Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Overlook to Publish Biography of Susan Boyle in February 2010

The first biography of international singing sensation Susan Boyle will be published by The Overlook Press in February 2010. From the moment she burst onto television screens on “Britain’s Got Talent” she became an unexpected and international phenomenon. Her riveting performance of “I Dreamed a Dream” became a YouTube sensation, and her debut album became the fastest selling female debut album of all time worldwide. Since its release in October 2009, "I Dreamed a Dream" has hit number one in the US, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Ireland.

Susan Boyle’s story is now ready to be told. In this entertaining and informative new book, Susan Boyle: Dreams Can Come True, journalist Alice Montgomery charts Boyle’s meteoric rise from humble beginnings in Scotland to global superstardom, exploring the relationships, events, and people that have played a role in her astonishing story – a 21st century fairy tale that became reality. ON SALE FEBRUARY 9!

Susan Hill's THE VOWS OF SILENCE in The Washington Post

Susan Hill's latest Simon Serrailler mystery, The Vows of Silence, is reviewed by Maureen Corrigan in The Washington Post Book World: "The death that will haunt you long after reading Susan Hill's new mystery, The Vows of Silence, is a natural one. Granted, a serial killer is on the loose and young women are being murdered, but it's a mundane killer -- cancer -- whose "crime" is most shockingly dramatized. In this, her fourth police procedural featuring the dour Chief Inspector Simon Serrailler, Hill overturns the usual priorities of the crime novel and devotes her most searing passages not to the twisted rituals of the sniper but, rather, to the exhausting hospital stays and quiet deathbed struggles of a likable minor character in the series.

Hill's preoccupying theme in The Vows of Silence is the randomness of life. Nothing stays put in the world of this novel: Lovers leave, children and old friends mutate into strangers, and a tumor abruptly starts to grow. The serial killer, who chiefly targets brides, is simply the most extreme manifestation of the imminent chaos that always threatens to destroy what's been taken for granted. Hill is a writer who invites the big theological questions into her stories; indeed, Serrailler's on-and-off love interest, Jane Fitzroy, has been ordained as an Episcopal priest. But neither Jane nor her creator supplies easy answers here to the divine mystery of why good people perish while mangy low lifes still draw breath. The short chapters told through the serial killer's point of view are the weakest aspects of the novel and should be dispensed with briskly in deference to how terrific the rest is. Our perpetrator boasts the generic serial killer résumé: early psychological damage caused by a woman, easy access to weapons, flexible work hours that allow time for stalking prey. In a classic narrative move patented by Agatha Christie, the evildoer turns out to be Someone We Already Know. Don't worry. I haven't spoiled the suspense. The mandatory moment of unmasking is more ho-hum than humdinger. The somber Serrailler is thrilled to have his sister, Cat Deerborn, back with her husband, Chris, and their young children in the cathedral town of Lafferton (where the series is set) after they've spent months away on sabbatical in Australia. Cat and Chris are both physicians, so when Chris collapses in the bathroom one evening and the consequent brain scans show a large tumor, everyone knows the score. What follows is a deeply affecting account of how these thoughtful characters deal with the shock of that diagnosis. Hill's restrained style rises to the challenge of rendering the horror and helplessness engulfing all concerned. Aside from the serial killer saga, "everything else" includes other, more engrossing plot strands concerning Serrailler's relationship with the reluctant Jane and the struggles of a widowed friend of Cat's to enjoy a new romance despite the disapproval of her adolescent son, who has fallen prey to a fundamentalist cult. The fact that "The Vows of Silence" is light on what traditionally constitutes a mystery plot hardly registers. It's the intelligence of this brooding series that rivets a reader's attention."

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Nigel Lawson, author of AN APPEAL TO REASON, in The Wall Street Journal

Lord Nigel Lawson, author of An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming, offers his perspective on the Copenhagen climate change conference in The Wall Street Journal: "The world's political leaders, not least President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Gordon Brown, are in a state of severe, almost clinical, denial. While acknowledging that the outcome of the United Nations climate-change conference in Copenhagen fell short of their demand for a legally binding, enforceable and verifiable global agreement on emissions reductions by developed and developing countries alike, they insist that what has been achieved is a breakthrough and a decisive step forward.

