B-I-N-G-O

An amusing—and a little too close to home—concept is making the rounds among book reviewers today: Book Review Bingo. Michelle Kerns, a literary columnist on Examiner.com, created a list of reviewer clichés, then plugged them into bingo cards. (She writes, “Book reviews that use clichés mean nothing, say nothing, and tell the reader nothing. They’re like eating a cream puff when what you really want is prime rib—they’re unsatisfying and, ultimately, useless.”)

Here’s one of the cards:

What do you say, book bloggers? Is it unforgiveable to use the word “powerful” in a review? Are you guilty of calling a book a “tour de force?” I’ll go ahead and confess to my own guilt; my most recent feature for BookPage would give a Bingo player several checks (come on—it was epic!).

For more on the subject, check out Salon, GalleyCat and The Boston Globe. Even Ron Charles at The Washington Post is tweeting about Book Review Bingo. Do you have any clichés to add to the list? My vote’s for “compulsively” readable.

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An international hit comes to the USA

I read and wrote about The Solitude of Prime Numbers over a month ago for a What We’re Reading Wednesday blog post. At that time, I had no idea if the book, which has been so popular abroad, would take off in the United States.

Well, it seems that it has: In the past week, Paolo Giordano’s debut has received accolades in the New York Times, Entertainment Weekly and USA Today—not to mention BookPage, where reviewer Tony Kuehn wrote that the author “deftly creates a sense of loneliness and loss through the use of simple, beautiful language and powerful imagery.”

This Thursday, you can see for yourself what the fuss is about—but you need to act fast. At the Nashville Public Library, there are already seven holds on the first available copy.

While you wait for the book’s release, check out this interview with Giordano. (The author is Italian, although the interview’s in English.) He talks about choosing between physics and literature; dealing with the strangeness of fame; and the satisfaction of writing:

Will you read The Solitude of Prime Numbers?

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Special features: the eBook edition

David Baldacci

Several of you had opinions on the iPad last week, so I thought you might be interested in the latest news about a “groundbreaking enriched eBook” (according to Grand Central).

When David Baldacci’s Deliver Us From Evil hits stores on April 20, the eBook will come with behind-the-scenes features in the same vein as a DVD. The features will include Baldacci’s research photos, deleted scenes from the manuscript and an alternate ending. Baldacci himself says the reader will have “a true multi-dimensional entertainment experience.” The complete package is called The Writer’s Cut eBook.

It’s exciting to see how publishers are taking advantage of the eBook platform, although I’m not sure that “Writer’s Cut” eBooks will work with every genre. If you’re an author, what do you think? Would you be willing to provide alternate endings and deleted passages? Readers: Would this additional content attract you to a book?

Related in BookPage: Don’t miss our interview with Baldacci about Simple Genius or his hand-written Meet the Author responses about True Blue.



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Trailer Tuesday: The Girl Who Chased the Moon

Once rare, book trailers are now popping up for all but the most obscure titles. It’s a wild world out there, so every Tuesday we’ll post one—or two—that we consider notable for your entertainment.

This week’s trailer is for The Girl Who Chased the Moon, Sarah Addison Allen’s third novel, which goes on sale today. Allen’s work blends the everyday with the magical, not unlike that of Alice Hoffman. Check out the trailer, and then read our review of the book—a web exclusive.

Also in BookPage: A review of Garden Spells.

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Now showing: The Wimpy Kid

Coming to theaters near you this weekend: Diary of a Wimpy Kid, based on Jeff Kinney’s best-selling middle-grade series. The movie hits theaters Friday, and the companion book, Movie Diary of a Wimpy Kid, is in libraries and bookstores today.

Judging from the trailer, the movie looks like a winning adaptation—likely to be a hit with the the 6- to 10-year-old set (and parents wondering how to pass the long hours of spring break).

Related in BookPage: Check out our Meet the Author featuring Jeff Kinney.

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Spring Break reading

A few observations on books and reading after spending a week at the beach:

1. The number one book spotted on the beach/in airports/and everywhere else I looked: The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson. If you need further evidence that this book has crossed from bestseller into phenomenon territory, take a trip.

2. If you’re reading on a Kindle, you have to turn it off during airplane takeoff and landing—a total pain, especially if you’ve reached an exciting part of the book. If you’re reading a good, old-fashioned paper-and-ink version, you can keep reading your book while the Kindle reader next to you squirms anxiously and awaits the announcement that personal electronic devices can be turned on.

3. If your plane hits extreme turbulence over the Atlantic, you won’t want to read either your Kindle or your old-fashioned book. You’ll want to clutch the armrests with both hands and moan as quietly as possible.

4. Though it’s widely reported that women read more than men, this doesn’t hold true among travelers. In airports and on the beach, men are just as likely as women to be staring at a book (though the man is more likely to be sound asleep and pretending to read the book).

