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Personal narrative addresses death of author's brother

By Kate Erbland Feb 1, 2013 2:43PM
When writing or talking about the late (and so, so great) children's book author and illustrator, Maurice Sendak, bibliophiles love to share a very popular story about the "Where the Wild Things Are" creator. As near-legend has it (and as told by Sendak himself), "A little boy sent me a charming card with a little drawing on it. I loved it. I answer all my children's letters - sometimes very hastily - but this one I lingered over. I sent him a card and I drew a picture of a Wild Thing on it. I wrote, 'Dear Jim: I loved your card.' Then I got a letter back from his mother and she said: 'Jim loved your card so much he ate it.' That to me was one of the highest compliments I've ever received. He didn't care that it was an original Maurice Sendak drawing or anything. He saw it, he loved it, he ate it." (Thanks, Wikpedia!) While Sendak's work alone illustrates just how much the late author loved his job, that little folk tale is a real heartstring-tugger.

Bing: Maurice Sendak | 'My Brother's Book'

But are you ready for more possible tears when it comes to Sendak's work? We certainly hope so, as Vanity Fair has posted an exclusive look inside Sendak's final book, "My Brother's Book," and it's guaranteed to make even the toughest reader shed a tear or two. Inspired by the death of Sendak's brother, Jack, back in 1995, the "beautifully illustrated narrative tells the story of his brother’s journey to the end of life" and addresses "Sendak’s longing to be reunited with his deceased sibling" through haunting and deeply-felt verse. Consider it a grown-up companion to Sendak's also-moving kids' books (that were just as good for adults, too) like "In the Night Kitchen" and "Seven Little Monsters."

Check out two pages from inside the new narrative after the break, and be sure to head on over to Vanity Fair to see more pictures from "My Brother's Book."

"My Brother's Book" will be released on February 5. You can pre-order the title on Amazon right now. 

The secretive project is simply titled 'S.'

By Kate Erbland 21 hours ago
Filmmaker J.J. Abrams has gained notoriety not just for his massively successful productions - including "LOST," "Alias," the rebooted "Mission: Impossible" features, the new "Star Trek" films, and the sure-to-be-successful seventh "Star Wars" film - but for his predilection to sticking to what he likes to call "the Mystery Box." While the effectiveness of said Mystery Box has waned over time - after all, Abrams is still the kind of director who refuted every claim that the villain in this year's "Star Trek Into Darkness" would indeed be classic Trek baddie Khan, a move that didn't earn him much affection from either Trekkies or critics - it's not something he's looking to abandon any time soon.

Bing: More on J.J. Abrams

Case in point - his new novel, titled "S.," that he's written alongside celebrated author Doug Dorst. What's "S." about? Who are the main characters? What kind of audience is it for? Does it fall under a particular genre? No, really, what's it about? Good luck finding out, because "S." is as big a mystery as anything Abrams has created yet.

The pair sewed up their book deal back in 2011, when Michael Pietsch, executive vice president and publisher of Little, Brown, announced the collaboration and the publisher's subsequent buy for their Mulholland Books imprint. Back then, he commented that "Doug and J.J.’s story will explode the bonds of the novel in ways no book has ever done. It is a privilege to work with this wildly creative team of writers and thinkers."

The hyperbolic phrase (that's still free of anything resembling details) doesn't stop there, as Mulholland's own blog describes the novel as such: "At the core of this multilayered literary puzzle of love and adventure is a book of mysterious provenance. In the margins, another tale unfolds—through the hand-scribbled notes, questions, and confrontations of two readers. Between the pages, online, and in the real world, you’ll find evidence of their interaction, ephemera that bring this tale vividly to life."


Even in the fall catalogue for publisher Little, Brown and Company, little else is revealed about the book itself, beyond minor details like that it will weigh in at 352 pages, will be available as a download or e-book, will be supported by events in New York and Los Angeles, and that it is slated for some kind of presence at San Diego's Comic-Con in July. Oh, and that the book will "redefine the novel," which certainly seems like one hell of a bold proclamation. The catalogue did, however, also feature a handwritten note by Abrams, one that should both echo the final product's interest in ephemera and its possible origins. You can read it up top or in a larger format after the break.

