If everyone is (or stays) healthy by this weekend we'll be going to see Brian Regan. (I know, I know... lots of fluids... but sheesh, this bug is all up and down the east coast, far as I can tell...)
I've actually never been to a comedy show before, so I'm really excited! My kids were too old for Dora the Explorer-- wonder if he knows any Teletubbies??
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Blog: Art, Words, Life (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: La Bloga (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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NEW FROM DAGOBERTO GILB
Good news that Dagoberto Gilb's second novel, The Flowers (Grove Press), is set to hit the book shelves this month. Here's the publisher's blurb about a book that is already getting high praise:
"Sonny Bravo is a tender, unusually smart fifteen-year-old who is living with his vivacious mother in a large city where intense prejudice is not just white against black, but also brown. When Sonny’s mother, Silvia, suddenly marries an Okie building contractor named Cloyd Longpre, they are uprooted to a small apartment building, Los Flores. As Sonny sweeps its sidewalks, he meets his neighbors and becomes ensnared in their lives: Cindy, an eighteen-year-old druggie who is married and bored; Nica, a cloistered Mexican girl who cares for her infant brother but who is never allowed to leave their unit. The other tenants range from Pink, an albino black man who sells old cars in front of the building, to Bud, a muscled-up construction worker who hates blacks and Mexicans, even while he’s married to a Mexican-American woman.
"The Flowers is about breaking rules. Dagoberto Gilb, in arguably his most powerful work yet, has written an inspiring novel about hate, pain, anger, and love that transcends age, race, and time. Gilb’s novel displays the fearlessness and wit that have helped make him one of this country’s most authentic and original voices."
How about this for an intriguing quote about the book: "But for the fact that he lacks a younger sister and an older brother, has never attended prep school, or ventured within 2,000 miles of Radio City Music Hall, and comes from a working-class Mexican background, Sonny Bravo could be Holden Caulfield." Stephen G. Kellman in the Texas Observer.
COMEDY FUND RAISER FOR CHIC CHICANA
This is the first comedy night of 2008 to support the CHIC CHICANA SCHOLARSHIP Program.
With the 2008 Chic Chicana Class the program will have graduated 900 students.
Visit the website at www.chicchicana.com
ROMANTIC READS
In honor of Valentine's Day, the Tattered Cover staff came up with a list of favorite romantic reads. One of these books teamed up with a rose and a cup of hot chocolate might just be the perfect li'l sumpin' sumpin' for a cold and wintry Valentine's Day.
Gods Behaving Badly, Marie Phillips
Loving Frank, Nancy Horan
Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen
Outlander, Diana Gabaldon
Gaudy Night, Dorothy Sayers
Much Ado About Nothing, William Shakespeare
An Equal Music, Vikram Seth
A Farewell to Arms, Ernest Hemingway
The Lover, Marguerite Duras
Gone With the Wind, Margaret Mitchell
Doctor Zhivago, Boris Pasternak
Cannery Row, John Steinbeck
Silk, Allesandro Baricco
The Bad Girl, Mario Vargas Llosa
The Passion, Jeanette Winterson
The English Patient, Michael Ondaatje
Like Water For Chocolate, Laura Esquivel
Time Enough for Love, Robert Heinlein
Twilight, Stephenie Meyer
Somewhere in Time, Richard Matheson
Is it time for Yeats yet?
AMERICAN BOOK AWARDS
I want to offer belated congratulations to two friends of La Bloga who received a 2007 American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation : Rigoberto Gonzalez and Reyna Grande. The announcement of these awards included the following:
"The American Book Awards, established in 1978 by the Before Columbus Foundation, recognize outstanding literary achievement from the entire spectrum of America's diverse literary community. The purpose of the awards is to recognize literary excellence without limitations or restrictions. There are no categories, no nominees, and therefore no losers. The award winners range from well-known and established writers to under-recognized authors and first works. There are no quotas for diversity, the winners list simply reflects it as a natural process. The Before Columbus Foundation views American culture as inclusive and has always considered the term multicultural to be not a description of various categories, groups, or special interests, but rather as the definition of all of American literature. The Awards are not bestowed by an industry organization, but rather are a writers’ award given by other writers."