Just one more heave, just one more venue for the great climate change traveling circus—Mexico City next year^and the job will be done. Or so we are told. It is, of course, the purest nonsense. The only breakthrough was the political coup for China and India in concluding the anodyne communique with the United States behind closed doors, with Brazil and South Africa allowed in the room "and Europe left to languish in the cold outside.

Far from achieving a major step forward, Copenhagen—predictably—achieved precisely nothing. The neatest thing to a commitment was the promise by the developed world to pay the developing world $30 billion of "climate aid" over the next three years, rising to $100 billion a year from 2020. Not only is that (perhaps fortunately) not legally binding, but there is no agreement whatsoever about which countries it will go to, in which amounts, and on what conditions. The reasons for the complete and utter failure of Copenhagen are both fundamental and irresolvable. The first is that the economic cost of decarbonizing the world's economies is massive, and of at least the. same order of magnitude as any benefits it may conceivably bring in terms of a cooler world in the next century.

The overriding priority for the developing world has to be the fastest feasible rate of economic development, which means, inter alia, using the cheapest available source of energy: carbon energy. Moreover, the argument that they should make this economic and human sacrifice to benefit future generations 100 years and more hence is all the less compelling, given that these future generations will, despite any problems caused by warming, be many times better off than the people of the developing world are today."

An Appeal to Reason is now available in a new paperback edition.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Max Frei's THE STRANGER Named Fandomania's Top Book for 2009

This just in from Kelly Melcher at Fandomania: Max Frei's The Stranger has been chosen as the Best Book of 2009! And here's why:

"The Stranger has to be one of the most imaginative and quirky stories released in a long time. It doesn’t use the supernatural as a crutch, but rather as a spice for the story. Readers will jump right into a story with a character, Max, who has one foot in our reality but the rest of his body firmly planted in a world straight out of one of his dreams. The Stranger combines oddball characters with a sense of danger, a splash of detective work, and a smidge of the fantastic into an imaginative and enveloping escape from reality. The story is told in episodic chapters, each one building upon the last, but not directly linked to the one before it. Imagine reading several Sherlock Holmes stories back to back, only in this case the stories feature strange devices, supernatural mysteries, and a cast of characters all of whom EXCEPT for our detective seem to know what is going on! Max and the other characters grow with each past experience, but readers could almost turn to any chapter and quickly figure out what is going on. Everything else aside, this is by far one of the most entertaining books to come around in a long time. It would be surprising if you could read this with a straight face the whole time, and yet the jovial nature doesn’t give way to lackluster writing. The Stranger is consistent throughout and stands head and shoulders above most books that have even come out in the last decade."

More Praise for RETURN TO THE LITTLE KINGDOM: Steve Jobs, the Creation of Apple, and How it Changed the World

Another excellent notice for Return to the Little Kingdom by Michael Moritz in Author Magazine: "Moritz tells the tale of the early years of the Apple Computer Company, starting with young Steve Jobs and Stephen Wozniak as high-school students and ending with the creation of the Macintosh. Even in the 1960s, the Mountain View-Cupertino-Sunnyvale area of Northern California was a hotbed of engineers and companies like Sylvania, Intel, and Ampex who made early electronic devices for Lockheed, which had large military contracts. The two Steves were “phone phreaks,” early hackers who built their own “blue boxes” that could fool phone company computers into allowing free long-distance calls. The lessons in circuitry and design that they taught themselves while “phreaking” soon led to building their own computers. Moritz recreates for us the wild, seats-of-their-pants days of Jobs and Wozniak scrambling to obtain funding (Jobs sold his car, Woz his personal calculator) for their project, and then getting friends and family to help assemble the first Apples in garages and bedrooms, surrounded by bags of computer chips. From the start, though both were highly-skilled, Jobs was clearly more interested in style and appearance, while his partner tackled technical aspects. The lesson of Apple may be that Jobs' obsession with details has always paid off. Younger readers will particularly enjoy learning about the Homebrew Computer Club, the 1970s bastion of geek power that launched Silicon Valley back when programs like BASIC came on cassette tapes. Older readers will thrill to the tales of backstabbing and greed that hit the Valley when Apple went public. This is a great entrepreneurial story, well-researched and well-told."