Just how secretive is the book? The book's cover hasn't even been revealed yet.

You can pre-order "S." over at Amazon.

We can finally open this particular Mystery Box when the book is released on October 29.
 

Also: a thriller from Max Barry, a seafaring debut and the story of an infamous summer heat wave

By Mary Pols Tue 7:29 AM
As we head toward the official start of summer, here are a few new titles we think readers will have a particularly hard time resisting this week:

"Sisterland"
by Curtis Sittenfeld: The critical darling and bestselling author of "Prep" and "American Wife" writes about twin sisters, Violet and Daisy, who both possess psychic abilities but have very different attitudes toward their gift to see the future. Violet makes it her profession and becomes infamous for predicting a massive earthquake set to strike the St. Louis area, while Daisy changes her name to Kate, marries a scientist who teaches at Washington University and devotes her time and energies to her toddlers while ignoring her own psychic abilities. She disavows Vi on many levels--her twin is her opposite, gay, overweight, freewheeling--but then gets her own premonition that something of major significance will happen on October 16. Will it be Vi's earthquake? First line: The first earthquake wasn't the strongest--that would come later, in February 1812--but it must have been the most astonishing.

"The Impossible Lives of Greta Walls" by Andrew Sean Greer: Like Kate Atkinson's "Life After Life," Greer ("The Story of a Marriage" and "Confessions of Max Tivoli") plays with the idea of a character living alternate lives. Heartbroken over the death of her twin brother and a breakup with her lover, Greta Wells undergoes electroconvulsive therapy in 1985 and wakes up in different versions of her life. In 1918 she's a bohemian adultress and in 1941, she's a devoted mother and wife. In all three lives she has the same brother, aunt and lover, but there are different outcomes for these relationships. She has three months of shock therapy to decide which of these lives she prefers, and perhaps, to choose. Right up the alley for those who loved Atkinson's novel or Lionel Shriver's "The Post Birthday World." Or even the movie "Sliding Doors." First line: The impossible happens once to each of us.


"Instructions for a Heat Wave"
by Maggie O'Farrell: England isn't known for steamy summers, but in 1976 the nation, already at drought conditions, was gripped by a heat wave that lasted nearly all summer. For 25 days in a row, temperatures were in the 80s, a number of Wimbledon spectators collapsed from heat stroke, offices without air conditioning (of which there were many) had to shut down and water conservation measures put into place. O'Farrell, whose previous novels include "The Hand That First Held Mine," sets her story of a London woman in crisis in the midst of the heat wave. Gretta Riordan's husband goes out for the paper while she's dutifully making soda bread--despite the heat--and simply never comes back. And he empties their bank account. In the wake of his disappearance, Gretta's three adult children arrive to sort out what to do about their abandoned mother. First line: The heat, the heat.


"Lexicon"
by Max Barry: One of the most anticipated thrillers of the summer. At an exclusive school near Arlington, Virginia, students are instructed in the art of persuasion, learning to bend people to their will in a nearly magical way. (If you think this kind of creepy mind control sounds a bit like the dream steering in "Inception," you'd be right.) Our clever, heroine is an orphan named Emily Rikkard, who is recruited for the school after she's found on the streets of San Francisco, running a three-card Monte game. She excels like no other student in this school for "poets," until she falls in love, something the organization doesn't approve of. This is the kind of book where a woman finds herself in possession of the most powerfully magic word in the history of the world and Barry writes with similar urgency. Emily doesn't just apply mascara, she "detonates" it and when she kisses, she kisses like "a predator." First line: "He's coming around."


"She Rises"
by Kate Worsley: Debut novelist Worsley, whose previous career includes stints as a journalist, a masseuse and a spotlight operator, got the idea for "She Rises" while walking to the docks near her home on the Essex coast. She admired those who went to sea every day but was terrified of it herself. Her novel, set in Georgian England (it opens in 1740) tells the story of Luke, a 15 year-old pressed into service on the Navy warship Essex. He's rather be anywhere else, but mostly in the company of Louise, a young maid in service to a wealthy captain's daughter in the naval port of Harwich. Worsley's characters have been compared to Dickens, her plotting to Sarah Waters and her sense of adventures at sea to Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey and Maturin series. First line: It's the singing that wakes him.

