Monday contest: Spring has sprung!

The days are getting longer and less nippy, the birds more chirpy. The trees are budding, flowers bursting forth. The outdoors is beginning to beckon, and you’re itching to get out and play. Winter is officially behind us at last, and this week we’re celebrating by giving away these four delightfully spring-y books to one lucky winner.

A gorgeous, practical guide to creating 100 different floral arrangements.

The Flower Recipe Book (by Alethea Harampolis and Jill Rizzo) A gorgeous, practical guide to creating 100 different floral arrangements.

The Artist, the Cook, and the Garden: A lovely book of recipes inspired by art and nature

The Artist, the Cook, and the Gardener (by Maryjo Koch) A beautiful book of recipes inspired by art and nature.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Grow Your Own in Pots: Discover the essential techniques of growing more than 60 vegetables, fruits, herbs and flowers in containers.

Grow Your Own in Pots (by Kay Maguire) Discover the essential techniques to growing more than 60 vegetables, fruits, herbs and flowers in containers.

1001 Secrets Every Birder Should Know: An informative and irreverent guide that makes birding fun for everyone, from beginners to experts.

1001 Secrets Every Birder Should Know (by Sharon Stiteler) An informative and irreverent guide that makes birding fun for everyone, from beginners to experts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TO ENTER: In the comments, tell us which book you most look forward to reading this spring—and about your favorite outdoor reading spot.

CONTEST DETAILS: One winner will be chosen by random.org from among entries received by 5 pm CST on Friday, March 29. The winner will receive copies of the four books listed above. Prizes must be shipped to a North American address, and Rhode Island residents are not eligible. (Full contest rules here.) Good luck!

ETA: Congratulations to our winner, Robin! She would love to read Grow Your Own in Pots.

Thanks to all who entered! Contest is now closed.

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Happy Birthday, Flannery O’Connor

flannery oconnor

The writer operates at a peculiar crossroads where time and place and eternity somehow meet. His problem is to find that location.
• Flannery O’Connor •

(Check out Flannery O’Connor on The Book Case and BookPage.com.)

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Friday links: Super-size edition

• The literary world lost one of its greats today. Chinua Achebe has passed away, but no doubt his masterpiece Things Fall Apart will continue to be read by students around the world.

• The Los Angeles Times shares an adorably spunky job inquiry letter that Eudora Welty sent to the New Yorker back in 1933. We would have hired her!

Jack London's bookplate

Jack London’s bookplate

• BuzzFeed has compiled a fun collection of bookplates from 35 famous folks, from Henry Houdini and Walt Disney to Charles Dickens and Sigmund Freud.

• Tuesday was Philip Roth’s 80th birthday, and the New Yorker’s David Remnick fills us in on what happened at the party.

• Can you imagine having David Foster Wallace or Vladimir Nabokov as a professor? Flavorwire has assembled recollections of super-lucky students who were in classes taught by literary superstars.

• It’s always interesting to hear recordings of writers who are long-gone. Brain Pickings has posted an excerpt of Ernest Hemingway’s 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature acceptance speech, along with the story behind why he didn’t attend the ceremony.

Joy of Cooking

The original cover of The Joy of Cooking

• Did you know that The Joy of Cooking was originally self-published? Book Patrol reports that one of the 3,000 copies published by Irma S. Rombauer in 1931 is up for sale . . . for a mere $40,000.

• A fascinating article from The Atlantic examines how feminism has finally seeped into the romance book genre.

• Of course, we know that books aren’t going anywhere, but Fine Books & Collections has posted a list of 10 reassuring signs that should sway even pessimists.

•  Stumped on your next read? Flavorwire has put together a list of 10 Millennial writers you may not know about. Included on the list are Kristopher Jansma and Evie Wyld.

• We can always count on McSweeney’s for a chuckle or two and weren’t let down by An Open Letter to Canonical Authors.

William Blake's "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell"

William Blake’s “The Marriage of Heaven and Hell”

• Move over tattoos—Buzzfeed has assembled a fun photo collection of literary graffiti from around the world.

• The New York Times has us on pins and needles waiting for next month’s release of The Selected Letters of Willa Cather.

• And finally, to follow up on an item in our post from a couple of weeks ago, the Diagram Prize for Oddest Book Title of the Year has been been awarded to—drum roll, please—. . . .

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7 questions with . . . Julia London

lastdebutanteOur Top Pick in Romance for March is historical romance The Last Debutante by Julia London, the fourth book in her Secrets of Hadley Green series.