5. Having a book in your hand is a great conversation starter among strangers.

6. Sand can be used effectively as a bookmark.

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Monday contest: Find solace in nature

For this week’s contest, we want to highlight a lovely book of personal essays. This slim and powerful collection will resonate with anyone who has found joy—and soothed sorrows—in nature.  To win a copy of Kathleen Dean Moore’s Wild Comfort, leave a note in the comments: Where is your favorite outdoor reading place? Deadline: Friday, March 19 at 10 a.m.

Here’s an excerpt from Marianne Peters’ BookPage review of Wild Comfort:

Employing a naturalist’s understanding of the world and a poet’s gift for language, Moore faces nature’s bracing truth and endless cycles of birth and death, wrestling to reconcile her own eventual death with a life of joyful surrender. “The bottom may drop out of my life,” she writes, “what I trusted may fall away completely, leaving me astonished and shaken. But still . . . there is wild comfort in the cycles and the intersecting circles, the rotations and revolutions, the growing and ebbing of this beautiful and strangely trustworthy world.”

Also, congratulations to the winner of last week’s Monday contest, Charlotte, whose favorite book published by HarperCollins is The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath.

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From Mr. Darcy to the Donner Party

Don’t miss this week’s fresh content on BookPage.com. Click the book titles to read more:

  • Review of Jane’s Fame by Claire Harman
    Do you, dear reader, dither over Mr. Darcy? Enthuse about the archness of Emma? Wail about the likes of Willoughby? If so, you just might be a Janeite
  • Roundup of the latest (and best) travel guides
    Travel guides have come a long way from Baedeker. Packed with GPS information, interactive features and online updates, the new breed of guidebook is more essential than ever, whether for a quick getaway or the trip of a lifetime.
  • Review of Borderline by Allan Stratton
    Living in upstate New York with a name like Mohammed Sami Sabiri, Sami has always felt like an outsider—the school nerd, a member of his school’s “leper colony” and the subject of constant taunting.

  • Review of Impatient with Desire by Gabrielle Burton
    Imagine what it would feel like to travel with a wagon train of pioneers, joining the great march to America’s western frontier in 1846.

Which will you read first?

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Best of the Blogs

Every week, there are many smart, funny and fascinating posts in the book blog community. With that in mind, we’re starting a Friday series: Best of the week in book blogs. Below are a few choice posts we’ve stumbled upon throughout the past few days. Feel free to add YOUR favorite book blog posts in the comments.

“I dare you not to sing along …”
Posted by She is Too Fond of Books

How much do you love this video, from Ocoee Middle School in Florida? Oprah did, and now she’s partnering with Target to give the school a library makeover. Okay everyone: Sing it with me: “This book’s going to be a good, good book to read.”

“Great Building of Books Friday”
Posted by Entomology of a Bookworm

This post is awesome because, well, who doesn’t want to learn about a building made of books? I visited the Modern Art Center in Lisbon a couple years ago, and there was a minimal, conceptual light installation in the hall where the book structure was on display. If only I could have seen a “symmetrical, enclosed room of stacked literature”!

“Some Bookish Events that are Local (to me)”
Posted by Book Chatter

I love getting out from behind my computer screen and interacting with booklovers in person—hence my fondness for book festivals and readings. On Book Chatter, Ti highlights two such events in the Los Angeles area, the L.A. Times Festival of Books and the Impatient with Desire book party. Wish I could be there!

“Spotted on the subway: Vladimir Nabokov edition”
Posted by Wormbook

Browse Wormbook for many “Spotted on the subway” entries. How fun is it to spot a stranger reading one of your favorite books? Or spy on a reader who totally doesn’t match up with the book he’s reading?

What book blog posts did you enjoy this week?

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A memoir from Dame Judi Dench

Judi Dench as Matty Jenkyns

Judi Dench as Matty Jenkyns

Finally, a celebrity memoir that has a chance of being interesting! On Wednesday St. Martin’s Press announced the acquisition of a memoir from Judi Dench, And Furthermore. As the press release puts it, “For the first time, Dench writes about her life, both on-stage and off, in a book that takes the measure of both her astonishing career and her private life. ” The book will be published in October.

Dench made her acting debut in 1957 and has amassed a string of impressive credits in the years since. Seeing her name on a cast list feels like a guarantee of quality to me — her turn as Lady Catherine de Bourg made the sub-par 2005 version of Pride & Prejudice worth watching (OK, Matthew MacFadyen helped with that too!). It’s hard to say what role of hers is my favorite, but right now I’m going to go with Miss Matty Jenkyns in the Cranford adaptations. (I blogged about the series here.)

I’m also looking forward to her turn as Mrs. Fairfax in the upcoming version of Jane Eyre. (More on that here.)

Do you have a favorite Dench film? Has anyone seen her on stage? And will you read her memoir?

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What’s your take on the iPad?

The iPad went on sale today (if you order now you’ll receive the device on April 3), and I wondered how many e-reader users following The Book Case are tempted by Apple’s sleek new toy.