 

Fowler's powerful new novel is our Top-shelf pick of the month; but we almost missed it

By Mary Pols Mon 10:41 AM
This week I got a stark lesson I had no idea I needed in the enormous significance of being on the cover of the New York Times Book Review. On June 9, a glowing review of Karen Joy Fowler's new novel "We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves," written by Barbara Kingsolver, appeared on the cover of the Sunday book section. That's about the biggest splash in literary waters a writer could hope for. I knew this. I can't remember a time when I didn't know this.

I already had a copy of the novel, sent to me by a publicist at Putnam without me even having to ask--how I love publicists like this--but I hadn't cracked it open yet. I could tell you that I was too busy to get to it. It is true that the piles of upcoming releases surrounding my desk have grown so overwhelmingly huge I have all but given up on vacuuming my office floor. Except that I had found time to check an A. M. Homes' "May We Be Forgiven" out of the library and become engrossed in it even though I had no timely element obliging me to read it or write about it. I also can't pretend that I didn't know who Fowler was. In 2007 I had driven to Davis, California, where much of this new novel is set, to interview the writer around the time the movie version of her bestselling book "The Jane Austen Book Club" was coming out. I liked the movie and the book well enough but hadn't found it particularly memorable. If pressed, I'd have said it was a "nice" book. The title of this new book, "We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves" conjured up expectations of a book about some domestic accident or tragedy: dead child, dead parent, pedophile in the 'hood.

But here's the thing: my interest in reading the book shot up immediately, not just because the Kingsolver review was so positive ("a novel so readably juicy and surreptitiously smart, it deserves all the attention it can get"). It was the placement of the review. The cover screams importance. The cover screams not chick lit. The cover made me put aside the Homes' book (which is excellent) and dive right into the Fowler. I can't lie; it altered my perception of its worth. That's what good literary real estate can do for a book.

Bing: More on Karen Joy Fowler


"We Are Completely Beside Ourselves" lives up to Kingsolver's endorsement and the larger endorsement made by the editor of the NYTBR in putting it on the cover. It is wickedly smart, instantly engaging--Rosemary the semi-unreliable narrator is in a word, unique--and so thought provoking on the topic of animal rights that it could alter your future decisions as a consumer. I don't want to say much about the plot of the book--Kingsolver tiptoed around it but gave up one key detail that Fowler doesn't reveal until page 77, and which I would have loved to not know--except to compare it to Ann Patchett's "State of Wonder" in terms of weaving a larger story of radical, scientific experimentation into a very personal woman's narrative. In short, it's Top Shelf.

A final word about the NYTBR. Pamela Paul was named the new editor of the book review in April, replacing Sam Tanenhaus, who becomes a writer-at-large. Would Tanenhaus have put a review of Karen Joy Fowler's book on the cover, or would he have made the same kind of dumb, incorrect assumptions about its worth that I did? It's impossible for me to supply a definitive answer, but having been appalled by the casual sexism and remarkably fuddy duddy tone of his review of the Amanda Knox memoir (read it here, if you are so inclined), in which he takes a college girl to task for essentially having been comfortable with the pleasure her body gives and receives (he calls her brazen, although thankfully, he left out the "hussy") my hunch is, I seriously doubt it. He'd probably have put the David Brooks' review of George Packer's "The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America," which ran inside the NYTBR on that same Sunday, on the cover. 

Bing: More on Pamela Paul
 
Many have hailed Paul, only the second woman ever to edit the NYTBR, as an exciting choice to replace Tanenhaus. In the last three years, VIDA, which gathers statistics on gender bias in book review sections for magazines and other publications, has shown that the NYTBR consistently favors male reviewers and authors. When bestselling author Jennifer Weiner, one of the most vocal critics of this practice, heard the news about Paul's hiring she told Poynter:  “I’ve been impressed with Pamela Paul’s writing (she’s my go-to source for picking books for my kids), and she seems aware of the Times’ female trouble. A female editor is no guarantee of instant improvement, but I am optimistic that things will get better for women in the Book Review.”

