretchen Rubin felt hit by a wave of homesickness. Homesick—why? She was standing right in her own kitchen. She felt homesick, she realized, with love for home itself. “Of all the elements of a happy life,” she thought, “my home is the most important.” In a flash, she decided to undertake a new happiness project, and this time, to focus on home.

And what did she want from her home? A place that calmed her, and energized her. A place that, by making her feel safe, would free her to take risks. Also, while Rubin wanted to be happier at home, she wanted to appreciate how much happiness was there already.

So, starting in September (the new January), Rubin dedicated a school year—September through May—to making her home a place of greater simplicity, comfort, and love. 

In The Happiness Project, she worked out general theories of happiness. Here she goes deeper on factors that matter for home, such as possessions, marriage, time, and parenthood. How can she control the cubicle in her pocket? How might she spotlight her family’s treasured possessions? And it really was time to replace that dud toaster.

Each month, Rubin tackles a different theme as she experiments with concrete, manageable resolutions—and this time, she coaxes her family to try some resolutions, as well. 

With her signature blend of memoir, science, philosophy, and experimentation, Rubin’s passion for her subject jumps off the page, and reading just a few chapters of this book will inspire readers to find more happiness in their own lives. 




Tuesday, January 21, 2014

On My Radar*

The Agent: My 40-Year Career Making Deals and Changing the Game
by Leigh Steinberg with Michael Arkush
Thomas Dunne Books
Hardcover


Excerpt from The Agent (Parade Magazine)


From the publisher's website:



Leigh Steinberg is renowned as one of the greatest sports agents in history, representing such All-Pro clients as Troy Aikman, Bruce Smith, and Ben Roethlisberger. Over one particular seven-year stretch, Steinberg represented the top NFL Draft pick an unheard of six times. Director Cameron Crowe credits Steinberg as a primary inspiration for the titular character in Jerry Maguire, even hiring Steinberg as a consultant on the film. Lightyears ahead of his contemporaries, he expanded his players' reach into entertainment. Already the bestselling author of a business book on negotiation, the original superagent is now taking readers behind the closed doors of professional sports, recounting priceless stories, like how he negotiated a $26.5 million package for Steve Young—the biggest ever at the time—and how he passed on the chance to represent Peyton Manning.

Beginning with his early days as a student leader at Berkeley, Steinberg details his illustrious rise into pro sports fame, his decades of industry dominance, and how he overcame a series of high-profile struggles to regain his sobriety and launch his comeback. This riveting story takes readers inside the inner circle of top-notch agents and players through the visionary career of Leigh Steinberg, the pre-eminent superagent of our time.



*On My Radar signifies a book that is not in my to-be-read stack, but looks very interesting.

Friday, January 17, 2014

BookSpin Interview:


A Few Minutes With Author John Sundman


From John Sundman's Amazon page:


Author John Sundman prepares
to battle Sehlob.
John (F.X, Compton, Damien) Sundman grew up on a small farm in New Jersey, attended Xavier (Jesuit, military) High School on 16th Street Manhattan, got a degree in anthropology from Hamilton College, did a two year rural development stint in Peace Corps, then: Purdue grad school agricultural economics, 25 years or so high tech hardware software Boston area & Silicon Valley, drop out Martha's Vineyard, truck driver, warehouseman, construction worker, working class hero, poverty & embarrassment. Wrote technoparanoid novel, metafictiony geekoid novella, dystopian illustrated phantasmagoria; back in and out of high tech; firefighter; husband, father of 3, essayist for Salon.com; food pantry worker.


BookDude:  I love the descriptions of your books in your self-written bio (above).  I have always assumed that fiction with high-tech driven plots are difficult to keep relevant. How do you know when you have a story worthy of publication as opposed to the ones that never see the light of day?

John Sundman:  A perceptive question. And you're right: fiction with high-tech driven plots is difficult to keep relevant. But only if you handcuff yourself to the technology instead of to the story. It took me a while to figure this out. 