The iBookstore on the iPad

Forbes has some information on how browsing the iBookstore will work:

Apple has designated about 20 “top-level” categories for books, including “Fiction & Literature”, “Reference,” “Romance,” “Cookbooks” and “Comics & Graphic Novels.” Below those categories lie more than 150 sub-categories, including some very specific genres, such as “Manga” under “Comics & Graphic Novels,” “Special Ingredients” under “Cookbooks,” and “Etiquette” under “Reference.” Some sub-categories, such as “Fantasy” and “Science Fiction & Literature,” even have sub-sub-categories (“Historical” and “Paranormal,” for example.) There are also two sections for “Erotica” books; one under “Fiction & Literature” and one under “Romance.”

For an interesting take on the co-existence of e-books and paper books, take a look at this post by Craig Mod, a writer, designer and publisher: “Books in the age of the iPad.” Mod asserts that digital books won’t render traditional books obsolete—but they will force us to ditch what he calls “disposable books” (poorly made books, mass-market paperbacks, etc.). He has some interesting thoughts on reconfiguring the layout of text on the iPad. And he thinks the books that will thrive in the future are the ones in which “the object [i.e. the physical book] is embraced as a canvas by designer, publisher and writer.” In other words, the “book” (paper, spine, ink) needs to be more than just a vessel for content. It needs to work “in concert with the content to illuminate the narrative.”

Rumor has it we’re getting an iPad at BookPage, so when that happens we’ll be sure share the experience of reading on the gadget.

Are you going to buy an iPad?

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The Tournament of Books is on!

The sought-after Rooster

Some of you may look forward to college basketball in the spring. As for me, I get my March Madness fix every year (well, since 2005, anyway) with the Morning News Tournament of Books, which puts the year’s best fiction in head-to-head competition.

The race for the Rooster started this week, and so far the commentary and matchups have been epic. Where else would you find John Wray’s Lowboy facing off against Kathryn Stockett’s The Help? (I won’t give the winner away, but judge Andrew Womack concludes, “Were the two books somehow collated into a single work, the result would be more formidable: a cooler, more memorable, disarming contender. Something with teeth of its own.”)

And don’t miss the commentary on each round from returning hosts Kevin Guilfoile and John Warner. A sample from the discussion of the aforementioned Help/Lowboy matchup:

Take the following one question quiz—If a black person were in your house, where would you send her if she asked to use your restroom? If your answer is not “the driveway,” The Help will make you feel good about yourself.

Past winners include Toni Morrison’s A Mercy, Junot Diaz’s The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao and Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. Looking at this year’s matchups, I’m betting Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall will take the Rooster home this year, although who knows which contenders will return in the Zombie Round? Follow all the action here.

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Marines’ memoirs behind “The Pacific”

If you’re interested in military history and loved Band of Brothers, mark your calendar for this Sunday at 9 pm EST—it’s the premiere of HBO’s miniseries The Pacific, based on memoirs by two U.S. Marines: With the Old Breed by Eugene B. Sledge and Helmet for My Pillow by Robert Leckie. The series is produced by Tom Hanks, Steven Spielberg and Gary Goetzman, the team behind Band of Brothers.

On an HBO message board for the series, a commenter wrote, “Without a doubt Sledge’s account is the greatest WWII story ever told.” If you’ve read With the Old Breed, do you agree?

Watch a trailer for the miniseries:

Related in BookPage: reviews of The Good Fight: How World War II Was Won and other military histories.

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High expectations for a 2011 debut

Speaking of debut authors from Penguin, I’m intrigued by novel called 22 Britannia Road by Amanda Hodgkinson. Originally bought by Juliet Annan at Fig Tree, an imprint at Penguin UK, the book will by published by Pamela Dorman Books in the United States. Here’s a brief plot summary from Publisher’s Marketplace: After World War II, a couple and their son “struggle to live a normal British life despite their six-year separation and the lingering ghosts and secrets that remain from the war.”

The book’s been compared to Small Island and Sophie’s Choice (tall order, huh?), and Annan calls it “a powerful novel of acceptance, survival and love.”

It appears that many people have taken interest in this debut. Here’s a tweet from Annan, dated Feb. 23:22 Britannia Road will be out in 2011. Will you look for it?

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And the YA deals keep coming…

Can Rothenberg’s heroine pull off narrating after death as well as Sebold’s Susie?

Just two days after I blogged about Starcrossed, the high school Greek tragedy billed as “a Percy Jackson for teenage girls,” another huge YA deal goes through. Dutton Children’s Books (a Penguin imprint) has paid six figures to publish The Catastrophic History of You and Me, by debut novelist Jessica Rothenberg. Rothenberg is an editor at Razorbill, another Penguin imprint. Here’s more on the plot:

In the book, a 15-year-old girl who literally dies of a broken heart must pass through five stages of grief before she can move on to the afterlife…and restore her faith in love.

Publisher’s Weekly points out that the girl’s death could have some basis in science. Check out this article from the Wall Street Journal about broken heart syndrome.

When I was a pre-teen, I had a fascination with tragic stories—for a while there, anything by Lurlene McDaniel was a must-buy from the book fair. Sounds like heartbreak and mortality still haven’t gone out of style.

Will you (or your teen) pick up The Catastrophic History of You and Me (out fall 2011)?

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