Thursday, December 30, 2010

Happy New Year!


And we're wrapping things up on our last workday of 2010. Hooray!

A few notes and some resolutions for 2011:

- We're always trying to build better relationships with online book reviewers. Have a book blog? Interested in getting our catalogs, requesting review copies or being more involved with Overlook's books? Get in touch! kgales at overlookny dot com.
- It's our 40th anniversary, which we'd like to commemorate as deserves our over-the-hill status.
- We have some amazing books coming out in January, including the Sarajevo Haggadah and the wonderful memoir from the late Philip Carlo The Killer Within. Look for more information about these two outstanding titles as we kick off 2011 strong!
- We're printing more copies of Charles Portis' novels as quickly as we can, and the ebook of True Grit will be released January 14. Sorry about any backorders! Feel free to get in touch with us if you have more questions, or order through our website.
- We're going to build up better blog content and are excited to get more of our Overlook staffers involved more regularly.
- Giveaways! Our holiday giveaways went so well that we'd like to do them more regularly. PG Wodehouse, new releases, special editions and more...here, Facebook and Twitter is where you'll be the first to know about the Winged Elephant's gift deliveries!
- Read, read, read. We already do a ton of reading in our offices and at home (unsurprising, right?). But we'd like to expand our horizons--more classics, more non-Overlook books, more literary experiments, and not writing off books just because they're in our mom's book club.

What are your literary resolutions for 2011? Any changes you'd like to see around here? Let us know! See you in 2011!

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Great discussion on our Facebook


about True Grit. If you're interested in the novel, it's definitely the place to be--people are posting their thoughts on the book, the new film adaptation and other Portis-y facts. We'll also continue to update it through awards season and with any particularly interesting tidbits about our new edition. Apologies for the backorders and lack of e-book, too--our newest printing will be shipping out soon and the e-book will be available Jan. 14.

Meanwhile, the lack of new editions means that people are checking out used bookstores and eBay for older editions. While of course we love the shiny new movie tie-in and think that Donna Tartt's introduction is a must-read, some of these are absolutely gorgeous and awesome keepsake. And there's something we really like about used (pre-owned?) books--imagining who was first enthralled by True Grit is really something fun.

Either way, thanks for getting involved in the discussion of this American classic. Coming tomorrow...our literary resolutions for 2011! We hope to hear some of yours for inspiration as well.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Happy birthday, Charles Portis!


A very happy birthday to Charles Portis, one of our most beloved authors. Hope you all got copies of True Grit--or even better, other Portis novels like the delightful The Dog of the South--in your holiday stockings this year!

Anyone see the new Coen Brothers film yet? We'd love to hear your comparisons of the book to the movie...

And a reminder for anyone who got a brand-new ereader this holiday season--TRUE GRIT will be released across all ebook platforms on January 14.

Happy reading, and if you're one of our East Coast readers, hope you got to stay home curled up with a good book and a warm drink today! Snowcapalypse now?

(Taken by Kate in publicity walking to work this morning. Gray, slushy snow is just no fun at all...)

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Happy True Grit Day!




The new film adaptation of TRUE GRIT opens today nationwide. Have any plans to see it? If so, did you read the book? What did you think? We'd love to hear your thoughts.

Also, our holiday giveaways are officially over (congrats to @ConMartin on Twitter for winning). Thanks for entering! We had a fantastic response and will be doing more giveaways in 2011, so make sure you're subscribed to our blog updates, follow us on Twitter, and are a fan of Overlook Press on Facebook.

We're in the office for the rest of this week and all next week, so you'll still hear our #fridayreads, get a glimpse at some of our publishing-related resolutions and updates on your favorite Overlook books--whether it's Charles Portis, P.G. Wodehouse, Katie Arnoldi or something else. And we have a fantastic 2011 publishing schedule that we know you'll want to see as well.

Thanks for a wonderful 2010 holiday season.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

On the 12th day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...


...WINNERS CHOICE! (Charles Portis, P.G. Wodehouse or Nonesuch Dickens Great Expectations!)

First, congratulations to yesterday's winners BethFishReads, Heather K and Amy for winning signed copies of Katie Arnoldi's POINT DUME!

For our last day of holiday giveaways, we're letting one lucky winner take his or her pick of True Grit and four additional titles by Charles Portis, or some of our new P.G. Wodehouse titles, or the Nonesuch Dickens edition of Great Expectations (Oprah's latest book club pick).

Now, we're a little bit biased towards the Charles Portis books right now, especially since he's getting some attention with the new Coen Brothers adaptation of his most famous novel, True Grit. But some of us like Norwood even more, and some of our Twitter friends have been particularly vocal about the superiority of The Dog of the South. We also thought Gringos and Masters of Atlantis were absolute American classics.

But in case you already read those, we thought you might prefer a Wodehouse or Dickens instead! So it's up to you.

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. We'll announce the winner tomorrow morning!

Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels
Autographed Drawing is Thinking
True Grit, True Grit, TRUE GRIT! (ongoing)
The Gilded Stage: A Social History of Opera
Freddy the Pig in paperback
Street Knowledge
P.G. Wodehouse
Let's Have a Bite!
Point Dume

Monday, December 20, 2010

On the eleventh day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...



...A SIGNED COPY OF KATIE ARNOLDI'S
POINT DUME!

First, congrats to our LET'S HAVE A BITE! winners--Michael (from the blog), Cindy H. (on Twitter) and April (also on Twitter). They'll receive signed copies of this mischievous menagerie in rhyme!