During the writing of Acts of the Apostles, I was initially preoccupied with keeping the book current and edgy. I was inventing stuff that was supposed to be futuristic and threatening but still plausible. So if I invented something and then somebody actually invented it in the real world (which did happen a few times) I felt that I had to adjust the book. For example, one of the central questions driving the plot of Acts of the Apostles is "What (if anything) caused Gulf War Syndrome?"  At the time I was writing the book, in the late 1990's, those were very pressing questions. I worried that the real cause of the illness (and many people at the time asserted that the illness itself didn't even exist) would be discovered, and that thus my fictitious explanation would be moot and stupid. Which would make the book moot and stupid (or so I thought). So I obsessively followed news about medical research into Gulf War Syndrome, in borderline panic that it would be figured out before my book hit the proverbial shelves.

I came to realize, as the writing process dragged on and on and on, that I was putting myself in the position of the Red Queen (in Alice in Wonderland), forever running in place while trying to stay just a bit in the future. Eventually I got worn out. So, I decided that my book was set in a specific time period -- the early to middle 1990's, when Gulf War Syndrome was a total mystery -- and that I would just have to accept that, and if future events obsoleted it, there was nothing I could do about it. During the writing of the book, in other words, the setting went from the near future to the present to the past. 

Although it's set in the past and deals with Gulf War Syndrome, Acts of the Apostles is about, mainly, the convergence of biological and digital technologies, and the practical, political, moral and epistemological implications of that convergence. Those topics are still current, and I expect that they will continue to be current until the Singularity overcomes us and people stop reading novels. The fact that Acts is set in the 1990's actually grounds it in a particular time (& in particular places), which I now see as a great strength of the book. It feels authentic to people.

So here we are in 2014, twenty years after I started writing Acts of the Apostles (which came out in late 1999), and many people today have no recollection, or only the foggiest recollection, of the first Gulf War (1990-91) or Gulf War Syndrome.  The disease is now believed to be real, and its causes are pretty well understood. How do these facts affect the experience of reading my novel? Not very much, so far as I can tell. It's like if you were to read a thriller about the Second World War, and the plot involved something that just might cause Hitler and the Nazis to prevail. Now, we all know that didn't happen. But so what? While you're reading the book you pretend you don't know that. I'm actually a bit embarrassed that it took me as long as it did to recognize this simple reality. If you do your job as a writer, your readers will willingly suspend their disbelief. In fact, they want to suspend their disbelief. So stop worrying and tell the damn story.

The two novellas I've published since then, Cheap Complex Devices and The Pains are much more fanciful. Their plots, such as they are, don't rely so much on real-world referents. For example, The Pains is set in a universe that is about 1/3 Orwell's 1984, 1/3 Ronald Reagan's 1984 and 1/3 stuff that I made up. To the extent that Ronald Reagan participated in the real world (which is in dispute), only about 1/3 of The Pains has real world referents. So the anxiety about keeping the book relevant diminishes considerably.

That being said, The Pains is a geeky story and does involve geeky technology. It was fun to include discussions of both analog and digital computing technology from 1984, and I tried to make those descriptions as non-anachronistic as possible.  


BD:  What surprised you the most about publishing a book?

JS:  Another interesting question. Keep in mind that I published Acts in late 1999. So we're relying on old (hence unreliable) memories here, filtered through nearly 15 years of experience. 

I guess I would say that the biggest surprise was and continues to be the range of responses to the very notion of the self-published novel. Self-publishing is much, much more mainstream/accepted in 2014 than it was in 1999. At the risk of sounding flippant, I'd say the change in typical attitudes to self-publishing has paralleled the change in attitudes towards marriage equality. Self publishing is not a human rights issue like marriage equality is, but it's seen a similarly radical change in general acceptance. Fifteen years ago, in general, most serious readers assumed that if a book was self-published, it sucked. Today that's not the case at all. In fact, many people seek out "indie" books; they prefer them.