Daria Bobcock, the last debutante of Hadley Green, plans to travel from England to Scotland to visit her grandmother. When she gets there, she encounters a naked, unconscious Scottish laird named Jamie Campbell in her grandmother’s cottage. When he wakes up, he kidnaps Daria as ransom for money owed to his clan. Sparks fly, hearts are torn between desire and duty, a scandal is revealed—and you’ve got yourself a charming new romance.

If London’s answer to my question, “What is it about those Scottish men, anyway?” doesn’t make you want to read The Last Debutante, I don’t know what will:

“They are the ultimate historical romance fantasy: Sexy and strong, they take what they want and discard what they don’t. They are dismissive of rules and propriety when it comes to true love, and if one claims you and makes you his own, he is yours for life.”

Read the rest of London’s answers to our 7 questions interview here.

Will you check this one out? Romance fans: Where/when are your favorite historical romances set?

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Happy Birthday, James Patterson

james patterson

Knowledge is valuable, but imagination is invaluable.
• James Patterson •

(Check out James Patterson on The Book Case and BookPage.com.)

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Recipe of the week: Smoked Albacore Tuna and Green Papaya Salad

Why do we love food trucks so much? Perhaps it’s their innovation, the accessibility of clever recipes or the joy of eating food curbside. Or perhaps it has something to do with our hunter-gatherer ancestors and some kind of feral satisfaction of tracking down our favorite trucks (albeit via Twitter).

Whatever the reason, Eat St. taps into our collective love of food trucks by assembling 125 recipes from all different trucks. Cooking columnist Sybil Pratt calls it a “revolution“; we call it tonight’s dinner.

El Gastrónomo Vagabundo | St. Catharines, Ontario
Smoked Albacore Tuna and Green Papaya Salad

Serves 4

El Gastrónomo Vagabundo is inhabited by Australian chef Adam Hynam-Smith and his Canadian partner, Tamara Jensen.

What a culinary and gastronomic journey! Proof? This salad, a blend of papaya, smoked tuna, and a delicious chili tamarind sauce. I guess that’s the “vagabundo” part.

Tamarind water can be found in many Asian supermarkets. If you can’t find it, soak 3 tbsp (45 mL) tamarind paste in ¾ cup (175 mL) hot water until soft; squeeze pulp with your fingers to dissolve it. Pour through a fine mesh sieve, forcing liquid through with the back of a spoon and scraping pulp from the outside of the sieve.

Smoked Albacore Tuna-A Continue reading

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Happy World Poetry Day!

poetry day

A poet looks at the world the way a man looks at a woman.
• Wallace Stevens •

(Check out the poetry section on BookPage.com.)

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Calling all Elizabeth Gilbert fans

Fans of Elizabeth Gilbert have been waiting on pins and needles for her next book, The Signature of All Things, a 19th-century historical novel due to hit bookstores on October 1.

After months of disagreement and back and forth between Gilbert and her publisher, Viking, regarding the book cover, they decided to put the decision into the hands of Gilbert’s fans.

Starting tomorrow, March 21, at 8:00 a.m. (all times are EDT), you can go to Gilbert’s Facebook page and vote on one of the three cover options. Voting will close on Sunday, March 24, at 11:59 p.m., with the winning design revealed on Monday at 5:00 p.m.

Gilbert covers

[photo from Elizabeth Gilbert's Facebook page]

What do you think of the covers? Which one is going to get your vote?

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An election just for kids!

Children’s Book Week is coming up—May 13 to 19—and the Children’s Choice Book Awards finalists have just been announced. Up for Author of the Year are:

Children's Choice Awards

John Green for The Fault in Our Stars
Jeff Kinney for Diary of a Wimpy Kid 7: The Third Wheel
• R.J. Palacio for Wonder
Rick Riordan for The Heroes of Olympus
Veronica Roth for Insurgent

Click here to see the full list of finalists and here to vote for your favorites. Voting ends on May 9, and the winners will be announced at a gala in New York City on May 13.

Both The Fault in Our Stars and Wonder made our Readers’ Choice: Best Books of 2012 list, and we’re big fans of Jeff Kinney here on The Book Case. Which books are you (and the little ones in your life) going to vote for? Are there any books that you think were snubbed?

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What we’re reading Wednesday: ‘The Son’ by Philipp Meyer

The Son by Philipp Meyer
Ecco • $27.99 • ISBN 9780062120397
On sale May 28, 2013

sonmeyer

Philipp Meyer made his fiction debut with a bang: His very first novel, American Rust, was one of the most talked-about literary releases of 2009, earning him a place on The New Yorker‘s Best 20 Writers Under 40 list. In 2011, he sold his second novel to Ecco in a hotly contested auction—and now, that book is about to hit shelves.