Next up is Overlook author and The Nervous Breakdown contributor Katie Arnoldi and her Los Angeles Times bestselling book POINT DUME. After the critically acclaimed CHEMICAL PINK and THE WENTWORTHS, Point Dume is a story of Arnoldi's passions--the death of surf culture, human trafficking, the Mexican drug cartel, illegal pot farms on public lands, environmental devastation, and obsessive love. Library Journal said that "her well-researched, well-written novel will appeal to fans of T.C. Boyle and Cormac McCarthy as well as to readers who mourn the destruction of the environment."

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the tenth day of Overlook Christmas!

Last giveaway TOMORROW!

Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels
Autographed Drawing is Thinking
True Grit, True Grit, TRUE GRIT! (ongoing)
The Gilded Stage: A Social History of Opera
Freddy the Pig in paperback
Street Knowledge
P.G. Wodehouse
Let's Have a Bite!

More Grit for Charles Portis

Chip McGrath profiles our man in Little Rock for The New York Times today:

"The arrival of the Coen brothers’ movie “True Grit” on Wednesday is likely to bring Charles Portis a new surge of attention he has no use for. Mr. Portis, the author of the 1968 novel on which the new film is based (as was the 1969 John Wayne version) is allergic to fame.

He’s not a Pynchonesque recluse, exactly. He is occasionally spotted in Little Rock, Ark., where he has lived for 50-odd years; he even went to a gala sponsored there recently by the Oxford American, a literary magazine, and consented to receive a lifetime achievement award, though he sat in the 14th row, or as far from the stage as he could. But Mr. Portis doesn’t use e-mail, has an unlisted phone number, declines interview requests, including one for this article, and shuns photographs with the ardor of a fugitive in the witness protection program. He hasn’t published a novel in nearly 20 years.

The writer and filmmaker Nora Ephron, who got to know Mr. Portis in the early ’60s, when he was a reporter for The New York Herald Tribune, recalled that back then he was more sociable. “Charlie was just charming, the life of the party almost,” she said. “But he was a newspaper reporter who didn’t have a phone. The Trib had to make him get one. So even back then the pattern was there.”

His elusiveness has only enhanced his status as a cult writer’s cult writer, cherished by a small but devoted following. He has published four novels besides “True Grit” (all five have recently been reissued in paperback by the Overlook Press), and for years those in the sect have been pressing them on new readers like Masons teaching the secret handshake. The journalist Ron Rosenbaum, the unofficial grand vizier and first hierophant of Portis admirers, has called him “perhaps the most original, indescribable sui generis talent overlooked by literary culture in America.”

“True Grit,” Mr. Portis’s second novel, which was serialized by The Saturday Evening Post and appeared on the New York Times best-seller list for 22 weeks, is actually a divisive matter among Portis admirers. There are some, like the novelist Donna Tartt, who consider it his masterpiece, a work comparable to “Huckleberry Finn.” Others, like Mr. Rosenbaum, resent “True Grit” a little for detracting attention from Mr. Portis’s lesser-known but arguably funnier books: “Norwood” (1966), “The Dog of the South” (1979), “Masters of Atlantis” (1985) and “Gringos” (1991). The writer Roy Blount Jr., an old friend of Mr. Portis’s, suggested recently that Mr. Portis himself was a little embarrassed by the success of “True Grit.”

“I think that’s why in his next book, ‘Dog of the South,’ he set himself the challenge of a funny book written by a boring narrator,” Mr. Blount said. “That’s why other writers love him so much.”

“True Grit,” the story of the 14-year-old Mattie Ross, from Yell County, Ark., who with the help of the one-eyed marshal Rooster Cogburn sets out to avenge the murder of her father by a drunken hired man named Tom Chaney, is not unfunny. It’s simultaneously a thoroughly satisfying western and a parody of one. But unlike Mr. Portis’s other books “True Grit” is a period piece — the story takes place in 1873 but is recounted decades later, when Mattie is by her own description a cranky old spinster — and the narrative voice is a feat of historical ventriloquism.

Mattie’s prose is stiff, formal (a quality lovingly captured by the Coen brothers), a little pious and platitudinous, given to scriptural quotation and fussy quotation marks: “I will go further and say all cats are wicked, though often useful. Who has not seen Satan in their sly faces? Some preachers will say, well, that is superstitious ‘claptrap.’ My answer is this: Preacher, go to your Bible and read Luke 8: 26-33.”

Mattie is lovable in her way, and though grit is what she admires in Rooster, she is hardly lacking in that department herself. But she is also humorless, righteous and utterly without either self-doubt or self-consciousness. She has no idea how she or her words come across on the page, nor would she care if she did.

“The Dog of the South” and “Gringos” are also written in the first person, and the two others might as well be. The voice in all them is loose and informal, even a little digressive, with a noticeable Southern quality. Mr. Portis’s friends say he talks much the same way, and to judge from “Combinations of Jacksons,” a memoir he published in The Atlantic in 1999, his nonfictional style isn’t much different from his fictional one: in both he is a great noticer, always alert to the odd but telling detail.

What the other novels have in common with “True Grit” is their deadpan quality. Most comic novels — think of anything by P. G. Wodehouse, say, or Ring Lardner — are fairly transparent: they unabashedly try to be funny and let the reader in on the joke. The trick of Mr. Portis’s books, especially the ones told in the first person, is that they pretend to be serious. They’re full of odd events and odd people with names like Norwood Pratt, Raymond Midge and Dr. Reo Symes, inventor of the underappreciated Brewster Method, a miracle cure for arthritis. But these are presented without a wink or a nudge, or any sense that slapstick touches like smooth-talking midgets, bread-fondling deliverymen or elderly gents wearing conical goatskin caps are at all unusual.