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Billy Lombardo's THE MAN WITH TWO ARMS Reviewed in Publishers Weekly

Publishers Weekly offers a review of Chicago writer Billy Lombardo's new novel, The Man With Two Arms, coming in February: "This debut novel from Lombardo follows ably in the cleat-prints of W.P. Kinsella and Bernard Malamud, chronicling the life of a talented Chicago pitcher. In their middle-class Chicago suburb of the mid-1980s, baseball nut Henry Granville and his wife, Lori, face marital discord regarding Henry’s immediate, insistent campaign to commit their baby son Danny to a life in baseball. When Henry discovers his son’s natural ambidexterity, visions of raising a superstar “switch pitcher” (an almost unheard-of athletic skill) kick his obsession into overdrive. One rocky boyhood later, Danny signs with the Cubs and finds instant fame (“Danny can throw like Tom Seaver with one arm and Sandy Koufax with the other”) as well as a bit of infamy; he’s a “freak” in the eyes of opponents. Meanwhile, Danny falls in love with an art instructor and nurtures another rare talent: clairvoyance. Fans of sports fiction should find this an enjoyable trip to the mound, with just enough old-fashioned Americana magic to keep them guessing."

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

More Praise for FIRE IN THE EAST, Book One in Harry Sidebottom's WARRIOR OF ROME Series

Harry Sidebottom's first volume in the Warrior of Rome series, Fire in the East, continues to draw attention from readers and reviewers:

"By AD 255, the Roman Empire struggles to maintain order especially in the outlying sectors as barbarians and infidels pose viable threats as Command and Control is almost nonexistent. Emperors Valerian and Gallienus send the honorary Dux Ripea, Marcus Clodius Bastilla, to take command of the legion on the eastern border. Marcus leaves his wife in Rome and travels to his new outpost. He arrives in Arete, Syria where his force is struggling to defend against the overwhelming Sassanid Persian army. He expects reinforcements but has no idea how many or when. Meanwhile, he finds treachery and betrayal from within as traitors, especially amongst the elite patrician officers, resent someone who was not even a citizen too long ago ordering them about and the Persians have assassins trying to kill him.

This is an intriguing historical thriller that has relevance today as Harry Sidebottom provides insight into how destructive the Roman Empire can be to defend its freedoms by destroying those very liberties with security enforcement filled with bloody battles. The story line is action-packed from the moment Marcus says good bye to his wife as he deploys where he is unwanted and knows treachery and betrayal will be the norm as no one has his back except for perhaps stabbing him there. Fans will relish this first Warriors of Rome profound thought provoking ancient historical military thriller as Mr. Sidebottom makes a strong but bloody case affirming Benjamin Franklin's "They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security". - Harriet Klausner

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Susan Hill's THE VOWS OF SILENCE Reviewed in ForeWord Magazine

Susan Hill's fourth Simon Serrailler mystery, The Vows of Silence, is reviewed in ForeWord Magazine's December issue: "There is a serial killer on the loose in the English country township of Lafferton and it has everyone, including Chief Inspector Simon Serrailler, flinching at every car that backfires. What makes this case especially baffling is that the killer seems to follow no pattern—the weapon is a rifle in one case, a handgun in another. The only linkage among the growing number of murders is a frightening one. The victims are all women.

This is the premise for Susan Hill’s fourth entry in the police procedural series about C.I. Simon Serrailler. What separates Ms. Hill’s work from the groaning shelf of mystery and procedural novels is her ability to tell a story without having the reader thumb back a few pages to feel caught up. Her style is straightforward and smoothes out the ridges of her complex plotlines. And there are enough twists and turns in The Vows of Silence to make the reader reach for a literary Dramamine.

As if it’s not enough to have everyone breathing down his neck over the unsolved murders, Simon Serrailler has enough personal problems to give the most optimistic among us a splitting headache. His sister Cat has returned from Australia with her husband, who is dying from an insidious brain tumor. Serrailler, very fond of his brother-in-law, broods about the inevitable. His mother has passed away some time ago and now his father has taken up with a woman he doesn’t approve of, and, oh yes, Simon is also estranged from his own love interest, the Reverend Jane Fitzroy, who has moved from Lafferton to put space between them. There’s an old cliché in the writing business that says you can never give your hero enough problems, an idea to which Ms. Hill obviously subscribes.