Though the Texas setting could hardly be further from the Pennsylvania mining milieu of American Rust, in The Son Meyer continues his exploration of the costs of survival and the weight of tragedy, while portraying a vivid slice of American history.

Told through the stories of three generations of the McCullough family—Eli, who survived and even thrived as a Comanche captive in the 1850s and went on to become a Texas Ranger; Pete, his son, who raised cattle and entered the oil rush of the 1910s; and Jeanne, Eli’s granddaughter, who took her place in a man’s world and solidified the family’s fortunes by investing in pipelines in the 194os and ’50s—The Son is full of compelling characters, vivid imagery and murky morals. Whether it is possible to survive, much less succeed, on the Texas frontier without that last item is one of Meyer’s themes. Can violence bring men together as much as pull them apart? Is there something unifying in a cycle of destruction? Here, Eli muses on the Western mentality:

With the exception of Nuukaru and Escuté, I had no doubts about my loyalties. Which were in the following order: to any other Ranger, and then to myself. Toshaway had been right: you had to love others more than you loved your own body, otherwise you would be destroyed, whether from the inside or out, it didn’t matter. You could butcher and pillage but as long as you did it to protect people you loved, it never mattered. You did not see any Comanches with the long stare—there was nothing they did that was not to protect their friends, or their families, or their band. The war sickness was a disease of the white man, who fought in armies far from his home, for men he didn’t know, and there is a myth about the West, that it was founded and ruled by loners, while the truth is just the opposite; the loner is a mental weakling, and was seen as such, and treated with suspicion.

What are you reading this week?

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Happy Birthday, Lois Lowry

lois lowryThe man that I named The Giver passed along to the boy knowledge, history, memories, color, pain, laughter, love, and truth. Every time you place a book in the hands of a child, you do the same thing.
It is very risky.
But each time a child opens a book, he pushes open the gate that separates him from Elsewhere. It gives him choices. It gives him freedom.
Those are magnificent, wonderfully unsafe things.

• Lois Lowry •

(Check out Lois Lowry on The Book Case and BookPage.com.)

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Trailer Tuesday: ‘Heaven’s Lessons’ by Steve Sjogren

heavens lessonsWhen Steve Sjogren, author of Conspiracy of Kindness, flat lined and then revived on the hospital operating table, he experienced a peaceful time he attributes to God. When he awoke to a world of pain, he had a difficult time recovering physically as well as spiritually.

In Heaven’s Lessons, Sjogren talks about what God has taught him from his experience and the limitations it has given him.

Says our reviewer: “This book offers readers the opportunity to benefit from Sjogren’s journey and to see how God turned a tragedy into a transformation.”

Watch the book trailer that dramatizes Sjogren’s death on the operating table:

What do you think about books that deal with experiences of the afterlife? Will you pick up Heaven’s Lessons?

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Happy Birthday, Philip Roth

philip roth

When you publish a book, it’s the world’s book. The world edits it. 
• Philip Roth •

(Check out Philip Roth on BookPage.com and The Book Case.)

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9 noteworthy books for book lovers

What do we love more than books? Books about books, of course! If you feel the same way, you’re going to love this roundup of recently published books about (in)famous writers, the act of writing, bookstores, bookshelves and more things that make the hearts of bibliophiles go pitter-patter.

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Literary Rogues

LITERARY ROGUES
By Andrew Shaffer
(Harper • $14.99)

Rock stars weren’t the first to mix art and vice. Sex, drugs, decadence, discontent, scandal and lots and lots of alcohol—the guys and gals included in this book managed to write some of literature’s greatest masterpieces while engaging in all sorts of misbehavior. F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Dorothy Parker, Hunter S. ThompsonNorman Mailer and James Frey are profiled in this fun, fascinating, raucous history.

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My Ideal Bookshelf

MY IDEAL BOOKSHELF
By Thessaly La Force (editor)
and Jane Mount (art)
(Little, Brown • $24.99)

Ever wanted to peek at the bookshelves of your favorite writers? David Sedaris, Maira Kalman, James Patterson, Jennifer Egan, Dave Eggers, Jonathan Letham and many others share their favorite books—ones that they most enjoyed reading or that inspired them to become writers—which are delightfully illustrated, making it the perfect addition to display on any book lover’s coffee table. (This isn’t the first time we’ve raved about this one—click here to see more.)

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Sorted BooksSORTED BOOKS
By Nina Katchadourian
(Chronicle • $22.95)

Speaking of books on shelves . . . in this one, artist Nina Katchadourian has cleverly created poetry-like narratives by photographing groupings of books and letting their spines do the talking. Here’s an example: “Sketches From a Hunter’s Album/Rivers and Mountains/Antlers in the Treetops/Running Dog/Some Trees/Vanishing Animals.” Another one: “How to Write/Very Bad Poetry/Keep Watching the Sky/Unlock/The Origin of the World.” The result is whimsical, uniquely creative fun.