I'd say they already have.
 

Sex! Booze! Hairdresser Wars! The producer tells all, 50 years after the movie's premiere

By Mary Pols Wed 12:29 PM
In honor of the 50th anniversary of "Cleopatra," widely regarded as the most infamous moving making nightmare of all time, MSN's Page-turner is doing our first give away. We're working with Vintage Books, a division of Random House and the publisher that has brought back one of the deliciously dishy books ever written about the movie, producer Walter Wanger's "My Life With Cleopatra." It's just in time to celebrate the original release of the Elizabeth Taylor-Richard Burton film, which premiered at the Rivoli Theater in New York on June 12, 1963.

Wanger's memoir, first published in 1963, is an often inadvertently hilarious account of the  nearly four years he dedicated to making "Cleopatra." If you were willing to pay a lot for a yellowed paperback or even more for a first edition, you could track down Wanger's book on abebooks.com but I'd never had my hands on a copy until Vintage Books' reissue arrived.

Wanger's memoir (written with Joe Hyams) is a total comedy of errors, or maybe a sexy French farce. He'd been fascinated with Cleopatra since his days at Dartmouth College (class of 1915) and had optioned material with a movie in mind as a young producer. His diary-style entries start in 1958 with Wanger wooing Taylor for the role. She was his dream choice, ever since he'd seen her in "A Place in the Sun." "She is the only woman I have ever known who has the necessary youth, power, and emotion," he wrote. But the president of 20th Century-Fox, Spyros Skouras, wasn't so hot on the idea. As Wanger writes, "he said he didn't like the idea of working with Elizabeth because 'she'll be too much trouble.'"

Bing: More on 'Cleopatra,' starring Elizabeth Taylor


Skouras was so right. Not only did she and her also-married co-star have the affair of the century (and you think the birth of Brangelina was a big deal) but the woman was the walking definition of high maintenance, from her housing needs to her choice of hairdresser. She had every illness under the sun, from boils to fevers to supposed Asian flu and then nearly died from staphylococcus pneumonia. But Wanger never says a bad word about Taylor, even during the times when it seems she really could have dragged herself out of bed to make it to set. He doesn't blame Taylor even when it starts to seem as if the entire cast is also calling in sick. I love this entry from March 4, 1962: Rex Harrison called for the doctor today. The clinic is thriving.

The book covers nearly four years of history, ending with Wanger's visit in the summer of 1962 to a sand and scorpion-plagued set in Egypt that Taylor herself was banned from because she'd made contributions to Israeli charities and there were fears of riots or other reprisals. The film lost its first director halfway through and nearly destroyed the spirit of its second, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, who once said "'Cleopatra was conceived in emergency, shot in hysteria, and wound up in blind panic." It was both legendarily bad and legendarily expensive; in a new afterword to Vintage's edition, film critic Kenneth Turan estimates its cost at $32 to 44 million.

Bing: More on Walter Wanger


There are many books that cover the making of  "Cleopatra," from the carefully researched (Sam Kashner and Nancy Schoenberger's 2010's biography "Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and the Marriage of the Century") to even some fiction (like Jess Walter's highly entertaining "Beautiful Ruins," which featured Richard Burton as a rascally character who impregnated an extra before falling for Liz) that I wasn't sure I needed to know anything more about the making of the film. But I flew through the book, folding over page after page filled with droll tidbits. Like this one, referring to Richard Burton's wife.

MAY 16 1962
Sybil Burton here over the weekend.

MAY 17, 1962
Dick Hanley called to say Liz cannot work today because she has swollen eyes.

If you want to read more, for free, try to win one of 10 copies of "My Life With Cleopatra" from Vintage. Enter to win following these steps.

1.    Like MSN Movies Facebook and follow MSN Movies Twitter

2.    Share the giveaway on your Facebook with your friends and tweet and comment the following message: I want to win the @MSNMovies #Cleoptra giveaway!

3.    Email msnmovies@hotmail.com with the following message: I want to win @MSNMovies #Cleopatra giveaway!

4.    Stay in touch with MSN Movies Facebook to see if you've been selected as the winner

Entries are accepted until the books are gone. Good luck, MSN Book fans!
 

