What is JacketFlap

  • JacketFlap connects you to the work of more than 200,000 authors, illustrators, publishers and other creators of books for Children and Young Adults. The site is updated daily with information about every book, author, illustrator, and publisher in the children's / young adult book industry. Members include published authors and illustrators, librarians, agents, editors, publicists, booksellers, publishers and fans.
    Join now (it's free).

Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: authorpod, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 31
1. Caitlin Doughty’s Playlist for Smoke Gets in Your Eyes

The soundtrack perfectly suited to facing your own mortality. ("My Way," "Wind beneath My Wings," and other popular funeral songs need not apply.) 1. "Dead Man's Party" by Oingo Boingo The first time I heard this song, I couldn't believe how good it was. It imagines death as a raucous adventure. "Who could ask for [...]

0 Comments on Caitlin Doughty’s Playlist for Smoke Gets in Your Eyes as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
2. Bill Clegg: The Powells.com Interview

In January of this year, eight months before its release date, the buzz was already starting to build for Bill Clegg's Did You Ever Have a Family. Bookseller colleagues were passing around the few advanced reader copies we could get a hold of and telling each other, "You have to read this!" Four major review [...]

0 Comments on Bill Clegg: The Powells.com Interview as of 8/31/2015 4:57:00 PM
Add a Comment
3. Summer Friction

I was crying or almost crying for most of Fun Home: The Musical — I already loved Alison Bechdel's graphic novel, and I've always been a sucker for the way musicals make melodrama catchy. The song that got me most was "Ring of Keys," a song about a primal moment of identification: Sydney Lucas, playing [...]

0 Comments on Summer Friction as of 8/28/2015 4:12:00 PM
Add a Comment
4. Powell’s Q&A: Christopher Moore

Note: Join us this Thursday, August 27, at Powell's Books at Cedar Hills Crossing for an author event with Christopher Moore. Describe your latest book. Secondhand Souls is the sequel to my bestselling novel A Dirty Job, which was about a single dad in San Francisco who gets the job of being Death and runs [...]

0 Comments on Powell’s Q&A: Christopher Moore as of 8/26/2015 3:40:00 PM
Add a Comment
5. Ramona Quimby Yogurt-Marinated Chicken Thighs

Note: Join us at Powell's Books at Cedar Hills Crossing on Wednesday, September 16, for an author event with Cara Nicoletti. As a kid, I read for two reasons: the first, and most common, was to escape from my everyday life by imagining a different one — to read about people and places that I [...]

0 Comments on Ramona Quimby Yogurt-Marinated Chicken Thighs as of 8/19/2015 8:06:00 PM
Add a Comment
6. The Blind Spot of United States History

The most frequent question readers ask about An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States is "Why hasn't this book been written before?" I'm flattered by that question, because it's the one I ask about texts that deeply move me; at the same time the information, argument, or story is new to me, it seems [...]

0 Comments on The Blind Spot of United States History as of 8/14/2015 1:34:00 PM
Add a Comment
7. “You Want Me to Smell My Fingers?”: Five Unforgettable Greek Idioms

The word "idiom" originates in the Greek word ídios ("one's own") and means "special feature" or "special phrasing." Idioms are peculiar because, by definition, something that is one's own is impossible to translate or share. Idioms point to ideologies inherently foreign and strange. Taken word for word, they are often ridiculous and hilarious. But translating [...]

0 Comments on “You Want Me to Smell My Fingers?”: Five Unforgettable Greek Idioms as of 7/16/2015 5:08:00 PM
Add a Comment
8. Nine Funny Animal Videos That Will Help You Write Your Novel!

If you thought watching funny animal videos was a bad habit, a time-sink, a distraction from writing your novel, well, you're probably right. But if you feel like indulging a little self-delusion, here are nine animal videos that EVERY WRITER must study carefully. They were absolutely instrumental for us in writing War of the Encyclopaedists! [...]

0 Comments on Nine Funny Animal Videos That Will Help You Write Your Novel! as of 5/19/2015 4:21:00 PM
Add a Comment
9. Best Fantasy/Sci-Fi of 2014

Here are the books that knocked my socks off in 2014. All of them would make great gifts; each of them was truly something that evoked that inexpressible delight of finding an author you are excited about. ÷ ÷ ÷ Prince of Fools (Red Queen's War #1) by Mark Lawrence Prince of Fools is essentially [...]

0 Comments on Best Fantasy/Sci-Fi of 2014 as of 12/10/2014 3:38:00 PM
Add a Comment
10. Powell’s Q&A: Emily St. John Mandel

Describe your latest book. My new novel is called Station Eleven. It's about a traveling Shakespearean theatre company in a post-apocalyptic North America. The book moves back and forth in time between the years just before a devastating flu pandemic brings about the collapse of civilization as we know it, and a time 20 years [...]

0 Comments on Powell’s Q&A: Emily St. John Mandel as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
11. Full Frontal Feminism Revisited

It is arguably the worst and best time to be a feminist. In the years since I first wrote Full Frontal Feminism, we've seen a huge cultural shift in the way feminism is thought of along with the same old nonsense. Decades after feminists fought for access to birth control, against sexual assault and rape [...]

0 Comments on Full Frontal Feminism Revisited as of 7/25/2014 12:32:00 AM
Add a Comment
12. Siri Hustvedt: The Powells.com Interview

Siri Hustvedt's latest novel, The Blazing World, is aptly titled; it is a tour de force about a larger-than-life artist, Harriet ("Harry") Burden, whose three great works used "masks" — male artists who claimed the works as their own. Hustvedt frames the book as an anthology of Harry's life and work after her death, including [...]

