Picks of the Week

  • Diana Spechler: Who by Fire: A Novel (P.S.)

    Diana Spechler: Who by Fire: A Novel (P.S.)
    Spechler's unfliching, beautifully written debut strikes at the heart of how one catastrophic event creates a fissure so deep it breaks a small family into fragmented pieces. A little girl is kidnapped, presumed dead, and over a decade later her mother is still searching for answers, her older sister seeks solace in meaningless sex and her brother - who blames himself for the crime's commission - finds his life's solution among ultra-Orthodox Judaism. Spechler uses the inciting event to show the ways in which family members cling to and turn away from each other, do terrible things with the best intentions and show the comforts and prejudices of religiosity with a compassionate eye and voice.

  • Iain Levison: Dog Eats Dog

    Iain Levison: Dog Eats Dog
    First published in France a few years ago, Bitter Lemon press finally makes this darkly comic gem available in English. When a bank robber, bleeding profusely from his last and very botched job, lands in a sleepy New Hampshire college town, disaster is pretty much inevitable. Never is that more true than for Elias White, roped into being the robber's accomplice as a result of an ill-fated dalliance glimpsed through an open window, and for FBI agent Denise Lupo, whose ability is less dogged and more fragmented. Levison nails the academic atmosphere and its jarring juxtaposition with the criminal underworld, but most of all he's clearly having fun with his given premise.

  • Matthew Hall: The Art of Breaking Glass

    Matthew Hall: The Art of Breaking Glass
    If this debut were published in 2008 instead of 1997, I suspect it would have been greeted with the same acclaim and the same sense that this is a major talent with a great deal in store for his career. Because holy hell, this has tremendous pacing, wonderful characters and an offbeat and very unique voice. But since its original publication, the book is all but out of print and there's no new novel from Hall in sight, as he's concentrated on TV and screenwriting duties. So read this book and hope that a) some publisher decides to reissue it b) Hall follows it up someday.

  • Victor Gischler: Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse: A Novel

    Victor Gischler: Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse: A Novel
    After four crime novels, Gischler turns to something a little different - and a lot more unclassifiable - with this incredibly funny, violent, panoramic and pulpy apocalyptic novel. The world Mortimer Tate left behind was about to go into ruins but what he returns to nine years later is littered with machine guns, strip clubs and people looking out for their best interests (both literally and carnivorously.) With the help of an eclectic crew of sidekicks and gun-toting babes, Mortimer prepares to save the world at the lost city of Atlanta - whether he likes it or not.

  • Zoe Sharp: Third Strike: A Thriller

    Zoe Sharp: Third Strike: A Thriller
    Once again, Zoe Sharp finds a way to make the thriller genre her own by focusing on the psychological toll that violence takes upon a person. By the end of THIRD STRIKE, Charlie Fox is at a very dark place, fully cognizant of the consequences her actions have taken upon those she's been asked to guard and those she loves, and I was profoundly disturbed in a way I haven't been after reading a thriller in quite some time. This is a long, long way from mindless fluff, and if you're prepared to travel some very dark and thoughtful corners, this is the book (and series) to read.

Archived Picks

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« On the BEA Front | Main | Dateline BEA: Roaming the floor »

June 03, 2005

Dateline BEA: Openings and constant cab rides

Jesus, what an insane day. And the book room opens tomorrow so Javits, which is already too big and crowded, will only get worse.

Anyway, in a nutshell, because others did a better job of liveblogging and offering comprehensive coverage:

I spent the morning acting like a deer in headlights at BEA and then went to the blogging panel with Michael Cader, Mad Max Perkins (bedecked like Dumbledore on crack -- or maybe it was Gandalf) M.J. Rose and Robert Gray, as moderated by Mark Dressler. I didn't have as many problems with the format as Mark did, but mostly because I was taking tips from Dressler about how to moderate a panel -- that is, let everyone else speak and just make sure they get the opportunity to do so. And if there was a bottom line, it is this: blogs are here, they aren't going away, and it's time the publishing industry recognized what an untapped well the medium is for them and getting the word out about books. Can't really argue with that...

Then I rushed over to the Park Avenue South Hotel for the Backspace Writers Conference. There will be pictures later (thanks to Ms. Reagan) But my own panel seemed to go over awfully well, thanks to the amazing panelists who barely had to be prodded to speak engagingly and openly about writing, crime fiction and whatever else I and audience members could think of. Especially cool was Jeff Kleinman (of Graybill and English literary agency) and Andrea Schultz (of Harcourt) running a mock editorial board with audience members acting as various key players: editorial director, sales rep, marketing director, etc. A total eye-opener about how it's so important to know your book inside out. And if you can't boil it down to one line, then chances are it's not ready for prime time (and for me, it just affirmed this. Thank god for revisions...)

Then the parties: the Litblog Co-Op party was amazingly well attended. Beyond our wildest expectations. Aside from a great many bloggers (many of whom I'd never met before and I'd list and link them but my brain isn't working right now) I also met up with the two nice young editorial assistants from Random House who are in charge of the twentysomething essay anthology I blogged about last week. Plus so many others: Reagan Arthur, Gayle Lynds, M.J. Rose, Laura Lippman (who later showed up to the Akashic bash at Partners & Crime), Jenny Davidson, and zillions of other people.

Eventually I had to leave and made my way down to Partners in the company of Pearl Abraham and Bella Stander who kept remarking about how much the Lower East Side has changed over the last few years. Bars that disappeared, new gentrification that's apparent. Great to listen to them compare notes. Then at P&C it was packed too, with the likes of Reed Coleman, C.J. Carpenter, Jason Starr, Peter Spiegelman, Jim Fusilli, Gary Phillips and Jervey Tavalon, S.J. Rozan, Tim McLoughlin, and again, I'm probably forgetting people.

Then dinner, and now, bed.

And I have to do this again tomorrow. And Saturday.

I love this town.

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» Book Expo of America (BEA) - Day One (con't) from NYC Photo
Sorry about doling these out so slowly. As you can tell from the posting time, there have been some late nights. These are just a couple of the pictures I took at the Backspace panel that Sarah moderated. See... [Read More]

Comments

"A total eye-opener about how it's so important to know your book inside out. And if you can't boil it down to one line, then chances are it's not ready for prime time"


Sarah, that's television.

It's scary, and a bit sad, that this is the direction publishing is headed. But it certainly explains a lot...

TL

I hope you're having a great time, despite the exhaustion. I am very very very envious! Dying to hear how the Backspace panel went...

Winston Churchill said somewhere or other that there are few things in life more exhilarating than being shot at without effect ;-)

Schopenhauer once wrote "A novelist should aim not to descibe great events but to make small ones interesting."

Thanks for the small details about the marriage between books and blogging ....

nice

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