Susan Hill’s portrayal of English country life seems spot on. Her narrative voice, pacing, and, especially, her ability to create believable characters, makes reading a pleasure. Finally, The Vows of Silence passes this reviewer’s litmus test for any author who writes a series: it’s time to go back and read the first three Serrailler books. After that, I’ll join the burgeoning Hill fan club that awaits the fifth Simon Serrailler novel. - Reviewed by Michael Lee

R.J. Ellory's A QUIET BELIEF IN ANGELS Named Top Mystery Book of 2009 by The Strand Magazine

Andrew Gulli, managing editor of The Strand Magazine, has chosen R.J. Ellory's A Quiet Belief in Angels as his top pick of books published in 2009. This beloved quarterly magazine for mystery and short story lovers not only publishes book reviews, interviews, and feature articles, it also delivers gripping tales of mystery and suspense in a variety of settings (from Victorian England to turn of the century Prague to modern day England and America) by some of today's leading mystery writers including writers. On behalf of Roger Ellory and The Overlook Press, our heartfelt thanks to Andrew and everyone at The Strand.

Monday, December 14, 2009

Holiday Gift Pick: SPLENDIDLY UNREASONABLE INVENTORS

Just in time for Christmas is the delightful Splendidly Unreasonable Inventors, a quirky and entertaining look at the lives, loves, and deaths of 30 pioneering inventors who changed the world. In this new book, author Jeremy Coller focuses on the individual rather the invention and explores the ways in which he or she did or did not succeed in bringing their vision to fruition. On one level, the book is a collection of fascinating stories packed with entertaining, often humorous nuggets of information. On another level, these stories provide an unconventional look at the processes and personalities that created products that changed the world. In bookstores everywhere!

Friday, December 11, 2009

Spend Christmas with ELVIS!

Christmas at Graceland is one of the best times of the year for Elvis fans, as readers of Adam Victor's monumental The Elvis Enyclopedia know. During his lifetime, Elvis released two original Christmas records (Elvis Christmas in 1957 and The Wonderful World of Christmas in 1971). The 1957 album was re-released as Elvis's Christmas Album, which has become Elvis's best-selling LP of all time! Last year, Elvis Presley Christmas Duets was released, featuring Elvis's classic holiday songs with new recordings by some of today's biggest stars paired with the King's original vocals.

Elvis fans can find out more about Elvis and his deep love for the Christmas season in The Elvis Encyclopedia. A perfect gift for Elvis fans, this is a visual compendium of Elvis's life, offering hundreds of photographs, ranging from never-before-seen unposed moments to the extraordinary iconic images the world has come to love. Fans and scholars finally have easy access to all of the information on Elvis s life and times, testing what is real against legend. The facts are represented in full a childhood mired in poverty, his unstoppable rise to the top with over 150 gold, platinum, or multi-platinum albums, 31 feature films, and 14 Grammy awards, his marriage to Priscilla, his early death. Entries cover every significant aspect of Elvis and his world from family members, lovers, benefactors, mentors, agents, directors, co-stars, and coaches. Complete with cross-referencing and a comprehensive bibliography, The Elvis Encyclopedia surpasses everything that has come before it.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

LOST BUILDINGS Featured in Dallas Morning News

The Dallas Morning News takes a look at Lost Buildings: Demolished, Destroyed, Imagined, Reborn, by Jonathan Glancey: "Glancey, a British architectural writer, here looks at what was, as well as what might have been, in a history of buildings that have vanished for unknown reasons, been demolished, been lost to war or acts of God, or dreamed of but never built. He plumbs the heights, and depths, of architectural fashion – a fickle concept that, for instance, allowed the 1964 demolition of New York City's original Pennsylvania Station, a superb example of classical revival architecture whose destruction was seen by many as city-sponsored vandalism. With lively prose, Glancey metaphorically trots from the crumbling of ancient Troy to the 1989 fall of the Berlin wall. On page 151, you'll see an image that looks eerily familiar, an 1855 view of the Crystal Palace on London's Sydenham Hill. That building was destroyed in 1836, but pretty much recreated for Dallas' Infomart, built in 1985 by Trammell Crow."

Tuesday, December 08, 2009

Nigel Lawson's AN APPEAL TO REASON Now in Paperback

New in paperback this week - and just in time for the Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen - is Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming, by Nigel Lawson.

In this well-informed and hard-hitting response to the scaremongering of the climate alarmists, Nigel Lawson, former Secretary of State for Energy under Margaret Thatcher, argues that it is time for us to take a cool look at global warming. Lawson carefully and succinctly examines all aspects of the global warming issue: the science, the economics, the politics, and the ethics. He concludes that the conventional wisdom on the subject is suspect on a number of grounds, that global warming is not the devastating threat to the planet it is widely alleged to be, and that the remedy that is currently being proposed, which is in any event politically unattainable, would be worse that the threat it is supposed to avert. Argued with logic, common sense, and even wit, and thoroughly sourced and referenced, Appeal to Reason makes a cool contribution to the heated debate.