0 Comments on Siri Hustvedt: The Powells.com Interview as of 2/28/2014 5:34:00 PM
Add a Comment
13. Powell’s Q&A: Rene Denfeld

Describe your latest book. The Enchanted is a story narrated by a man on death row. The novel was inspired by my work as a death penalty investigator and some of the questions I face. Why do people do such terrible things to each other? What is the meaning of redemption? While the setting is [...]

0 Comments on Powell’s Q&A: Rene Denfeld as of 2/28/2014 1:52:00 AM
Add a Comment
14. An Interview with the Author, Part One

For my second blog post (ever), I wish to conduct a simple (but extensive and even possibly endless) interview with myself. Its purpose is to force the reluctant subject into inadvertent admissions or revelations that the reclusive subject has hitherto kept secret. You were born in New Zealand. True or false? Too much importance is [...]

0 Comments on An Interview with the Author, Part One as of 10/8/2013 2:40:00 PM
Add a Comment
15. A Smash Is Born

Editor's note: Chris Bolton is not only a former Powell's employee, he was also once the primary writer for this blog. So we are particularly proud today to post the following essay by our former coworker and friend as he promotes the publication of his first book. Congratulations, Chris! As is so often the case [...]

0 Comments on A Smash Is Born as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
16. Domenica Ruta: The Powells.com Interview

Growing up in an Italian-American family in Danvers, Massachusetts, Domenica Ruta had a life filled with violence and poverty but also imagination and love. Ruta's mother, Kathi, who "believed it was more important to be an interesting person than it was to be a good one," cycled between welfare and great wealth, helped get her [...]

0 Comments on Domenica Ruta: The Powells.com Interview as of 2/26/2013 5:09:00 PM
Add a Comment
17. George Saunders: The Powells.com Interview

George Saunders fans have long been stalwart champions of his work, recommending CivilWarLand in Bad Decline and Pastoralia to anyone who would listen, pushing copies of In Persuasion Nation and The Braindead Megaphone into the hands of the unconverted. He's always had critical praise, from no less than Thomas Pynchon ("An astoundingly tuned voice — [...]

0 Comments on George Saunders: The Powells.com Interview as of 2/12/2013 3:26:00 PM
Add a Comment
18. Whitney Otto: The Powells.com Interview

As a writer, Whitney Otto is a democrat. Her tendency is to tell a story through a plurality of voices, to refract her narrative through a prism of perspectives. This is most obvious in her bestselling first novel, How to Make an American Quilt, whose central metaphor is literally a collection of discarded bits of [...]

0 Comments on Whitney Otto: The Powells.com Interview as of 1/30/2013 3:48:00 PM
Add a Comment
19. Two Years with Mawson

I feel as though, in a certain sense, I've spent the last two years in Antarctica with Douglas Mawson while researching and writing Alone on the Ice, my book about Australia's greatest explorer. Exactly one century ago, in January 1913, Mawson pulled off the feat that Sir Edmund Hillary later called "the greatest survival story [...]

0 Comments on Two Years with Mawson as of 1/26/2013 10:54:00 AM
Add a Comment
20. Lisa O’Donnell: The Powells.com Interview

"Today is Christmas Eve. Today is my birthday. Today I am fifteen. Today I buried my parents in the backyard. Neither of them were beloved." Those dramatic first lines of Lisa O'Donnell's debut novel, The Death of Bees, launch the story of two sisters, 15-year-old Marnie and 12-year-old Nelly, who, in alternating voices (along with [...]

0 Comments on Lisa O’Donnell: The Powells.com Interview as of 12/31/2012 3:47:00 PM
Add a Comment
21. The Truth about Children and Anarchy

When you write a children's book called A Rule Is to Break: A Child's Guide to Anarchy, some eyebrows inevitably get raised in your direction. As a result, people might not come to you for parenting advice, but we say they're wrong about that. For parents fearful of children run amok, our book sets off [...]

0 Comments on The Truth about Children and Anarchy as of 12/27/2012 1:59:00 PM
Add a Comment
22. Mea Culpa, Minerva et Mars

The motto "Art and War," under imposing statues of Minerva and Mars, has graced a cartouche over the entrance to Stockholm's Riddarhuset — the House of Nobles — since 1647. Those words struck a powerful chord while doing research for my novel, The Stockholm Octavo. Providing a factual core for the story was Gustav III, [...]

0 Comments on Mea Culpa, Minerva et Mars as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
23. Steven Johnson: The Powells.com Interview

In a 2003 TED Talk, Steven Johnson quipped: "Who decides that SoHo should have this personality and that the Latin Quarter should have that personality? There are some kind of executive decisions, but mostly the answer is, everybody and nobody." A running theme through Johnson's work is that complex systems operate best when they are [...]

0 Comments on Steven Johnson: The Powells.com Interview as of 10/2/2012 2:08:00 PM
Add a Comment
24. J. Robert Lennon: The Powells.com Interview

J. Robert Lennon's first book, The Light of Falling Stars, got a glowing review from the New Yorker: "Lennon's impressive first novel — psychologically nuanced, richly detailed, unexpectedly comic — offers us an unsentimental examination of the ways in which we find and lose those we love, both before and after death." His novels and [...]

0 Comments on J. Robert Lennon: The Powells.com Interview as of 9/17/2012 5:50:00 PM
Add a Comment
25. Writing a Series; or, The Characters Who Just Won’t Die, Dammit

Devil Said Bang is the fourth Sandman Slim book. As I write this, I'm currently working on book five, Kill City Blues. When I started out, the last thing I thought I'd be writing was a series or anything other than science fiction. However, Sandman Slim dwells in that ever-shifting netherworld somewhere between Jim Thompson [...]

0 Comments on Writing a Series; or, The Characters Who Just Won’t Die, Dammit as of 9/17/2012 3:16:00 PM
Add a Comment

View Next 5 Posts