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Five of the hottest books we can't wait to read in January
Maybe you received a book store gift card over the holiday season? Maybe you’re looking for ideas on how to spend it?
Read on, to learn about some exciting titles that will show up in stores and on library shelves in the next month, including a true crime investigation and, first up, the latest twistathon from British novelist Alice Feeney. ...Read more
Five of the hottest books we can't wait to read in January
Maybe you received a book store gift card over the holiday season? Maybe you’re looking for ideas on how to spend it?
Read on, to learn about some exciting titles that will show up in stores and on library shelves in the next month, including a true crime investigation and, first up, the latest twistathon from British novelist Alice Feeney. ...Read more
Love both trees and poetry? There's a place for you in Minnesota
MINNEAPOLIS -- Joyce Kilmer famously wrote, “I think that I shall never see/A poem lovely as a tree.” Well, south Minneapolis has a tree that Kilmer would go nuts for.
It’s the Little Free Poet Tree, located in front of Davin Haukebo-Bol’s home at 4026 3rd Av. S. Affixed to an oak in the boulevard is a small, windowed box that contains ...Read more
Ian Rankin recommends a gritty crime novel and a Jilly Cooper romance
Ian Rankin is the best-selling author of the Inspector Rebus mysteries and other books. A multiple-award winner, the Edinburgh-based novelist has received an OBE and knighthood for his service to literature.
Early one morning while traveling in Paris recently, Rankin took the Q&A and shared a wealth of book recommendations and more.
Q. ...Read more
Review: Life seems to have passed by Eddie Winston, but he gets another chance in 'delightful' novel
Eddie Winston is 90, but for all practical purposes he is more like 17. Like a teenager, he’s gregarious, gangly but strong (few 90-year-olds can sit in the grass for a picnic lunch and then hop up again no problem) and — most importantly — he has yet to enjoy his first kiss.
This unlikely but delightful character is at the heart of ...Read more
Column: 'I stay up too late,' 'There are stacks everywhere' and other tales of a professional reader
The me of 20 months ago, before I became the interim books editor, would be shocked at some things the current me does.
I never used to read more than one book at a time, for instance. I used to always finish books. And there was a time when I could walk from my living room to my kitchen without plowing into multiple stacks of books. But those ...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Dec. 21, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2024 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2024, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. James. ...Read more
Review: In 'The Rest Is Memory,' a photo drives novelist to imagine the life of girl who died in Auschwitz
A black-and-white photograph of a young girl. Her hair has been roughly shaved. She has a bruise under her lower lip. She is wearing a striped concentration camp uniform. On the shirt, her number is discernible: 26947. Photographer Wilhelm Brasse’s camera doesn’t lie: His subject stares straight ahead, not with indifference or defiance but ...Read more
What a $500 book about Las Vegas tells us about the Strip
LAS VEGAS — Light reading takes a vacation this holiday season with “The Vegas Book.”
Written by historian, frequent Las Vegas visitor and accomplished poker player Joris Dekkers, this chronicle of several of Las Vegas’ founding legends weighs in at 18 pounds. Its 450 pages are dedicated to nearly 30 extensive interviews of Las Vegas ...Read more
Why 'Didion & Babitz' author warns readers: Don't be a baby
In “Didion & Babitz,” author Lili Anolik opens with some advice: “Reader, Don’t be a baby.”
It’s an apt warning for readers who might consider themselves Joan Didion and/or Eve Babitz aficionados. While their most ardent fans — Sixties counterculture devotees and literary It-girl wannabes (of which I am both) — know the lore, ...Read more
A divisive factory farm battle in southern Minnesota takes center stage in new book
Sonja Trom Eayrs, a Twin Cities attorney, grew up on a farm outside Blooming Prairie, Minnesota. A decade ago, Eayrs started waging a litigation campaign in Dodge County to compel local governments to enforce the rules against the growth of massive hog operations.
While small victories in court were ultimately swallowed on appeal, Eayrs has now...Read more
Review: New book argues the late composer Stephen Sondheim's songs can teach us a lot about life
The problem with Richard Schoch’s “How Sondheim Can Change Your Life” is its title. Other than that, it is a valuable addition to the library of any fan of musical theater and certainly every Stephen Sondheim fanatic.
The book’s premise is that “a prolonged encounter with [his work] will reveal predicaments — and the paths out of ...Read more
Review: In new collection, a book store attracts the wrong kind of customers -- the murdering kind
Why are the holidays such a popular time to bump someone off?
Fictionally speaking, December may be the most murder-y time of the year. Eventually, most popular mystery writers — from classic practitioners such as Agatha Christie (”Hercule Poirot’s Christmas”) to contemporary writers such as Peter Swanson (”The Christmas Guest”) —...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Dec. 14, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2024 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2024, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. "James: A ...Read more
This week's bestsellers from Publishers Weekly
Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, Dec. 14, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by Circana BookScan © 2024 Circana.
(Reprinted from Publishers Weekly, published by PWxyz LLC. © 2024, PWxyz LLC.)
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. James. ...Read more
Meet the widower who wrote a book to introduce his grandson to the grandma he never met
When his daughter and son-in-law visited Ken Rohlf on his birthday in September 2023 to tell him they were expecting a child, two words came to mind for the soon-to-be-grandfather: “joyful” and “tough.”
The first adjective is obvious, and proved to be true when Oliver was born this summer. The other, though, is because Rohlf knew ...Read more
Review: The story behind the singalong holiday classic that shall reign forever and ever
When I was a teenager in Tennessee during the 1980s, Christmas officially launched the day after Thanksgiving: holly wreaths hung on front doors, shoppers thronging local malls. My father busied himself in the kitchen, assembling tins of Chex mix and pecan-freckled cheeseballs, gifts for friends in our Baptist congregation. On Christmas Eve, we ...Read more
So you say you're bummed there was no new Ann Patchett novel this year? We have ideas...
MINNEAPOLIS -- Look, we get it. Ann Patchett is reliably great. Her books are always best sellers. We know she’s busy running a book store and campaigning against censorship and also that finished novels don’t just appear out of thin air. We’re not asking for her to be as prolific as, say, Mr. Nine-Books-a-Year James Patterson. But it sure...Read more
Ella Baxter wrote a 20,000-word letter to her stalker. It became her novel, 'Woo Woo'
Ella Baxter’s novel “Woo Woo” wasn’t supposed to be published.
It wasn’t even meant to be a novel, Baxter says. She’d sat down to feverishly pen a letter to the stalker who’d been driving her mad for a year and a half. Twenty-thousand words later, the catharsis was too potent, the energy that kept the words flowing was too ...Read more
The dead body in his bed is pure fiction, says 'I Might Be In Trouble' author
Daniel Aleman and the protagonist of his new novel share the same profession, the same initials, and the same plot points in their third novel. But there’s one key difference, Aleman insists.
“I promise you, I have not woken up next to a dead body.”
The protagonist in “I Might Be In Trouble,” David, wrote a debut book that was a ...Read more