Even fifteen years ago, I found that many people were willing to read (and purchase) a self-published book without prejudice. I've sold thousands of books, in person, to total strangers (at trade shows and similar venues). I've had influential reviewers treat my books as legitimate literature; I've experienced
bookstore owners who purchased books from me & gave them prominent display. I have experienced truly incredible and heartwarming response from readers and fans (who've become friends). People have sent me money to support my continued work. They've blogged about me and my books, bought copies of my books for their friends, sent me letters of encouragement, taken me to dinner. 

But I've also experienced derision, disdain, and outright insult. I've had total strangers tell me that they were certain that any positive review of my books had been written by me or my friends or by somebody in my employ (because it's axiomatic that self-published books suck, and thus there can be no legitimate positive reviews). And so forth. 

I don't know what I was expecting when I first published Acts and announced its availability to the world. (I was probably expecting a Nobel Prize for Literature by return mail, but let's not talk about that.) But I don't think I expected that I would make as many real friends as consequence as I've in fact made. Yes, there have been haters and snobs. But screw them, who cares. The pleasant surprise has been the number of real, valuable and truly bilateral friendships I've made. Who woulda thunk it?


BD:  How long is it typically for the writing of a book?  Tell us about your specific process.

JS:  It takes forever. My process is that I get a great idea for a book (from where? who knows. Mostly from my usual preoccupations) and I figure, since I have the book all clear in my head before I've written a single word, that it will take me a Joyce Carol Oatesean 3 months to write the book, no revisions necessary. 

And then I engage the beast and discover that I'm Frodo in the dark corridors of Shelob's lair about to be wrapped in a cocoon and consumed. I scribble in notepads. I research in the most unlikely places, letting serendipity be my only guide. I write whole chapters, and more, only to find when I re-read what I've written that it is utter crap that must be discarded. I get despondent. I question my sanity. I procrastinate on the level of Olympic Procrastination Team procrastinators. I drink beer and get fat, then give up beer and work out obsessively and get in shape again. I weep real tears.

But by some miracle I break free, with my trusty hobbit-sized sword, and I slay the nasty spider. I complete a first draft of the book! 

Only to discover that, just as in the Alien(s) movies, the beast is now inside me, gestating upon my very victuals! And so I must take that same sword and cut myself open and pry the ghastly living thing from my innards, a kind of auto-caesarean-section, rewriting it, pulling it out of me by sheer force of will to save my very life. 

A case in point: I got the idea for The Pains pretty much in a flash. I had been kicking around the idea of writing a story set in a world that married Reagan's 1984 with Orwell's 1984. And then one day I read a diary in an online diary site in which I used to be quite active that began with the line, "I woke up this morning with a pain in my body that felt as if it might have been a soul gone bad." I wrote that sentence down and meditated on it, convinced that it was significant. It was (at least, it was to me.)

A few weeks later almost instantly the story came to me. I was at a mall where I had taken my youngest daughter with a few of her friends for her 16th birthday. (When you live on an island with no malls or even traffic lights, a trip to an  off-island mall is a big deal.) While my daughter and her friends were out being teenagers, I went into a $1 store and bought a $1 notebook and a $.25 pen and sat down and wrote the first chapter of The Pains. 

It's in many ways just a retelling of the story of Job: a decent man ("Mr. Lux"  in my book) is selected by God, or the universe, or fate, or randomness, to endure an endless succession of pains. How he bears up under this assault has some cosmic bearing on the fate of the universe. That's the story.

The book, as published, is only 111 pages long. And it has 12 full-page illustrations. So it's less than 100 pages of text, and it took me five years to write it. Even though the story was pretty much complete in my head that whole time. 

But during the time I was writing the book my brother Paul, whom I loved very much, was dying of ALS, and I was spending a lot of time taking care of him (and of my day job, of course). And my sister Maureen, whom I also loved, was dying of brain cancer. They were both younger than me. And it so happened that whenever I invented some impossibly ghastly and cruel affliction to befall Mr. Lux, something more ghastly and cruel would befall my brother or my sister. 