Mr. Portis evokes an eccentric, absurd world with a completely straight face. As a result there are not a lot of laugh-out-loud moments or explosive set pieces here. Instead of shooting off fireworks the books shimmer with a continuous comic glow.

Unlike the tightly plotted “True Grit,” the other books are all shaggy-dog stories of a sort. In “Norwood” (which was made into a 1970 movie starring Glen Campbell) Norwood Pratt travels all the way to New York from his home in Ralph, Tex., to collect a $70 debt and winds up engaged to a girl he meets on a Trailways bus. In “The Dog of the South” Ray Midge drives to Mexico from Little Rock in search of his wife, who has run off with her first husband and Ray’s Ford Torino. “Masters of Atlantis” is about two guys who create the Gnomon Society, an esoteric, Rosicrucian-like sect based on wisdom from the lost city of Atlantis. And in “Gringos” an American expat in Mexico falls in with some U.F.O. nuts and archeologists searching for a lost Mayan city.

But in one way or another the subtext of all these novels is the great Melvillean theme of the American weakness for secret conspiracies and arcane knowledge, and our embrace of con men, scam artists and flimflammers of every sort. In Mr. Portis’s pantheon of tricksters, moreover, writers rank pretty high. There’s John Selmer Dix, author of “With Wings as Eagles,” an inspirational manual for salesmen, whose admirers rank him higher than Shakespeare; the hack writer Dub Polton, author of “Hoosier Wizard,” a political biography that pretty much makes everything up; and Lamar Jimmerson, compiler of the Codex Pappus, the sacred Gnomon text, which deliberately includes a lot of obfuscation to “weary and disgust the reader” and put him off the track.

All these texts, you can’t help noticing, are in their way not unlike Mr. Portis’s books in the degree of devotion and enthusiasm they evoke in their readers. They’re not self-parodies but, rather, warnings about the dubiousness of reputation and about the dangers of taking the cult of authorship too seriously.

“Talking about himself is something that would feel false and strange to him,” William Whitworth, the former editor of The Atlantic and his old friend, said of Mr. Portis. “It would be like asking him to stand up and sing like Frank Sinatra, or be on ‘Dancing with the Stars.’ ”

Friday, December 17, 2010

On the tenth day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...


...a signed copy of LET'S HAVE A BITE!

We're excited to tell you more about this delightful Overlook title for young readers, but first, winner-winner-chicken-dinner time. We have LOTS of winners to announce today! (Disclosure: we selected our winners by listing all entrants from the blog, Twitter, and Facebook and using Random.org.)

First up, our TRUE GRIT bonanza winner, who will receive a a copy of the new movie tie-in edition of the book, a copy of our limited edition throwback version, a poster from the new TRUE GRIT movie and a pair of passes to an AMC theatre that we hope you'll use to see TRUE GRIT--is WORDLILY from the blog comments! We hope you and your father-in-law enjoy this movie as much as we did.

Our FIVE winners for copies of our new movie tie-in edition are
- PsychTLC on our blog
- Brian F. on our blog
- Hannah N. on Facebook
- @KKollef on Twitter
- @JarrettRush on Twitter

Congrats, all!

Due to the overwhelmingly great response, we have THREE P.G. Wodehouse winners. Congrats to EXILE BIBLIOPHILE on the blog, @GilionDumas on Twitter and Shayne B. on Facebook! We'll be doing more Wodehouse giveaways in the future, so make sure to follow our blog, Twitter, and Facebook!

All of the above--email kgales at overlookny dot com with your mailing addresses to claim your prizes!

And now onto today's main event...we're giving away THREE SIGNED COPIES of LET'S HAVE A BITE: A BANQUET OF BEASTLY FEASTS, by one of Overlook's favorite authors, Robert L. Forbes. It's illustrated by legendary artist Ronald Searle, and the whimsical drawings make Mr. Forbes' delightful rhymes come to life. One lucky winner will also receive a signed poster!

Here's an example of one of our favorite poems.

Flick the fly
Is no nice guy,
A huge but tiny pest.
He'll buzz my head
Until he's fed —
Never giving me a rest.

And one of our favorite illustrations (not with that poem!)

This book is geared towards children ages 4-8, but the rhymes and drawings can be appreciated by anyone young at heart!

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the tenth day of Overlook Christmas!

Two more days of giveaways to go!

Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels
Autographed Drawing is Thinking
True Grit, True Grit, TRUE GRIT! (ongoing)
The Gilded Stage: A Social History of Opera
Freddy the Pig in paperback
Street Knowledge
P.G. Wodehouse

Thursday, December 16, 2010

On the ninth day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...






...THREE NEW P.G. WODEHOUSE TITLES!

First, congratulations to yesterday's winner, Jessica M., who will receive an early copy of STREET KNOWLEDGE by King Adz. Also, a reminder: today is the last day to enter to win TRUE GRIT prizes! Go here to learn more and enter!

Today we're giving away three of our new editions of P.G. Wodehouse titles. One of Overlook's most popular authors, we're re-releasing all of his works in stylish new editions. These have been incredibly well received both for the signature Wodehouse humor and the beautiful Overlook cover designs.

We'll be giving away A Pelican at Blandings, A Prefect's Uncle and Eggs, Beans and Crumpets, all of which are newly available from Overlook.

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the tenth day of Overlook Christmas!

Upcoming: one more book for young adults, one more set of signed books and the final day of Christmas next Tuesday!


Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels
Autographed Drawing is Thinking
True Grit, True Grit, TRUE GRIT! (ongoing)
The Gilded Stage: A Social History of Opera
Freddy the Pig in paperback
Street Knowledge

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

On the eighth day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...




...AN ADVANCE COPY OF THE NOT-YET-ON-SALE STREET KNOWLEDGE BY KING ADZ!

First, congratulations to yesterday's winners Mystie (right here on the blog!) and Jeannine (on Twitter), who will get the three just-released-in-paperback copies of FREDDY THE PIG! Also, a reminder that our TRUE GRIT contest ends tomorrow. Go here to learn more and enter0!

Next up, a copy of one of our coolest books ever that goes on sale this February--STREET KNOWLEDGE, by King Adz. It's an encyclopedia of street culture for those who love Banksy or Irvine Welsh and want to know about the cutting-edge talents who are shaping street art. This is a gorgeous book in and of itself and is sure to start a conversation on any coffee table or bookshelf. But for those interested in the sometimes subversive but always fresh styles of street artists, this is a goldmine of information.

STREET KNOWLEDGE includes works by and interviews with the most bold-faced names in street art, including Banksy, David LaChapelle, Kelsey Brookes, Quik, Tony Kaye, Tama Janowitz, The KLF, Shawn Stussy, Obey, Irvine Welsh, Martha Cooper, and Benjamin Zephaniah, as well as lesser-known and up-coming talents who are literally coming up from the streets.

And the author, King Adz, is a fascinating person as well. He left his former life as a filmmaker and advertising exec to pick up a pen and do what he loves best. In his current incarnation as writer, cook, and street culture aficionado, he roams the globe to touch, taste, and experience what’s happening on the ground and document his findings. Who better to teach you the ins and outs of street art?

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for NINTH day of Overlook Christmas!

Still upcoming: another book for young readers, PG Wodehouse and more!

Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels
Autographed Drawing is Thinking
True Grit, True Grit, TRUE GRIT! (ongoing)
The Gilded Stage: A Social History of Opera
Freddy the Pig in paperback

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

On the seventh day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...






...A NEW SET OF "FREDDY THE PIG" BOOKS--NOW AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACK!

Okay. That was a rather unwieldy giveaway to fit into the song. But after 75 years, people still love Freddy, and we'd love to give this set of three new paperbacks to a longtime fan or a new reader!

First, congratulations to Antoine D., who yesterday won a signed copy of THE GILDED STAGE: A SOCIAL HISTORY OF OPERA. Also, a reminder: TRUE GRIT giveaways can be entered through Thursday--prizes include posters, movie passes and book giveaways. Go here to learn more and enter!

Up now: a set of new-in-paperback young reader classics from Walter R. Brooks' beloved FREDDY THE PIG series. We just released Freddy the Politician, Freddy the Detective and Freddy and the Bean Home News in paperback for the very first time, and are thrilled to introduce Freddy to a new generation of readers.

But you don't need to trust us on the lasting appeal of Freddy. Here are a few of his fans in the media:

“Freddy’s readers have called him a porcine prince…Walter R. Brooks’s gentle genius shines even brighter.” --The New York Times

“Brooks’ series is full of humor and warmth and, most importantly, the underlying assurance that no matter how threatening life may get, we have the ability to survive and prosper. Even better, the books declare that life is fun—particularly on the Bean Farm in upstate New York…Freddy the Pig is one of the great characters in American children’s literature.” --FIRSTS Magazine

“Freddy is simply one of the greatest characters in children’s literature!” --School Library Journal

“The American version of great English classics such as the Pooh books or The Wind in the Willows.” --The New York Times Book Review



TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the sixth day of Overlook Christmas!

We have many more giveaways to come as the holiday season kicks into high gear. Don't forget to check back every day!

Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels
Autographed Drawing is Thinking
True Grit, True Grit, TRUE GRIT! (ongoing)
The Gilded Stage: A Social History of Opera

Monday, December 13, 2010

On the sixth day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...


...AN AUTOGRAPHED COPY OF DANIEL SNOWMAN'S THE GILDED STAGE!

First, we're still running our TRUE GRIT NYC movie passes giveaway (winners announced at 2 p.m. EDT!) and bonanza package and book giveaway (winners announced Thursday). Go here to learn more and enter!

However, today we have a separate giveaway for the theatre lovers out there--a signed copy of The Gilded Stage: A Social History of Opera. The first book of its kind, The Gilded Stage tells the story of opera's beginnings, its rise and spread throughout Europe and beyond, and the audiences who love it. This beautiful book is also a guided tour of the world's premier opera houses and the story of monarchs, artists, and audiences who made opera one of the world's great arts. This elegant book is a must for anyone who loves opera, theatre or music and is both a comprehensive history and an eminently readable tale.

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the sixth day of Overlook Christmas!

We have many more giveaways to come as the holiday season kicks into high gear. Don't forget to check back every day!

Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels
Autographed Drawing is Thinking
True Grit, True Grit, TRUE GRIT! (ongoing)

Friday, December 10, 2010

On the fifth day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...


...TRUE GRIT, TRUE GRIT AND MORE TRUE GRIT!

We have some AMAZING True Grit-related prizes that we’ll be giving away to our wonderful Overlook readers over the next few days to get you as excited as we are about the new Coen Brothers film that’s getting some great early reviews, as well as the classic Charles Portis novel from which the film was adapted.

First, congratulations to Heather B, Jenna! and Don, winners of yesterday's contest. They'll each receive a signed copy of the amazing DRAWING IS THINKING by art and design legend Milton Glaser.