Don't be fooled by the spectre of "the letter"

By Kate Erbland Wed 10:52 AM
When we last reported on the follow-up to Lauren Weisberger’s bestselling 2003 roman à clef, “The Devil Wears Prada,” we weren't thrilled by the promise of picking up with Andrea "Andy" Sachs a decade on. "Revenge Wears Prada" promised to take us back into the world of publishing, with Miranda Priestly still hanging firmly over Andy's head. We bemoaned a number of elements of this plot, questioning things like, "Andy got back into a side of publishing she didn’t like so much, is still afraid of Miranda, and will likely have some relationship issues thanks to her work? Nice maturation there."


The book, predictably, landed on our desk late last week. "Revenge Wears Prada" does indeed stick Andy back into the belly of the beast, but it's also packed with some unexpected twists and turns. The book's dust jacket promises all sorts of juiciness - it makes note of "karma's a bitch," "a secret letter with crushing implications," and Andy realizing that "nothing is at seems" - but that's not all exactly true. 

So why not bust open some "Revenge" myths that are a very part of its marketing? Let's do it!
 

Also, two new novels and a confession about the seduction of pretty covers

By Mary Pols Jun 11, 2013 12:28PM
Another great week for new releases. And wait until you see all the good books coming in the next couple of weeks. If I could freeze time and just read everything appealing that's littered across my office floor, I would.


"Run, Brother, Run: A Memoir of a Murder in My Family"
by David Berg: In 1979 Parade magazine profiled trial lawyer David Berg under a headline that read "Is He the Meanest Lawyer in Town?" Berg admits he was mean, mostly because "I was angry." Eleven years earlier, in 1968 his brother Alan, six years his elder and David's "fulltime cheerleader" was murdered outside a bar. His remains turned up six months later and the man accused of killing him was a hitman named Charles Harrelson, the father of Woody Harrelson. All these years later, Berg has carefully researched the case and his brother's life in an effort to finally come to terms with his loss. This true crime book examines the case from beginning to end, from Harrelson's acquittal to Berg's decision to confront his own father for the role he played in putting his son in harm's way.There's never been any doubt in Berg's mind that Charles Harrelson committed the crime (he talks to the woman who told police she watched Harrelson kill Alan Berg) and it drove him to pursue justice in his own career."Run, Brother, Run" is a fascinating look at a Texas family's history, written in darkly humorous, direct and powerful prose. Trial lawyers are known for being smooth talkers, but Berg proves himself a graceful writer as well.

Bing: More on convicted killer Charles Harrelson


"The Silver Star" by Jeannette Walls: Out about five minutes and already the latest from the author of the mega-hit "The Glass Castle" has already cracked the top #50 sellers on Amazon. She's writing fiction now, albeit fiction with a similar theme (screwed up mothers and what they do to you) and set during the Nixon administration. Two young sisters, Bean, aged 12 and Liz, 15, are deserted by their narcissistic mother. She runs off to look for "herself," leaving them with enough money to keep them going for a month or so. The girls, Bean and Liz, decide to find themselves some more reliable family, so they get on a bus from California to rural Virginia to track down their uncle. There, in a small mill town they come to love their eccentric Southern uncle and begin to build new lives for themselves. But the East has its drama too, including racial strife when the local schools begin to integrate and some dark encounters with the town's resident bad guy, the foreman at the mill.

Bing: More on Jeannette Walls


"The Illusion of Separateness"
By Simon Van Booy: Look, sometimes we judge books by their covers. Or rather we're more drawn to or repulsed by books because of their covers. My friend Sami never wanted to read Willa Cather's "O Pioneers" because the corn fields on the cover reminded her too much of growing up in Kansas. When I saw this novel, which is really more like short stories that eventually begin to intersect and turn into a cohesive whole, I wanted to prop it up somewhere for display. It's so minimalist and elegant. But it turns out that what's inside is equally minimalist and elegant. In Santa Monica, an old man cleans floors at a nursing home and wonders about his life as a foundling in World War II Paris. On the other side of the country, a blind young woman longs for a normal life and takes strength from her grandfather's strange story of survival in World War II. And for one bittersweet moment, these worlds intersect.