My brother died in April 2008 and my sister in September 2008, and I finished writing The Pains (including finding an illustrator and commissioning all the illustrations) a few weeks later, after nearly five years of endless thrashing. Although I did not realize it at the time, I was wrestling with this little book as a way of dealing with the existential questions posed by the suffering and deaths of Paul and Maureen. I apologize for being so heavy, but that's the truth. 

And in fact, my other two books, and the ones I'm working on now (Biodigital and Creation Science), come similarly freighted. They always seem so clear-cut and obvious when I undertake them. And yet here I am, again, in the dark with Shelob, years later.

I'm not proud of  this, by the way. I'm not deliberately embracing the cliche of artist-suffering-for-his-art, whose every written word is an act of unfathomable courage. It's actually pretty frustrating and humiliating. I'd much rather be like Charles Dickens, who wrote three five-hundred page masterpieces in the time it has taken me to write a short novella. I'm trying to figure out how to be more Dickensian in output. 

The only good thing I can say about the process it that I'm happy with the results. I very much like the books I've written and published. 


BD:  Who would you say is your target market?

JS:  My target market depends a bit on which book we're talking about. Acts of the Apostles is kind of like "Jason Bourne meets Soul of a New Machine". It's written for readers of intelligent and literate thrillers, especially geekoid thrillers like those written by Neal Stephenson. People who liked his Cyrptonomicon generally like Acts. 

Cheap Complex Devices is a bit more demanding; it's written for readers who like postmodern metafiction (Nabokov, Borges, Lem). Its subject matter touches on computer science and artificial intelligence (and their histories), so readers who are familiar with those things catch a few more of the jokes. But there are no prerequisites for reading the book; it's a bit of a puzzle but it's not deliberately impenetrable or anything like that.

And The Pains is a simple illustrated dystopian phantasmagoria. I would hope that it would appeal to, for example, fans of Neil Gaiman. 

These three books form a self-referential set (which I call "Mind over Matter"), much as the component stories of David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas do. I'm kind of hoping that some of Mitchell's many fans will discover & like Mind over Matter. Hasn't really happened yet, but one never gives up hope. . .


BD:  Why is John Sundman a writer?  Tell us about your journey to publication?

JS:  I've always been something of a writer, since childhood. Why? I don't know. I was a professional writer from 1980 until 1990, writing technical manuals for computer companies. Then I was a manager of technical writers and editors for five years before I began work on my first novel. So I had fifteen years' worth of experience explaining complex technology before I attempted to write a novel whose plot intimately involves complex technology. 

After nearly six years away from the high tech industry, I jumped back into it in 2000, and have spent the last 14 years making my living mostly as a technical writer. I've also written novellas and stories and essays during that time, but mainly I'm a technical writer (and science writer). I like understanding technology and science, and I'm intrigued by their effects on people and societies. Fiction is a good way to explore how technology affects people and societies; I discover how I feel about these things by writing novels about them. My background as a technical writer gives me the confidence to approach things I don't really understand well (I've said elsewhere that "to be a good technical writer, you have to be comfortable with not understanding stuff."). And technical writing is great training for any kind of writing. To write a good a good manual, for example, you have to understand your audience and you have to be very clear about what you're trying to accomplish. You have to be very economical with words. And so forth. 

As to why I first sat myself down and began to write Acts of the Apostles, all I can say is that it was something of a compulsion. I did it because I couldn't not do it. The other books were similarly unavoidable. And the two books I'm still wrestling with also won't leave me alone, although I sometimes wish they would.




