When you get to a certain age, something forces itself into your consciousness more often than you’d like: the untrustworthiness of memory. Think about the words that just won’t settle on your tongue, the task you had in mind when you left your office that you can’t recall until you retrace your steps back to your desk. It is heartbreakingly portrayed in Lisa Genova’s Still Alice, the story of a Harvard psychology professor who at age 50 is diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s disease. Alice Howland can’t accept the doctor’s pronouncement. She won’t consider that her life as a respected educator, wife, and m...Read More
Here are some bibliographic gleanings from my vacation earlier this month in England, my first trip there in 25 years. A.N. Wilson may think that Great Britain ain't so great any more (click here for LJ's current review of his Our Times: The Age of Elizabeth II), but I beg to disagree.
Available for sale in British bookstores is 60 Years Later: Coming Through the Rye, the The Catcher in the Rye "sequal" offered by J. D. California, the pseudonym of Swedish author Fredrik Colting. As you can see, the British paperbacks sport...Read More
Last March I blogged about thriller author Joseph Finder's entry into the bold new world of Twitter. So far @joefinder (his Twitter handle) has built up a nice following of almost 6000 fans, a number that surely will increase with the August 18 release of his new thriller Vanished. Since he won't making many personal appearances to promote the book (primarily N...Read More
August 15 marks what would have been Julia Child's 97th birthday. And what better gift could there be than to have her first book, published almost 50 years ago and still in print, hit the national best-seller lists for the very first time in its history. Publisher Knopf reports that last weekend Child's 1961 culinary classic, Mastering the Art of French Cooking, was #1 on both Amazon.com and B&N.com. It also debuted this week on the USAToday's list and will appear next week at #6 on Publisher Weekly's hardcover nonfiction...Read More
It's been a sad month for the literary world. On July 19, Frank McCourt, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Angela's Ashes, died in New York City at age 78 after a battle with melanoma. And last Thursday July 23, gay African-American novelist E. Lynn Harris, 54, was felled by heart disease (according to a coroner's report) in Beverly Hills while on a book tour for his most recent novel, Basketball Jones. (And blogger Sarah Weinman reports that William G. Tapply, author of the long-run...Read More
When I got a call for submissions for the zine Not Your Mother's Meatloaf on Barnard's zine mailing list, my first thought was not "I should write something!" (I can't draw) but "This would be a great zine for library collections!" It's a sex education comic book edited by Saiya Miller and Liza Bley addressing issues of sexual health and sexual experience from points of view beyond the hetero- and gender-normative. The first issue is available from Microcosm Publishing and ...Read More
I’ve lost track of the number of American Library Association (ALA) conferences I’ve been to (not as many as some of my staff, but more than others), and I find my time spent in the LJ/SLJ exhibit booth to be both energizing and enervating. Chatting with librarians and publishers and vendors is fun; I always learn something. It can also be frustrating and bewildering. How do we satisfy everyone with so many varying needs? It is a challenge, but one we are constantly hoping to meet and overcome.
One wonderful thing I discovered on the show floor, however, made the frustration dissipate...Read More
LJ reviewer Tamela Chambers, Chicago Public Library, reports on her conference experiences:
"Although this is not my first ALA conference, I always experience it as if it were. I never cease to be amazed at the outcome of months of planning and could sense from the buzz of the crowd at the registration desk that I shared this enthusiam with other registrants."
Sessions
"Walk the Fine Line Between Selection and Censorship"
...Read More
For BookSmack!, one of LJ's e-newsletters, I spent some time recently pulling together a roundup of materials that I thought would be useful and rewarding for people either considering or actually undertaking a "staycation." (Here's the piece.)
I had mixed feelings about the term "staycation" itself, but figured that as long as we're in a tough economy and more and more workers are without employment, the staycation concept would be staying around, as I think I wrote...Read More
Tamela Chambers (left), of the Chicago Public Library's new Beverly Branch Library, and a new LJ book reviewer (here's her recent LJ review of Acceptance: A Legendary Guidance Counselor Helps Seven Kids Find the Right Colleges—and Find Themselves), has sent us a quick take on this year's Professional Options Fair, which she attended yesterday evening. The fair, presented by the OCLC Inclusion Initiative, offered current American Library Association (ALA...Read More
So, did the New York Public Library (NYPL) face pressure not to purchase Michael Gross’s new book Rogues’ Gallery, an unauthorized exposé of the Metropolitan Museum?
The New York Observer on June 16 questioned whether the absence of the book in the catalog was related to complaints against the book filed by Annette de la Renta, who is a trustee of both the museum and the library.
The book’s editor, Peter Gethers, told the...Read More