Wednesday, July 27, 2011

New in Paperback: Frank Deford's BLISS REMEMBERED

New in paperback this month is Bliss, Remembered, Frank Deford's wonderful novel starring a fictional Olympic swimming hopeful Sydney Stringfellow. The book follows Sydney's life from 1934, when she was a lonely 16-year-old innocent growing up in the Depression in a small town on The Eastern Shore of Maryland, until 1942, when war with Germany has begun and she finds herself personally caught up in it in a way she could never have imagined. Sydney tells this story to her son, Teddy, in 2004. By then, she is an old woman, dying of cancer, but she is still charming and feisty and determined to finally let her son know of the fascinating events that so changed her young life - and all that followed.

Bliss, Remembered is both a love story and a historical thriller, making it a great choice for summer reading. Deford mixes in real-life figures, swimming star Eleanor Holm and filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl, in his razor-sharp depiction of the 1936 Berlin Olympics.

Author Frank Deford, author of sixteen books, is often recognized as the finest sports writer of his era, his highly-praised historical novels have ranged far afield. Besides Bliss, Remembered, he has written about such varied topics as the polio epidemic (An American Summer), reincarnation (The Other Adonis) and Japan before Pearl Harbor (Love and Infamy). His story about modern celebrity, The Entitled, is often also cited as the best novel ever written about the sport of baseball. Frank Deford is a commentator every Wednesday on Morning Edition on National Public Radio.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Eva Zeisel, 104, Profiled in The Wall Street Journal

Design legend and Overlook author Eva Zeisel was profiled in The Wall Street Journal this weekend:

"Ms. Zeisel is one of the great modernist designers of the 20th century. But what was she doing in the 21st? She was born around the same time as W.H. Auden, who's been gone for nearly 40 years, and Frida Kahlo, nearly 60. Turns out that at 104, Ms. Zeisel is still creating her "things," as she calls her designs, for companies ranging from Kleinreid to Design Within Reach. The definition of a survivor, Ms. Zeisel was born in Budapest, went to Berlin for the glamorous period of the 1920s and then to Russia in the '30s. "The arts from Russia seemed fresh and appealing," she said. "So I decided to go and see what was behind the mountain." There she had a run-in with Stalin, who imprisoned her for 16 months. In 1938, she arrived in New York with $67 in her pocket and was given the first-ever one-woman show, seven years later, at MoMA."

Zeisel classic work, Eva Zeisel on Design, will be published in an all-new paperback edition in October.

In this richly illustrated, full-color book, the designer presents the ideas that have guided and inspired her. Each aspect of the design process is analyzed--variety, spontaneity, line, contour, shading, and texture, among others--to show how the best works are formed through a dialog between creator and object, the result of which is an environment that is pleasurable, comfortable, and elegant. The language in which this dialog is conducted, "the language of things," is one in which Zeisel's fluency is unparalleled. Her thoughts, read alongside the photos of her stunning creations and those that have inspired her, make this book indispensable to every enthusiast of art, design, and ceramics.


With a trailblazing career that spans more than seventy-five years and continues to this day, with recent creations that include a Martini glass featured in Bombay Sapphire ads and vases for Klein-Reid, Eva Zeisel stands at the forefront of twentieth-century designers. Her works are a reflection of a profoundly independent vision, unconstrained by design conventions, fads, or ideologies, and are featured in the permanent collections of museums throughout the world, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art. Her belly-button wall dividers are part of the modern decor in the lobby of Los Angeles's Standard Hotel.

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Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Richard Zimler's THE WARSAW ANAGRAMS: Giving Uniqueness Back to Our Dead

Richard Zimler's profoundly moving historical thriller The Warsaw Anagrams goes on sale tomorrow. Set in a Jewish ghetto during World War II, The Warsaw Anagrams won Portugal’s Marques de Ouro Prize in 2010 and now, at last, is available to American readers.

Zimler, author of The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon, has written 8 novels over the last 15 years that have been translated into 22 languages and been bestsellers in 12 countries. Born and educated in New York, Zimler now lives and teaches in Portugal.
Here's what some of the early reviewers are saying:

“Wrenching and raw, The Warsaw Anagrams by Richard Zimler is an historical suspense novel as unique as it is compelling. This chilling novel explores themes of loss, survival, deprivation and the resilience of the human spirit; and while it contains several disturbing and graphic scenes essential to describing the horrors of ghetto life, Zimler’s skill as a writer is without question. . . .The anagrams in the book’s title refer to the scrambling of letters in names to guard identities—but the word puzzles end up resonating more deeply as the novel is resolved. – ForeWord Magazine

"As he did so brilliantly in The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon (1998), Zimler builds a riveting mystery around one of the most horrific moments in Jewish history. In 1940, following the German invasion of Poland, the Warsaw ghetto, once a vibrant Jewish neighborhood, became a walled-in prison, its inhabitants forced to exist with little food, inadequate heat and sanitation, and a future even bleaker than the present. Erik Cohen, formerly a prominent psychiatrist, lives with his niece and young nephew, Adam. Then, in the dead of winter, Adam goes missing, his mutilated body eventually discovered in the barbed-wire enclosure that separates the ghetto from the rest of the city. Vowing to find the killer (soon other, similarly slain Jewish children are discovered), Erik attempts to investigate, finding that the trail seems to point toward a Jewish traitor. Moving back and forth in time, Zimler brings the dailiness of life in the ghetto—both its overwhelming horror and claustrophobia and its moments of startling humanity—to vivid, sometimes unbearable life, all in the context of a nightmare version of the classic locked-room mystery. Gripping and deeply disturbing. - Booklist


“Zimler, who examined the slaughter of Jews in 16th-century Portugal in The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon, explores a different dark period in the Jewish people’s history in this solid mystery thriller. In 1940, psychiatrist Erik Cohen moves into the Warsaw ghetto before the Nazis force him to do so, along with his niece, Stefa, and his beloved great nephew, Adam, who appears to be about nine. Cohen is frantic when the boy vanishes and is beyond distraught when Adam’s corpse is located with the child’s right leg severed from the knee down. Determined to track down the killer, Cohen has further cause for alarm after discovering that Adam was not the murderer’s only victim; that Benjamin Schrei, a representative of the ghetto’s Jewish Council, knew the killing was part of a series; and that a Jew might be responsible for the butchery. The highly unusual setting adds tension to the investigation, and Zimler successfully manages to convey the horrors of the Holocaust through the experiences of one family.” – Publishers Weekly

Thursday, July 07, 2011

A Celebration of the Writing and Art of MERVYN PEAKE

This Saturday, July 9, 2011 marks the centenary of Mervyn Peake's birth, and an international celebration of the brilliant creator of Gormenghast in now under way.

Several new books will be published to coincide with the centenary, including Maeve Gilmore's conclusion to the Titus trilogy, Titus Awakes.

The Overlook Press is also publishing The Sunday Books, a truly remarkable collaboration featuring Peake's amazing drawings with verse by world-renowned fantasy writer (and friend of the Peake's) Michael Moorcock.

Also available this summer is a landmark edition of Gormenghast, The Illustrated Gormenghast Trilogy, a beautiful, definitive, clothbound edition that surpasses all previous editions.

Last week The Guardian ran a tribute to Peake with wonderful essays by Michael Moorcock, China Miéville, Hilary Spurling and AL Kennedy. And The New Yorker's "Book Bench" blog recently posted a tribute and slide show celebrating Mervyn Peake's Wonderland.

And Peake fans will definitely want to visit the superb Mervyn Peake website for all the latest information and birthday events!