* * * * * * * * * *

Website:  www.wetmachine.com
Twitter:   @jsundmanus
Goodreads: www.goodreads.com/jsundman






Thursday, January 16, 2014

On My Radar*

The Watchdog That Didn't Bark: The Financial Crisis and the Disappearance of Investigative Journalism
by Dean Starkman
Columbia University Press
Hardcover


From the publisher's website:



In this sweeping, incisive post mortem, Dean Starkman exposes the critical shortcomings that softened coverage in the business press during the mortgage era and the years leading up to the financial collapse of 2008. He locates the roots of the problem in the origin of business news as a market messaging service for investors in the early twentieth century. This access-dependent strain of journalism was soon opposed by the grand, sweeping work of the muckrakers. Propelled by the innovations of Bernard Kilgore, the great postwar editor of the Wall Street Journal, these two genres merged when mainstream American news organizations institutionalized muckraking in the 1960s, creating a powerful guardian of the public interest. Yet as the mortgage era dawned, deep cultural and structural shifts—some unavoidable, some self-inflicted—eroded journalism’s appetite for its role as watchdog. The result was a deafening silence about systemic corruption in the financial industry. Tragically, this silence grew only more profound as the mortgage madness reached its terrible apogee from 2004 through 2006.

Starkman frames his analysis in a broad argument about journalism itself, dividing the profession into two competing approaches—access reporting and accountability reporting—which rely on entirely different sources and produce radically different representations of reality. As Starkman explains, access journalism came to dominate business reporting in the 1990s, a process he calls “CNBCization,” and rather than examining risky, even corrupt, corporate behavior, mainstream reporters focused on profiling executives and informing investors. Starkman concludes with a critique of the digital-news ideology and corporate influence, which threaten to further undermine investigative reporting, and he shows how financial coverage, and journalism as a whole, can reclaim its bite.


*On My Radar signifies a book that is not in my to-be-read stack, but looks very interesting.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

In My TBR stack:

Ham: Slices of a Life
Sam Harris
Gallery Books
Hardcover


From the publisher's website:



ham (noun) [hæm] 
1 the hind leg of a hog, salted, smoked, and cured 
2 second son of Noah 
3 somebody who performs in an exaggerated showy style 
-always hamming it up 

Just when you thought you knew everything about ham, you discover that ham is also: 
4 a reason to laugh about everyday life, and 
5 an irresistible collection of humorous essays from a man who was born to entertain us. 

In sixteen brilliantly observed true stories, Sam Harris emerges as a natural humorist in league with David Sedaris, Chelsea Handler, Carrie Fisher, and Steve Martin, but with a voice uniquely his own. Praised by the Chicago Sun-Times for his “manic, witty commentary,” and with a storytelling talent the New York Times calls “New Yorker– worthy,” he puts a comedic spin on full-disclosure episodes from his own colorful life. What better place to find painfully funny material than in growing up gay, gifted, and ambitious in the heart of the Bible belt? And that’s just the first cut: From partying to parenting, from Sunday school to getting sober, these slices of Ham will have you laughing and wiping away salty tears in equal measure with their universal and down-to-earth appeal. After all, there’s a little ham in all of us. 




Tuesday, January 14, 2014

In My TBR Stack:

Flyover Lives: A Memoir
by Diane Johnson
Viking
Hardcover


From the publisher's website:



Growing up in the small river town of Moline, Illinois, Diane Johnson always dreamed of floating down the Mississippi and off to see the world. Years later, at home in France, a French friend teases her: “Indifference to history—that’s why you Americans seem so naïve and don’t really know where you’re from.”

The j’accuse stayed with Johnson. Were Americans indifferent to history? Her own family seemed always to have been in the Midwest. Surely they had got there from somewhere? In digging around, she discovers letters and memoirs written by generations of stalwart pioneer ancestors that testify to more complex times than the derisive nickname “The Flyover” gives the region credit for.

With the acuity and sympathy that her novels are known for, she captures the magnetic pull of home against our lust for escape and self-invention. This spellbinding memoir will appeal to fans of Bill Bryson, Patricia Hampl, and Annie Dillard.