Now, onto today's contest. We've never done ANYTHING like this before, but we're beyond thrilled to be offering you a chance to win these amazing prizes tied into the new film release of True Grit. You could win:
TICKETS TO AN ADVANCE SCREENING OF TRUE GRIT IN NYC: Unfortunately, this is only open to our New York City-area readers. But get two FREE passes to the ADVANCE True Grit screening on December 14 at 7 p.m.!

OUR TRUE GRIT BONANZA PACKAGE: Copies of True Grit (the brand-new movie tie-in edition and the limited-edition Hollywood hardcover), a True Grit movie poster, and 2 movie passes you can use to see True Grit in a convenient theatre at your leisure.

And 5 winners will receive a copy of the new movie tie-in edition of True Grit!

TO WIN: Tell us why you love TRUE GRIT, the book, or are excited to read it! Enter through Facebook, Twitter, or by commenting here. You can also enter by sending us a link to your blog where you have an entry about TRUE GRIT (email a link to kgales at overlookny dot com). That means each person can enter up to four times. PLEASE indicate if you are able to see the advance screening in NYC on the 14th so you are entered into that part of this contest. (For Twitter, given the character limits, just tag #truegritnyc for the screening or #truegritbook for the rest of the prizes.)

The NYC winner will be announced on Monday 12/13 and the Bonanza Package/book winners will be announced on Thursday, December 16. NYC entrants who did not win the screening tickets are still eligible for our other prizes. GOOD LUCK! And happy True Grit-reading!



Previously:
Autographed Drawing is Thinking
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels

Thursday, December 09, 2010

We depart from our regularly scheduled holiday giveaways

...to bring you this fantastic piece about TRUE GRIT by Malcolm Jones in Newsweek. Much like how dessert is our favorite part of any meal, the concluding paragraph is our favorite part of this column:
True Grit is one of the great American novels, with two of the greatest characters in our literature and a story worthy of their greatness. It is not just a book you can read over and over. It’s a book you want to read over and over, and each time you’re surprised by how good it is. In every Portis novel, someone makes some kind of journey. His protagonists all have a little Don Quixote in them. They are at odds with the ordinary ways of making do, and they don’t care what the world thinks. In True Grit, these elements are the raw ingredients for one of the finer epic journeys in American literature. The Coen brothers, with their wry, dry-eyed take on all things American, are supremely equipped to bring Portis’s vision to the screen intact. But do yourself two favors: read the novel before you see the movie. You won’t regret it. As for the second favor: do not loan this book out. You’ll never see it again.



Go here to read the article on newsweek.com!


True Lit: Movies eclipse their literary sources all the time, which is fine when the book is ‘Jaws.’ But when John Wayne overshadows a master such as Charles Portis, we have a problem.

When Charles Portis published True Grit in 1968, the novel became a critically praised bestseller. Then a year later the movie, starring John Wayne, came out, and after that no one even remembered there was a book. If we know how 14-year-old Mattie Ross hired Rooster Cogburn, a one-eyed U.S. marshal with a drinking problem, to hunt down the man who robbed and killed her father, it’s mostly because the movie never stops showing up on television. As a result, most of the pre-release chatter about the new Coen brothers version of True Grit, with Jeff Bridges as Rooster, continually calls it a remake of the John Wayne film. For Portis fans this is nothing short of a crime.

Criminal or not, there’s nothing unique going on here. Any time Hollywood takes a book and turns it into a successful movie, there’s every chance that the book, however good it may be, will be forgotten. For every To Kill a Mockingbird or Gone With the Wind, where the book and the movie are equally respected and neither trumps the other, there are five examples of movies that eclipse the books they came from. Of all the people who have seen Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds, how many have read the Daphne du Maurier novella on which the movie is based, much less recognize that in many ways the original is better? How many fans of Die Hard know it’s based on a good crime novel? Or Out of the Past, Vertigo, or Don’t Look Now (du Maurier again, this time a short story)? The explanation isn’t complicated: more people will go to see a movie on any given Wednesday afternoon than will read the book on which it’s based in a year. Almost always, the more successful the movie, the more forgotten the book. But understanding that situation is small consolation for authors or their admirers.

Readers who love Portis have it especially tough. To the extent that he’s known at all to the reading public, it’s as the author of True Grit—his one shot at the big time, and it backfires. This has only goaded his small but devoted band of readers to spread their gospel, and with good reason. His five novels are not hard to read or hard to find—it is a true credit to the publishing industry that someone, as a labor of love, is always republishing him. Maybe Roy Blount Jr. got closest to the truth of the matter when he said, “Charles Portis could be Cormac McCarthy if he wanted to, but he’d rather be funny.”

Readers and critics don’t like putting “funny” and “important” in the same sentence when talking about a writer, as though there’s something vaguely disreputable about someone who can make you laugh. Or, to put it another way, they are not comfortable with the idea that someone who can make you laugh can also make you think. Would Mark Twain still enjoy his status as a great American writer if he had not inserted the issues of slavery and racism into The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn? Just asking.

In the case of True Grit, the onus of humor is not even much of a problem. Which is to say, it’s not a comic novel but a novel that has comedy in it, and the funny stuff comes from the characters and the way they talk. Mattie Ross is an old woman when she sets down her adventures as a teenager in Arkansas and the Oklahoma territory, and there are numerous passages in her fusty, opinionated style that can make you smile and a handful that will have you laughing out loud. Writing about the ponies that her father had purchased right before he was killed, she admits that “it was wrong to charge blame to these pretty beasts who knew neither good nor evil but only innocence. I say that of these ponies. I have known some horses and a good many more pigs who I believe harbored evil intent in their hearts. I will go further and say all cats are wicked, though often useful. Who has not seen Satan in their sly faces?” If it were nothing else, True Grit would stand as an astonishing act of literary ventriloquism. From beginning to end, you never once doubt that this story is being told by a smart old spinster in the early part of the last century.