Monday, December 07, 2009

THE BEST OF PUNCH CARTOONS in New York Times Book Review

Best of Punch Cartoons is reviewed by Charles McGrath in the Holiday issue of the New York Times Book Review: "The British humor magazine Punch, adornment of countless proper ­middle-class homes, not to mention club libraries, dentists’ offices and Oxbridge common rooms, ceased publication, after more than 160 years, in 2002. It had been on life support since the early ’90s and temporarily went under until the Egyptian businessman Mohamed al-Fayedbought the magazine and relaunched it in 1996, for much the same reason, it would appear, that he bought Harrods department store a few years earlier — because he cared more about venerable British institutions than the British themselves did. In the foreword to The Best of Punch Cartoons, a coffee-table-size anthology edited by Helen Walasek, he writes that Punch is still “a national treasure.

The problem with national treasures, though, is that they’re seldom very funny. What ultimately did Punch in was probably the success of the satiric magazine Private Eye (which also helped inspire Spy in this country). It was younger, snarkier, more topical and original and a whole lot more fun. But Punch had for years been running on fumes, except for the cartoons, which got better, oddly, as the rest of the magazine slipped into a kind of genteel, un-funny mediocrity. Circulation began to decline in the ’50s, after a postwar peak, and yet as you leaf through this big anthology, which is arranged more or less chronologically, you can’t help noticing that that’s also when the cartoons start to come alive and get looser, freer, funnier. The written humor — the light verse and comic essays that had so long been a Punch staple — beganto become ossified, and it’s as if the artists, seeing the editors and writers nodding off in their club chairs,decided they would carry the show by themselves.

Read straight through, from front to back, “The Best of Punch Cartoons” is more instructive than it is amusing. In some ways it’s a study in the evolution of the cartoon itself. The earliest examples in the book, dating back to the mid-19th century, mostly aspire to the condition of book illustration. They’re fussy, detailed woodcuts reminiscent of Cruikshank, say, or Tenniel. The best of these early artists was Charles Keene, whose cross-hatched drawings, subtly shaded, were admired both by Degas and by Whistler, who thought Keene the greatest English artist since Hogarth. Hogarth was funnier. Keene had no ear for a joke, but he was only slightly more tone deaf than many of his contemporaries. Cartoon captions in those days tended to be written in dialogue form (“Diner: ‘Thompson, do the members ask for this wine?’ Head waiter (sotto voce): ‘Not twice, sir!’ ”), and by today’s standard they were often astonishingly wordy. Thackeray, who drew (quite skillfully) as well as wrote for Punch, has one here that goes on for a couple of paragraphs.

The Best of Punch Cartoons is as much a document of social history as it is a cartoon album, and it’s hard to read this big book without a twinge of nostalgia for a bygone era — if you’re an American, for a time when the English were more English and not quite so much like us. Even those ponderous, labored Victorian cartoons have their charm, for probably no one will ever again take being funny quite this seriously."

Friday, December 04, 2009

Two New Memoirs Coming in January 2010

Coming next month are two extraordinary memoirs: Jid Lee's To Kill a Tiger, an unforgettable story of one woman's childhood and five generations of Korean history; and Spilling the Beans, the entertaining and heartfelt autobiography of Clarissa Dickson Wright from television's Two Fat Ladies.

YEAR OF THE HORSE and THE ALCHEMASTER'S APPRENTICE in Philadelphia Weekly Press


Philadelphia Weekly Press includes two Overlook titles in the December round-up of Science Fiction, or nearly science fiction, books - The Alchemaster's Apprentice by Walter Moers and Year of the Horse by Justin Allen.

"Walter Moers works in a surreal fantasy world that has a unique logic to its background. Diseases inflict the city of Malaisia. Ghoolion, the alchemist-in chief, lives in an ancient castle and collects fat from rare animals. When the talking cat (crat) Echo, who may be the last of his kind, is turned out on the street when his mistress dies; he is near starvation when Ghoolian makes him an offer. He’ll be fed and amused for one full moon, and then killed for his fat. It seems a good deal at first because death is near, but as Echo recovers from the street he soon wants to break his contract. Ghoolion tells Echo his secrets as he prepares marvelous meals, making Echo The Alchemaster’s Apprentice. Echo, like all crats, can talk in any language, so he talks to the blood drinking, bat-like, leathermice; and the wise owl on the roof, Theodore T. Theodore. Soon he is working with the last Ugly in the town, Ghoolian’s enemy, a woman secretly in love with Ghoolian. I was so caught up in the tale that I had to sneak a peak at the end to discover if Echo did, indeed survive. This is a children’s book for adults who want to remember the joy of youth, but want more complexity."