Monday, January 13, 2014

On My Radar:*

If Only You People Could Follow Directions: A Memoir
by Jessica Hendry Nelson
Counterpoint Press
Hardcover


From the publisher's website:



If Only You People Could Follow Directions is a spellbinding debut that reimagines the memoir in Jessica Hendry Nelson’s thoroughly original voice. In these linked essays, Nelson’s fearless writing and hypnotic storytelling centers on the story of three people: Nelson’s mother susan, her brother eric, and Jessica herself. These three characters are deeply bound to one another, not just by the usual ties of blood and family, but also by a mother’s drive to keep her children safe in the midst of chaos. The book
Author Jessica Hendry Nelson
begins with Nelson’s childhood in the suburbs of philadelphia and chronicles her father’s addiction and death, her brother’s battle with drugs and mental illness, her own efforts to find and maintain stability, and her mother’s exquisite power, grief, and self-destruction in the face of such complicated family dynamics. each of the book’s chapters concerns a different relationship—friends, lovers, and strangers are all at play—but at its heart the book is about family, the ties that bind, enrich, and betray us, and how one young woman sought to rise above her perilous surroundings.

*On My Radar signifies a book that is not in my to-be-read stack, but looks very interesting.

Friday, January 10, 2014

On My Radar:*

Things I've Learned From Dying: A Book About Life
by David R. Dow
Grand Central Publishing
Hardcover

From the publisher's website:


"Every life is different, but every death is the same. We live with others. We die alone."

In his riveting, artfully written memoir The Autobiography of an Execution, David Dow enraptured readers with a searing and frank exploration of his work defending inmates on death row. But when Dow's father-in-law receives his own death sentence in the form of terminal cancer, and his gentle dog Winona suffers acute liver failure, the author is forced to reconcile with death in a far more personal way, both as a son and as a father.

Told through the disparate lenses of the legal battles he's spent a career fighting, and the intimate confrontations with death each family faces at home, THINGS I'VE LEARNED FROM DYING offers a poignant and lyrical account of how illness and loss can ravage a family. Full of grace and intelligence, Dow offers readers hope without cliche and reaffirms our basic human needs for acceptance and love by giving voice to the anguish we all face--as parents, as children, as partners, as friends--when our loved ones die tragically, and far too soon.




* On My Radar signifies a book that is not in my to-be-read stack, but looks very interesting.

Thursday, January 9, 2014

BookSpin Interview:


5 minutes with:

Charlotte Ashlock
Berrett-Koehler
Digital Producer and Editor



Charlotte Ashlock is a very interesting lady.  Don't take my word for it, read her bio here.

I "met" Charlotte on twitter and she has one of the twitter feeds that I stop and read every time.    

When I decided to change things up a bit and include interviews on BookSpin, I thought it would be a good idea to include all sorts of book people:  writers, editors, agents, publishers, and...digital producers.

Charlotte's blog is http://ashlockcharlotte.wordpress.com




1.  Tell me about your journey to working in the publishing industry.


When I was doing the bibliography for my Senior Project at Bard College, I noticed a bunch of the books I had read were all by the same publisher. So I contacted them and told them how much I loved their books, and got an internship on the strength of that.  After my internship, I did website work for a nonprofit and learned a lot of computer skills.  Because of my computer skills and previous internship, I was eventually hired as Berrett-Koehler's Digital Editor. 

2.  What is a "typical" day at work for you?

There is no typical day- my job is to innovate digitally so we can reach our audiences in other ways besides the printed book.  We are doing a lot of rapid prototyping and experimenting with different content delivery forms.  So the variety of projects I work on is endless.  It's a perfect job for someone who wants to use their imagination and their curiosity. 

3.  What has most surprised you about your job?

The praise and warm feedback from my coworkers.  It's a more supportive environment than I've ever worked in before.

4.  What is the best part of your job?  The part you wouldn't trade for anything....

Interacting with the authors always makes me really, really, happy.  Our publishing focus is books that improve lives, organizations, and societies, so our authors are always really driven to make the world a better place. The authors inspire me with their zest and enthusiasm and idealism.