The novel outshines the 1969 movie at almost every turn. We remember that version because of John Wayne. Say what you like about his acting, it was the rare actor who could hold his or her own against Wayne onscreen. Poor Kim Darby as Mattie never had a chance. But the book is better balanced. Rooster may not think so at the outset, but Mattie always knows—and so do we—that she is every bit his equal. The admiration that grows between these two over the course of the story is genuine and affecting. And the devotion they feel for each other—demonstrated in actions, never words—is the most moving thing about this story. He saves her life; she pays to put a headstone on his grave. The Coen brothers’ version is a much better movie. They capture the raw surreality of the Arkansas frontier, and the acting is more of an ensemble work. Artists in their own right, they have been respectful but not slavish to Portis’s vision. But is this movie better than the book? That would be a very tall order.

Why quibble? True Grit is one of the great American novels, with two of the greatest characters in our literature and a story worthy of their greatness. It is not just a book you can read over and over. It’s a book you want to read over and over, and each time you’re surprised by how good it is. In every Portis novel, someone makes some kind of journey. His protagonists all have a little Don Quixote in them. They are at odds with the ordinary ways of making do, and they don’t care what the world thinks. In True Grit, these elements are the raw ingredients for one of the finer epic journeys in American literature. The Coen brothers, with their wry, dry-eyed take on all things American, are supremely equipped to bring Portis’s vision to the screen intact. But do yourself two favors: read the novel before you see the movie. You won’t regret it. As for the second favor: do not loan this book out. You’ll never see it again.

On the fourth day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...




...AN AUTOGRAPHED COPY OF MILTON GLASER'S DRAWING IS THINKING!


First, congratulations to yesterday's winner, CollenFL, who won a set of Penny Vincenzi's best novels. Thank you again for your enthusiasm! We're so excited for our wonderful books to be finding new homes and, hopefully, new fans.

Today's contest is one we've been thinking about for quite some time. While many outside the art and design world might not know Milton Glaser by name, you've definitely seen his work--it includes the iconic "I Heart NY" logo as well as DC Comics' old logo the "DC Bullet," and the logo for the delicious and quirky Brooklyn Brewery. He co-founded New York magazine and last year was awarded the National Medal of the Arts.

So you know Milton Glaser is a living legend. He's also written a number of books. DRAWING IS THINKING is perhaps our favorite--it's a deeply personal look at how the mind works in visually representing reality. More about the book:

Based on his view that all art has its origin in the impulse both to create and, visually, to do this by drawing, he has designed a book that powerfully delineates this position. In Drawing is Thinking, the drawings depicted are meant to be experienced sequentially, so that the reader or viewer not only follows Glaser through these pages, but comes to inhabit his mind. The drawings represent a sweeping range of subject matter taken from the full range of a reflective master's career. They represent the author's commitment to the fundamental idea that drawing is not simply a way to represent reality, but, as the title suggests, a way to understand and experience the world.


This beautiful book can be appreciated both by artists and designers familiar with Glaser's work and by anyone interested in the beauty of the world around them. We'll be giving away THREE AUTOGRAPHED COPIES as the perfect holiday gift for yourself or for someone very special.

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the fifth day of Overlook Christmas!

We still have eight giveaways to go, plus a very special BONUS giveaway related to the upcoming film adaptation of TRUE GRIT. Check back daily for more! Hope you're enjoying the holiday season--and these giveaways--as much as we are!

Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered
Penny Vincenzi novels

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

On the third day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...


...THE BEST OF PENNY VINCENZI!

We're thrilled about today's giveaway both because Vincenzi kind of rhymes with "me," and because we are huge, HUGE Penny Vincenzi fans.

First, congratulations to yesterday's winners, Gary P., @ and @. They'll be getting signed copies of Frank Deford's much-praised novel of the 1936 Olympics BLISS, REMEMBERED. Thanks to all of you who entered on Day 2! We are thrilled with the responses we're getting and appreciate your enthusiasm for some of our very favorite titles.

And oh, what a favorite are today's titles. We're giving away JUST ONE set of Penny Vincenzi's Spoils of Time trilogy--No Angel, Something Dangerous, and Into Temptation--as well as her brand-new hardcover, Forbidden Places. The Lytton family saga remains one of Overlook's best-selling titles year in and year out. They're the story of glamorous Lady Celia Lytton, her husband Oliver, and the publishing company they run in early-twentieth-century London. Anyone who loves sweeping historical novels, strong women characters, and passionate romances written by a true master of women's fiction will fall in love with Lady Celia just like we did. (The only downside of recommending these novels to everyone? Explaining that our publishing universe isn't quite as glamorous as the literarti of Edwardian London).

We'll be giving away ONE set of these FOUR NOVELS. They're great for sinking one's teeth into and a gift that will provide hours of entertainment for the recipient (or distract you from holiday stress, difficult family gatherings, arduous winter travel...) and will open up a whole new world of fabulous Penny fiction.

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the Third Day of Overlook Christmas! And yes, it will be better than colly birds (we always thought it was "calling" birds?). Hint: we hope you like art and graphic design!