"Justin Allen has translated the Hobbit into a western coming-of-age novel in The Year of the Horse. Our hero is a fifteen-year-old Chinese boy born on the banks of the great river in the St. Frances Chinatown, Tzu-lu. A great gun-fighter (wizard) comes to town to deal with Lu’s alchemist grandfather, and Lu finds himself volunteered to go on an expedition to find hidden gold. Gollem is present as an Indian chief, but the magic bullets come from Pecos Bill, which was a nice touch. There are also references to Sleepy Hollow and Rip Van Winkle. The main villain is Old Scratch, i.e. Satan. The quoted reviewers didn’t catch the parallels with the classic tale because the magic is kept to a minimum, and they also didn’t catch on to the fact that the background is not quite our America. Lots of fun."


Thursday, December 03, 2009

More Praise for Penny Vincenzi's WINDFALL

Another stellar review for Penny Vincenzi's Windfall has arrived: "In London 1935, Cassia Tallow has been married to a practicing doctor Edward for seven years while she has stayed home to raise their three young children. She is somewhat envious of her spouse as she also was trained as a doctor, but he insists she stay at home. Cassia is scrubbing the alter steps when she learns she inherited a fortune from her godmother, Lady Beatty, who drank Champagne with the rich, aristocratic and famous like Edward VIII. With a half a million pounds, Cassia has the means to join the upper crust if she chooses or practice medicine to the neglected working-class women as she once dreamed of; something her husband objects to. However, Cassia soon begins to learn that her liberating windfall may not rightfully belong to her; ethical as always, she investigates with a need to learn the truth. Sometimes the truth will not set you free as Cassia learns that with each revelation comes increasing danger.

This a typical entertaining Penny Vincenzi historical thriller as the ethical heroine tries to do what is right, but finds that dangerous. Cassia makes the story line work as her actions after learning of her WINDFALL place her in opposition with her demanding spouse and to a degree her children, but eventually she goes after what she wants for herself: providing medical care to impoverish women. Fans of the author and those who enjoy a between World Wars English historical will want to read Ms. Vincenzi's blockbuster bonkbuster as the British would say over a cup of Earl Grey. - Midwest Book Review

R. J. Ellory's A QUIET BELIEF IN ANGELS: "A Gripping Mystery, Beautifully Written"

Julie Rose reviews R.J. Ellory's thriller A Quiet Belief in Angels in the current issue of Historical Novels Review: "A Quiet Belief in Angels follows narrator Joseph Vaughan, an author, who recounts the story of his life, from his time as a child in rural Georgia in the early 1940s to a hot, dark hotel room in 1960s New York City, where we learn that Joseph has just shot a man. Previously published in over 20 languages and a bestseller in the UK, A Quiet Belief in Angels is the first of Ellory’s books to be available in the US. In a series of flashbacks and flash forwards, Joseph tells the story of his life, wreathed in heartache and tragedy, defined by a series of child mutilations and murders in his own hometown. When he finally escapes Georgia and moves to New York City to chase his dream of becoming a writer, he finds that has not escaped, and that tragedy and death itself has followed him. Ellory renders mid-20th century America convincingly, with a good sense of place and time, through both description and realistic dialogue. That said, while the Georgia sections ring particularly true, the Manhattan passages suffer from too many historical details shoe-horned in. However, those quibbles are minor. This is a gripping mystery, beautifully written."

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Irene Levine's BEST FRIENDS FOREVER Offers Advice on Breaking Up with Your BFF

Dr. Irene S. Levine, author of Best Friends Forever, offers salient advice on breaking up with your best friend in a feature story posted on Lemondrop: It's important to recognize that not all friendships last forever," says Dr. Irene S. Levine, professor of psychiatry at NYU and author of Best Friends Forever: Surviving a Breakup with Your Best Friend. "They're dynamic and change over time, and two friends don't always change in the right direction." Here, she gives us the how-to on parting ways with your best friend.