The winners are an impressive list:
2007 Daniel Cassidy, How The Irish Invented Slang: The Secret Language of the Crossroads
(CounterPunch/AK Press)
Michael Eric Dyson, Come Hell or High Water: Hurricane Katrina and the Color of Disaster
(Basic Books)
Rigoberto Gonzalez, Butterfly Boy: Memories of a Chicano Mariposa (University of Wisconsin Press)
Reyna Grande, Across a Hundred Mountains (Washington Square Press)
Ernestine Hayes, Blonde Indian: An Alaska Native Memoir (University of Arizona Press)
Patricia Klindienst, The Earth Knows My Name: Food, Culture and Sustainability in the Gardens of Ethnic Americans (Beacon Press)
Gary Panter, Jimbo's Inferno (Fantagraphics Books)
Jeffrey F.L. Partridge, Beyond Literary Chinatown (University of Washington Press)
Judith Roche, Wisdom of the Body (Black Heron Press)
Kali Vanbaale, The Space Between (River City Publishing)"
ACENTOS: A GATHERING AND CELEBRATION OF LATINO AND LATINA POETS
A reading of more than twenty-five Latino/a poets from New York City and around the country. Scheduled readers include Martín Espada, Sandra María Esteves, Rafael Campo, Aracelis Girmay, Willie Perdomo, Brenda Cárdenas, and more.
Presented by El Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños and Acentos Bronx Poetry Showcase.
The School of Social Work at Hunter College
129 E. 79th Street, NYC
Later.
Blog: The Written Nerd (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ABA, wiki, cop-out, Add a tag
Just madness, no links -- forgive my overworked state, I promise I'll have more later this week.
I suggest you spend Monday messing around with the Bookseller Wiki. Actually, you can only change it if you're an ABA member, but the accumulated knowledge (and they only just unveiled it), is fascinating. Especially the info on the order of kids' book series like Warriors -- I don't think that information is available anywhere else.
What's your favorite example of information sharing?
Blog: The Written Nerd (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: chronicle, DTF, ABA, NAIBA, Add a tag
Despite the purported summer doldrums, July was a busy month as booksellers came together for pooling our collective brains and planning for the future. My own brain is a bit fuzzy today as I seem to have contracted an icky summer cold, but I'll do my best to give you the scoop on the two meetings I attended this month.
Wednesday, July 11: American Booksellers Association Digital Task Force (ABA-DTF)
Participants:
* Beck Anderson (Anderson’s Bookshops – Naperville, IL)
* Tom Campbell (Regulator Bookshop – Durham, NC)
* Dan Cullen (Director Information Department – American Booksellers Assoc.)
* Avin Domnitz (CEO – American Booksellers Assoc.)
* Kelly Justice (Fountain Bookstore – Richmond, VA)
* Russ Lawrence (Chapter One Books – Hamilton, MT)
* Ricky Leung (Technical Lead – BookSense.com)
* Madeline MacIntosh (Senior VP and Publisher, Random House Audio Group)
* Jessica Stockon (McNally Robinson – New York, NY)
* Neil Strandberg (Tattered Cover – Denver, CO)
* Oren Teicher (COO – American Booksellers Assoc.)
* Len Vlahos (Director BookSense.com & Education – American Booksellers Assoc.)
* Dave Weich (Powells.com – Portland, OR)
* Jeff Wexler (IT Director – American Booksellers Assoc.)
* Eric Wilska (The Book Loft – Great Barrington, MA)
Thank goodness for emailed agendas -- while all of these booksellers and ABA staffers were insightful and fascinating, there's no way I would have remembered their names and associations without Len's helpful briefing. The Digital Task Force is a rotating group of booksellers and publishing folks convened occasionally by the ABA to address issues of emerging technology and how they relate to our industry -- and perhaps most importantly, to make sure independent booksellers have a seat at the table as the nature of the book changes in the internet age.