"No One Could Have Guessed the Weather"
by Anne Marie-Casey: And sometimes we must pick up a book because the title is so evocative. Otherwise I don't know that I would have opened this novel about four 40 something women in New York coming to terms with their less than beautiful lives. Look at that cover--what is that? Is that the bottom of a stream, filled with weeds and floating leaves? Not, it's an upside woman's head, a new twist on the stick-a-chick's-head-on-it cover. Lucy's husband loses all their money and has to take a low paying job in New York. He announces they'll have vacate their former comfortable suburban New Jersey life and cram themselves (and their two young sons) into an 800 square-foot apartment in the East Village. "The Mothers at the School shrieked divorce," Casey writes. Instead she decides to buck up and embrace New York, as well as the three new friends she makes, all of whom have lives in some state of intriguing disrepair. Likely to appeal to fans of Meg Wolitzer's "The Ten-Year Nap."

 

Go across dimensions with a new brand of hero

By Kate Erbland Jun 11, 2013 8:46AM

Combining both the perennially popular sci-fi genre and the white hot fantasy realm, debut writer Danie Ware's "Ecko Rising" has already been billed as "'The Matrix' meets 'Game of Thrones'...immense fun" by the Financial Times, and now you can get an exclusive look inside the new world that Ware has built in her first novel.


The first of a planned trilogy, "Ecko Rising" is set in a future London where body modification has taken a seemingly logical new direction - it's now technological body modification. Described as "a testament to the extreme capabilities of his society, criminal for hire Ecko is "driven half mad by the systems running his body." Ecko is already a bit out of place in a world that embraces new tech, but when one of his biggest jobs goes awry (and, in a word, offline), Ecko finds himself in a primitive world that's terrified of what they perceive as "magic." 

Bing: More on 'Ecko Rising'


And magic is what Ecko certainly looks like to him. But the new world that Ecko has found himself trapped in comes complete with their own problems, and he may be the only one who can solve them. And that may also lead to his way home.


After the break, check out our exclusive look at the prologue from Danie Ware's "Ecko Rising."
 

And that's about all we know about it

By Kate Erbland Jun 6, 2013 9:41AM
Bestselling author Suzanne Collins, creator of the wildly popular "The Hunger Games" trilogy, already has one new book on deck, but she's already started teasing her next one. Collins' next publication, a children's book called "Year of the Jungle," most likely won't appeal to the YA fans who made "Hunger Games" a hit (it's aimed at a much younger set), but the author hasn't abandoned her main fanbase just yet.

Hypable reports that, while speaking at last week's BookExpo America, Collins told her fans that she next plans to jump back into the YA world with a brand new series. And that's all we know! 


If you're a fan of Collins' work and can't wait to read this new mystery series, why not go back to her first YA works, the lesser-known (but still bestselling!) "The Underland Chronicles" series? The series consists of five books, all published between 2003 and 2007, and centers on young Gregor, who "follows his little sister through a grate in the laundry room of their New York apartment building, [and] he hurtles into the dark Underland beneath the city. There, a conflict is brewing between the humans and the giant creatures that live below. Gregor must find his place in the frightening prophecies he encounters, the strength to protect his family, and the courage to stand up against an army of giant rats." You can purchase the entire set in paperback on Amazon. (We might also owe this one a read post-haste.)


Curious about "Year of the Jungle"? The kiddie-aimed book will feature illustrations by James Proimos, but it's not just a fuzzy picture book, it's actually an autographical work about Collins' own childhood. The book's synopsis tells us: "When young Suzy's father leaves for Vietnam, she struggles to understand what this means for her and her family. What is the jungle like? Will her father be safe? When will he return? The months slip by, marked by the passing of the familiar holidays and the postcards that her father sends. With each one, he feels more and more distant, until Suzy isn't sure she'd even recognize her father anymore." You can probably guess who "Suzy" is. Our heartstrings are suitably pulled.


The book will be released this September, and you can pre-order it here.


The latest film in "The Hunger Games" film franchise, "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire," opens in theaters on November 22.