5.  Tell me something I don't know about publishing.

Small presses sometimes receive fewer unsolicited submissions than literary agents.  So if you don't mind being published by a small press (instead of one of the big New York houses) your chances could be better researching the small presses in your niche and targeting them directly.




A big BookSpin thank you to Charlotte for her time and for being the first BookSpin interviewee.  

- - - - - - - - - - - -


Know someone who should be interviewed on BookSpin?  Contact me at the email address on the top right of this page.  :)


Wednesday, January 8, 2014

In My TBR Stack:


Priscilla: The Hidden Life of an Englishwoman in Wartime France
by Nicholas Shakespeare
Harper Books
Hardcover


When Nicholas Shakespeare stumbled across a box of documents belonging to his late aunt, Priscilla, he was completely unaware of where this discovery would take him and what he would learn about her hidden past. The glamorous, mysterious figure he remembered from his childhood was very different from the morally ambiguous woman who emerged from the trove of love letters, photographs, and journals, surrounded by suitors and living the dangerous existence of a British woman in a country controlled by the enemy. He had heard rumors that Priscilla had fought in the Resistance, but the truth turned out to be far more complicated.

As he investigated his aunt's life, dark secrets emerged, and Nicholas discovered the answers to the questions over which he had been puzzling: What caused the breakdown of Priscilla's marriage to a French aristocrat?  Why had she been interned in a prisoner-of-war camp, and how had she escaped? And who was "Otto" with whom she was having a relationship as Paris was liberated?

Piecing together fragments of one woman's remarkable and tragic life, Priscilla is at once a stunning story of detection, a loving portrait of a flawed woman trying to survive in terrible times, and a spellbinding slice of history.


Tuesday, January 7, 2014

In My TBR Stack:

Out of the Woods: A Memoir of Wayfinding
by Lynn Darling
Harper Books
Hardcover


From the publisher's website:


When her college-bound daughter leaves home, Lynn Darling, widowed more than a decade earlier, finds herself alone and utterly lost. Freed of her parental responsibilities, she has no idea what she wants or even who she is.  Searching for answers, she leaves her apartment in New York City and moves to a cranky little house in the middle of the Vermont woods, her only companion a new dog and a compass.  There she hopes to develop a sense of direction - both in the woods and in her life.

As she finds new ways to get lost in her own backyard, Darling meditates on her past on on the challenges that aging poses to love, work - not to mention fashion - and the way she sees herself.  She has just begun to chart a new course for the future when an unexpected setback unsettles her newfound balance.

With rare insight and remarkable honesty, Out of the Woods reveals how honing the skills of navigation - literal and metaphorical - smoothed one woman's path through the uneven course of life.  It is a story at once universal and deeply personal - in the words of writer Geraldine Brooks, "both a compass and a manifesto for navigating the often-treacherous switchbacks of the second half of life."

Monday, January 6, 2014

Out This Week:

Little Failure: A Memoir
by Gary Shteyngart
Random House
Hardcover


I was going to write a brief post about all the little failures in my life up to this point but I realized the collected pile would most likely be overwhelming and would no longer qualify to be "little" at all.   But, really, what is life except an endless series of little failures interspersed with improbable victories?



From the publisher's website:


After three acclaimed novels, Gary Shteyngart turns to memoir in a candid, witty, deeply poignant account of his life so far. Shteyngart shares his American immigrant experience, moving back and forth through time and memory with self-deprecating humor, moving insights, and literary bravado. The result is a resonant story of family and belonging that feels epic and intimate and distinctly his own.

Born Igor Shteyngart in Leningrad during the twilight of the Soviet Union, the curious, diminutive, asthmatic boy grew up with a persistent sense of yearning—for food, for acceptance, for words—desires that would follow him into adulthood. At five, Igor wrote his first novel, Lenin and His Magical Goose, and his grandmother paid him a slice of cheese for every page.