Heed the signs. "When being together feels like it's consistently draining you of energy, it's time to think about ending the friendship," Dr. Levine says. Does your stomach knot up every time she calls to meet up? Does she always leave you hanging when you need her most while you drop everything to be by her side? Realize that relationships aren't perfect, but if its become a toxic one filled with mistrust and disagreements rather than movie nights and martinis, it could be creeping towards its expiration date.

Break it down gently. Remember that you were besties once upon a time, so try to keep the hurt to a minimum. Plus, she might not have a clue that you want out. "Avoid a direct confrontation and don't breakup in the heat of an argument," Dr. Levine suggests. "Unless there was a betrayal that you need to talk about openly, step back slowly, seeing less and less of one another."

Expect backlash. Not only will this affect your ex-buddy, but any mutual friends as well. Let them know that you're no longer BFFs, but hold off on the dirty details. "Try to understand the hurt your friend feels at being dumped without having a say in the matter," Dr. Levine says. "You'd probably feel the same way." And own up to the breakup. "Instead of blaming the other person, assume responsibility for your decision," she adds.

Heal and move on. Pity parties shouldn't be the only activities on your calendar. "Engage in life with the people and things you enjoy," Dr. Levine suggests. "Try to remember all you're taking away from the relationship and the lessons learned."

More Praise for Susan Hill's THE VOWS OF SILENCE

Susan Hill's The Vows of Silence in the Midwest Book Review: "In Lafferton, a culprit uses a handgun to kill newlywed Melanie Drew in her apartment. Soon after that a sniper uses a rifle to shoot into a crowd standing outside a nightclub. Next a gun is fired killing a mother standing with her infant. The seemingly random killings have the townsfolk frightened and panicked. Lafferton Police Chief Inspector Simon Serrailler and his unit see no ties beyond the age and sex of the victims. The three homicides is made even more complicated by the use of two weapons. Simon wonders if two killers are stalking the streets yet keeps going back to the concept of a psychopathic serial killer. As he struggles with preventing the next murder, his sister Cat has health issues and his nephew is known for creative cheating at Scrabble. The police procedural subplot is well written, filled with suspense and has a red herring suspect, but the emotional intensity happens more to people in Simon's personal circle as he is the "watcher" even with Jane Fitzroy, a woman he is attracted to. The story line is fast-paced and Susan Hill effortlessly moves back and forth between the case (to include the killer's perspective) and Simon's personal life. British police procedural fans will enjoy Simon's not simple investigation and look for his previous caseload (The Various Haunts of Men, The Pure in Heart, and The Risk of Darkness).

Tuesday, December 01, 2009

Celebrate Twelve Days of Wodehouse with Nonsuch Book Blog

We're big fans of the Nonsuch Book blog, and are delighted with share the joy of P.G. Wodehouse this holiday season with the Twelve Days of Wodehouse. Readers of The Winged Elephant can join the fun by entering in this spectacular contest and win one of those gorgeous volumes from Overlook's Collector's Wodehouse series. The giveaway begins today and runs until December 12, with a featured Wodehouse title every day.

Meet Deirdre O'Connell, author of THE BALLAD OF BLIND TOM, at Upcoming Events

Deirdre O'Connell, author of The Ballad of Blind Tom, Slave Pianist, will discuss the life and times of Blind Tom Wiggins at a number of special events this week. O'Connell, an Australian writer and filmmaker, has written the definitive biography of Blind Tom Wiggins, slave pianist and autistic savant, who was one of the country's most popular entertainers in the late 19th century. His extraordinary life, born into slavery and later rising to the heights of musical stardom, is a fascinating and uniquely American story.

Meet Deirdre O'Connell at these special events:

Thursday, December 3 @ 6:00pm
Hue Man Bookstore
2319 Frederick Douglass Blvd (Btwn 124th & 125th Sts)
New York, NY
http://www.huemanbookstore.com/

Saturday, December 5 @ 1:00pm
African American Museum in Philadelphia
701 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA
http://www.aampmuseum.org/

Tuesday, December 8th @ 7:15pm
DeKalb County Public Library
215 Sycamore Street
Decatur, Georgia
http://www.georgiacenterforthebook.org/

Wednesday, December 9th @ 7:00pm
Columbus Library
3000 Macon Road
Columbus, Georgia
http://www.georgiacenterforthebook.org/