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Judging a BookJUDGING A BOOK BY ITS LOVER
By Lauren Leto
(Harper • $14.99)

Navigating the literary world can be difficult—whether you’re discussing the latest bestseller with your book club or Infinite Jest with someone you just met at a cocktail party. With chapters called “How to Fake It” (that is, intelligently discuss a book you haven’t read), “Stereotyping People by Favorite Author” and “Ten Rules for Bookstore Hookups,” this hilarious guide to the passionate and peculiar world of book culture is at once snarky and reverential—and thoroughly entertaining.

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Why We WriteWHY WE WRITE
Edited by Meredith Maran
(Plume • $16)

You’ve already seen what’s on their shelves. Now get ready to be enraptured by firsthand accounts from 20 great authors on why they became—and continue to be—writers. Meg Wolitzer, Jane Smiley, Sebastian Junger, Ann Patchett and Michael Lewis are just a few of those who share not only the whys, but also the whens, the wheres and the whats of writing—along with words of advice and encouragement for aspiring writers. A couple of sample tidbits: Isabel Allende always begins writing a new book on January 8, and Mary Karr discarded 2,000 pages of work while writing Lit.

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How Lit Saved My LifeHOW LITERATURE SAVED MY LIFE
By David Shields
(Knopf • $25.95)

“Mad genius,” “brainy,” “super smart,” “stunningly intelligent”—reviewers just can’t seem to praise David Shields’ latest book enough. Both a probing memoir and an examination of the importance of literature to a man who considers it as essential to life as food and water, How Literature Saved My Life is an original, intimate, energetic and fascinating exploration of self-discovery and the future of literature. (Read a review of Shields’ previous book, The Thing About Life Is That One Day You’ll Be Dead.)

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One for the BooksONE FOR THE BOOKS
By Joe Queenan
(Viking • $24.95)

Prolific journalist Joe Queenan also muses on the important role that books play in his life—though in a much less heady and existential way than David Shields. After a lifetime of devouring between 10 and 30 books at any given time, Queenan employs his trademark wit while sharing his eccentric reading habits—many of which will be familiar to fellow avid readers. You may not agree with everything he says—he’s critical of book clubs and independent bookstores—but you will be impressed by—and likely relate to—his deeply instilled passion for books.

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weirdthings_campbellWEIRD THINGS CUSTOMERS SAY IN BOOKSTORES
By Jen Campbell 
(Overlook • $17.95)

So, the title of this one does a pretty good job of describing the book. Some examples of the wacky and just plain unintelligent things people have asked bookstore clerks include: “I’ve forgotten my glasses . . . can you read me the first chapter?” “Did Anne Frank ever write a sequel?” “Do you have any books by Jane Eyre?” Featuring fun and quirky illustrations, this one’s guaranteed to amuse and would make the perfect gift for book lovers.

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bookshelfBOOKSHELF
By Alex Johnson
(Thames & Hudson • $24.95)

Bibliophiles l-o-v-e looking at photos of books. This book features a visual feast of cool, innovative, completely unique spaces—designed by artists, engineers and regular folk—for storing and displaying libraries of all sizes. There are invisible bookshelves, round bookshelves, animal-shaped bookshelves, and there’s even a cool reading chair/bookshelf combo. This one’s bound to elicit some “oooh”s and “aaah”s.

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What say you, readers? Which of these books about books are you most excited to get your hands on?

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‘The Da Vinci Code’ ebook

Da Vinci CodeWith just 57 more days to go until the release of Dan Brown’s anticipated novel, Inferno, his publisher (Doubleday) has announced that the eBook version of The Da Vinci Code will be downloadable for free from now until March 24. As a bonus, your eBook will include the prologue and first chapter from Inferno!

You can get your gratis copy at from any eBook retailer: BooksamillionAmazon, Barnes & Noble, Apple iBookstore, Kobo, Google or Sony.

In further news, Brown’s only publicity appearance for Inferno will be held at Lincoln Center in New York City on Wednesday, May 15.  Fear not, though, non-New Yorkers—the 7:30 p.m. (EDT) event will be streamed live to bookstores and libraries across the country. Check with your local library and/or bookstore to see if they will be participating.

Do you plan on rereading The Da Vinci Code or The Lost Symbol before the release of Inferno? Is Inferno the book you’re most looking forward to reading this summer, or is there another book you’re counting down the days to read?

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