Coming up over the next 10 business days...art books, more signed books, gift book sets, some of our most popular authors (including P.G. Wodehouse, Katie Arnoldi, Peter Quinn...and more!) and a True Grit giveaway bonanza! Thanks for participating and we hope you enjoy the holidays as much as we are!

Previously:
Nonesuch Dickens Christmas Books
Autographed Bliss, Remembered

Tuesday, December 07, 2010

On the second day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...


...A SIGNED COPY OF FRANK DEFORD'S BLISS, REMEMBERED!

(We know that does not even come close to rhyming. We have given up on that completely).

First, congratulations to Roger S (via Facebook) and Ellen L (via Twitter), winners of yesterday's copies of Charles Dickens' Christmas Books. Thanks to all of you who entered! We were thrilled with the response (and might need to add in some bonus days-of-Christmas for you all!). The holiday cheer is unparalleled.

Today's giveaway is one of my absolute favorite Overlook books--Bliss, Remembered by Frank Deford of NPR and Sports Illustrated fame. He signed advance copies of Bliss at Book Expo America 2010, which was our first indication that this wasn't your ordinary sports novel--the crowd was full of young and old readers, male and female, sports enthusiasts and those who just loved listening to him on NPR. Scroll down for praise and to see him discuss Bliss with Matt Lauer on the Today Show! Plus, the book is a wonderful love story--it's really appropriate to be given away on the day celebrating two turtledoves, a symbol of love.

We'll be giving away THREE AUTOGRAPHED COPIES of Bliss, Remembered. While I recommend it to anyone who loves a great story, we can say that our dads, grandmothers and twenty-something friends all really loved this book--it would be a great gift for someone who's hard to buy for but enjoys reading, and it has the fun signed touch!

TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the Third Day of Overlook Christmas! And yes, unless you live on a farm, it will be better than three French hens. (Or any other hen ethnicity. We love them all).

Coming up over the next 10 business days...art books, more signed books, gift book sets, some of our most popular authors (including P.G. Wodehouse, Penny Vincenzi, Peter Quinn...and more!) and a True Grit giveaway bonanza! Thanks for participating and we hope you enjoy the holidays as much as we are!

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy



"Told as a memoir, Deford's newest is entertaining and thought provoking. He has a superb sense of character and period, and readers will at once feel drawn into the turbulent times... This is a poignant story, utterly charming and enjoyable."--Publishers Weekly

"Deford, the award-winning author of "Everybody's All-American" and a celebrated figure in print and broadcast media, creates as his heroine Sydney Stringfellow, an American athlete who falls in love with a dashing German while competing at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Describing that doomed love affair, against the budding wartime landscape of the time, Stringfellow relates the intriguing timeline of her life in a descriptive narrative to her son. The result is compelling and, from start to finish, filled with serpentine twists."--San Antonio Express-News

PW Starred Review: Norman Foster: A Life in Architecture

We were thrilled to see Publishers Weekly award a starred review to NORMAN FOSTER: A LIFE IN ARCHITECTURE. This professional biography was one of our most interesting books of the fall season, and this review nails why people responded to Foster's life story so well, regardless of their taste in architecture or knowledge of the field today. Thanks, PW!

Norman Foster: A Life in Architecture
Deyan Sudjic, Overlook, $37.95 (320p) ISBN 978-1-59020-432-0

Though Sudjic (The Language of Things) takes readers on an engrossing tour of Foster's life as a renowned architect, it's the exquisite attention to detail in recounting that life--particularly the childhood–that brings this book to such vibrant life. Foster came from humble means; growing up in England's Crescent Grove--"unmistakably on the wrong side of the tracks"--left a lasting impression on Foster. His working class parents "had failed in what they wanted to do with their lives," Foster believed. Following his education at Manchester, he turned down a Fulbright scholarship because he didn't think it offered the "flexibility to work" and instead pursued the Henry Fellowship, which led him to study architecture at Yale. In the United States Foster was thrilled to "reinvent himself." Sudjic, director of London's Design Museum, does a remarkable job examining influences, Buckminster Fuller among them, who "gave Foster the ambition about what architecture might be" and deftly describes the irony of Foster's fame as the architect of influential buildings like the Hong Kong Bank which, though it elevated Foster to international acclaim, came at such great expense that it did little to make him more employable. Photos. (Sept.)

The Arkansas News: Coens and Portis, genius on genius

A must-read: this wonderful feature on True Grit from a newspaper columnist who knows the famously publicity-averse author. He joins the rest of us in being excited to see the upcoming Coen Brothers film adaptation!

Coens and Portis, genius on genius
December 5, 2010

The Arkansas News
By John Brummett

Go here to read the article online

All the insider movie rage last week was about the imminent debut at a movie theater near you of the genius Coen brothers’ version of “True Grit.”

It is from the novel by Charles Portis, the lovably reclusive author in Little Rock whom some consider the best American writer of our time or at least the most under-appreciated.

Portis is not much for attention by photograph or interview or tribute or the unsubstantiated superlative. His personal style is as lean and minimalist as some of his writing.

If he warms to you at all, and you cannot be sure of that, it is because you do not bother him or make over him and you do not let it rile you that, when he finally decides to engage, he goes all right-wing.

He loves having been a Marine in Korea. He likes the militaristic field-positioning of old-style football. He hates our litigious society.

Or at least that is what he said. I do not profess actually to know. I only profess to have had the privilege of inhabiting a bar stool next to his a time or two.

I am fairly sure he despises pretense especially when verbose.

Once when I was editor of the Arkansas Times when it was a slick monthly magazine, Portis gave me an epic piece about the Ouachita River that won a national prize. All he asked was that I not change a word unless I talked with him first and not to make a big splash about him on the cover.