In the late 1970s, world events changed Igor’s life. Jimmy Carter and Leonid Brezhnev made a deal: exchange grain for the safe passage of Soviet Jews to America—a country Igor viewed as the enemy. Along the way, Igor became Gary so that he would suffer one or two fewer beatings from other kids. Coming to the United States from the Soviet Union was equivalent to stumbling off a monochromatic cliff and landing in a pool of pure Technicolor.

Shteyngart’s loving but mismatched parents dreamed that he would become a lawyer or at least a “conscientious toiler” on Wall Street, something their distracted son was simply not cut out to do. Fusing English and Russian, his mother created the term Failurchka—Little Failure—which she applied to her son. With love. Mostly.

As a result, Shteyngart operated on a theory that he would fail at everything he tried. At being a writer, at being a boyfriend, and, most important, at being a worthwhile human being.

Swinging between a Soviet home life and American aspirations, Shteyngart found himself living in two contradictory worlds, all the while wishing that he could find a real home in one. And somebody to love him. And somebody to lend him sixty-nine cents for a McDonald’s hamburger.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

In Stores Now:

Confessions of a Casting Director: Help Actors Land any Role with Secrets from Inside the Audition Room 
by Jen Rudin
It Books
Trade Paperback


The phone call came out of the blue from a guy I knew from high school.  The guy and I had recently reconnected because he had opened a comic book store and was also writing/drawing his own comic book.  He asked me to edit the book for him and I did.

Teddy was a nice guy if a tad weird.  O.k. a lot weird.  But today I'm talking about the nice guy part.

So as I was saying, he called me one day and told me that there was a movie filming in town and they needed warm bodies.  He was not calling me because of any acting expertise on my part but because the filmmakers had put out the word that they needed extras for one day only.  They apparently were desperate and that's where I came in.  Teddy sweetened the pot by telling me I'd actually get paid and get a free meal.  Hell yeah! I would get to watch a movie get made and eat for free!  Not to mention, finally get discovered and become the huge movie star I was destined to be.

I was in two scenes, none of which made the final cut.  I refuse to claim any responsibility for the omission of these scenes, as I'm sure it was one of the other 50 guys who messed up the shot.

My brush with Hollywood fame and fortune was the movie Love Potion No. 9, starring BookDude.  Also in the movie was someone you've never heard of named Sandra Bullock.  Tate Donovan was also in the movie, and dating Bullock at the time.  A couple of the other extras and I were treated to an impromptu non-sexual invitation to Donovan's hotel room (my scenes were shot in a grand hotel in Chattanooga) for what amounted to a look at his own copy of the script and its annotations.  He was a nice guy.  My only interaction with Ms. Bullock was when she stepped over my outstretched legs as I lounged on the floor of the aforementioned grand Chattanooga hotel waiting for my next scene to chew.

If only this book had been available then....


From the publisher website:



Confessions of a Casting Director is a must-have for any aspiring actor or stage parent—the definitive guide to breaking into film, television, theater, and even YouTube from longtime casting director and studio executive Jen Rudin.
Packed with information that aspiring actors want, her up-to-the-minute expert advice is essential for anyone pursuing an acting career. Jen Rudin demystifies the often intimidating and constantly changing audition process, sharing insider tips on preparing for every type of audition: musical theater, television (including commercials and reality TV), and film to voiceovers, animated movies, and even web series.
In this comprehensive guide, Rudin covers everything today’s actor needs to succeed, including finding an agent or manager; using technology to your advantage; the demanding world of child acting; the pros and cons of New York vs. LA; turning a callback into an offer for the role, and much more.
Every actor should walk into an audition room feeling confident and prepared, and this book is full of the Dos and Don’ts, sure-fire tricks, and must-have information to help turn rejection into that first big break.
Complete with checklists, easy-to-follow game plans, and advice from real actors, agents, and entertainment industry professionals, Confessions of a Casting Director is like having your own private audition coach.