I said I would never do such a thing.

That banner above the nameplate — “Charles Portis discovers the Ouachita” — was no big splash. It was medium-sized.

All he ever said to me about writing a novel was that “you gotta have a story.”

I took that to mean it is one thing to write a sentence or a paragraph or an essay, but that it is something else entirely to conceive of a drunken eye-patched U.S. marshal in Fort Smith who heads out for serious character development in the unlikely company of a noble teenage Arkansas hill girl determined to seek justice for the murder of her father by a most-evil outlaw.

That is “True Grit,” and what the Coen brothers — Joel and Ethan — have done with it has now been seen by a few critics, most of them admiring and a few extolling, and will get its theatrical release Dec. 22.

The main criticism has been that the movie, by clinging so closely to the novel and by stressing peculiar and archaic language and slow character development, may not offer the mass appeal of the action-adventure form.

But that is not detraction. It is roaring endorsement.

The Coen brothers are known for homages to great literature and for mastering the distinctive dialogue of places and periods, as in “Fargo” and “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” and “Raising Arizona” and “No Country for Old Men.”

This is technically a remake of the John Wayne vehicle of 1969, but poor Glen Campbell ruined that one trying to portray the Texas Ranger. Matt Damon gives that role a go in this one.

Jeff Bridges plays Rooster Cogburn and, in apparent deference to Wayne, puts the patch on the other eye. A new young actress is introduced as Mattie Ross.

Paramount so likes the product that it is putting it out for the awards season.

I will admit to being a little excited. It is not every day that a story based from Yell County and Fort Smith by an author of my acquaintance gets made into a big-time film by the most gifted and imaginative filmmakers of our time.

I do not know if Portis is excited. I do not know what that would look like or how one could tell.

All I know is that I read that he didn’t know who the Coen brothers were and will be happy as long as the checks come in.

Monday, December 06, 2010

On the first day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me...


...Charles Dicken's Christmas Stories! (We know that rhyming that is a bit of a stretch...)

Welcome to the Overlook Press Holiday Celebration, where we prove that books make great gifts by giving away some of our best titles from now through December 21! Whether it's for you, for a friend, a family member, or your office Secret Santa, there's something for everyone on this list. These are not Christmas-exclusive--the song just happens to have the perfect number of gifts for us to give away to our readers!

On our first day of holiday celebrating, we'll be giving away Charles Dickens' Christmas Books. These Nonesuch Press editions should definitely be judged by their covers--or more specifically, their leather and linen bindings, which are a beautiful throwback. (Throwbook?) Dickens said he wept, then laughed, then wept again while writing his iconic story "A Christmas Carol," and this edition also includes "The Chimes," "The Cricket on the Hearth," "The Battle of Life," and "The Haunted Man."

While you're probably familiar with these stories (especially all of the fantastic versions of "A Christmas Carol" that exist--we personally love the "Muppet Christmas Carol" the best, although "Mickey's Christmas Carol" is truly a classic), the Nonesuch Press edition is a keepsake that will make both a perfect holiday gift and an heirloom to be treasured for years.

We're giving away TWO copies of this wonderful book. Good luck!
TO WIN: Leave a blog comment, Tweet this contest, or leave a comment on our Facebook page. You can enter once in every area and we'll announce the winners tomorrow morning as we announce what you can look forward to for the Second Day of Overlook Christmas! (Spoiler alert: it will be MUCH better, and less messy, than turtledoves).

Giveaways will include signed books, limited editions, art books, early copies of books not available for sale, and sets of books by various Overlook authors. Check back each business day to see what we're giving away!

Happy holidays to everyone from the Overlook Press!

Friday, December 03, 2010

Books make GREAT gifts for kids!

And kid of all ages are absolutely delighted by the mischievous rhymes and delightful illustrations of LET'S HAVE A BITE: A BANQUET OF BEASTLY FEASTS, by Robert L. Forbes (illustrated by Ronald Searle).

And a wonderful way to make the gift of a book a lifetime keepsake is to have it signed (or personalized!) by the author. If you're lucky enough to be in Palm Beach, Santa Barbara or Montecito over the next few weeks, you have a great chance to get Mr. Forbes to inscribe a personal message in this beautiful book.

Check out Mr. Forbes' web site or Facebook page to stay up to date on all of the latest happenings with this wonderfully whimsical book. A few to mark on your calendars...

December 7: Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens 3rd Annual Literacy Day
During their Annual Festival of the Trees, I will be reading here.
253 Barcelona Road
West Palm Beach, FL
From 10AM

December 8: The Channel City Club in Santa Barbara, CA

I will do a reading at their annual Holiday Luncheon, 12:30-2, including a book signing.
2:30 A reading at the Story Teller Children’s Center, Santa Barbara

December 9: The Crane Country Day School, Montecito, CA
2:15-3 A reading to students.

December 15: Palm Beach Book Store, PB, FL
5:30 Book signing until 7pm

2011 Lots of events in the works, such as a reading at the Princeton Club in New York, a Southern swing , a return engagement with the Creative Writing classes at Boca Raton’s Spanish River High School, a reading in Rome, more schools, and Easter Day with many kids in Palm Beach at the annual egg hunt. Stay tuned!


And don't forget that Monday kicks off our 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS AT OVERLOOK, with twelve days of giveaways that include autographed books, sets, swag related to the forthcoming TRUE GRIT film adaptation, and for those of you shopping with kids, just-in-time-for-the-holidays copies of LET'S HAVE A BITE! Check back Monday for more.