The meeting took place in the ABA offices in Tarrytown, New York, around a conference table littered with laptops, a Sony e-reader, and a projector to look at web pages on a large movie screen. Ideas were shared, theories were floated, experiences were analyzed, and jokes were made (the most memorable was one bookseller's suggestion that perhaps we needed to form a "Wake The F*** Up Task Force" for our still occasionally tech-phobic industry). I was especially fascinated by Eric Wilska's experience with an InstaBook machine, much like the Espresso Book Machine, which has added to his bottom line by printing books as a service and creating copies of out of print, public domain books that have a market in his region but are beneath the notice of any publishing company. It's just one of many opportunities indie bookstores have to take advantage of the redistribution of resources that the digital age portends, though of course these changes mean many challenges as well. The ABA, in my opinion and based on this meeting, is doing an excellent job of both keeping on top of developments in the tech world, and listening to its membership as they express how they think resources should be allocated in response.
We came up with a list of priorities, including bookseller education, BookSense developments, working with social networking sites (like Shelfari), monitoring trends in e-books, and more. I'm sure I'll be writing more about all these issues in future, and I'm looking forward to how they play out in the world of bookselling. Len Vlahos, who ran the meeting, is freshly married as of yesterday (CONGRATULATIONS!!), but he managed to contribute to a great rundown of the meeting for this article about the DTF in Bookselling This Week -- check it out for more details.
Monday, July 30: New Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association Board of Directors Meeting
Participants:
Joe Drabyak, President (Chester County Book Company, West Chest, PA)
Lucy Kogler, Vice President (Talking Leaves Inc., Buffalo, NY)
Pat Kutz, Secretary/Treasurer (Lift Bridge Book Shop, Brockport, NY)
Lynn Gonchar, Past President (Tudor Bookshop & Cafe, Kingston, PA)
Betty Bennett (Bennett Books, Wyckoff, NJ)
Carla Cohen (Politics & Prose, Washington, DC)
Paul Emberley (Walck Sales & Marketing, Wayne, PA)
Harvey Finkel (Clinton Bookshop, Clinton, NJ)
Tim Hepp (Simon & Schuster, Ardmore, PA)
Rob Stahl (Colgate University Bookstore)
Jessica Stockton Bagnulo (McNally Robinson Booksellers, New York, NY)
Eileen Dengler, Executive Director (NAIBA, Westbury, NY)
The board of our regional booksellers association met in the offices of Random House in New York (thanks again to RH for the use of the Dr. Seuss meeting room, and a few moments of wistful thinking about what it might have been like to end up on the publishing side of things in this posh, beautiful office, until I came to my senses.) There were some goodbyes (Carla Cohen and Jack Buckley of 9th Street Books in Wilmington, DE are leaving the board after much faithful service) and some hellos (we discussed nominations [secret, of course] for the next slate of board members, and it was my first meeting with my new last name, so there was some good natured teasing from my seniors on the board, as well as a David Mitchell-themed wedding gift).
Mostly, we talked about (what I like to call) NAIBA-Con: the NAIBA Fall Conference being held in Baltimore October 14 and 15. We still have a bit of evangelizing to do in bringing everyone in the industry around to the new format for the show: streamlined and scaled down, with an increased focus on publishers pitching the best of their list to help booksellers sell, and practical education for booksellers to improve their stores. But as the model is spreading to other regions across the country, excitement is running high about the potential for the new conference. Loads of fabulous regional authors are lined up for the Moveable Feast and other aspects of the show, the educational panels are looking stellar, awards for authors and others are in the works, and Eileen is (as always) working out the finest details for our weekend at the Baltimore Sheraton. Keep your eyes on the mailbox for the conference registration materials, which will be showing up soon.
I'm off to gargle with salt water again -- back with the first of the Brooklyn Lit Life interviews on Friday!
Ha, ha... just great. Alexandra loves Dora so I also watch it with her and he is so right about a lot of it.
So funny how he said that Dora doesn't rhyme with explorer.. but it does in spanish. Dora la exploradora, so I think that's how it started. Also I think that she is supposed to be in a computer, you can see at the beginning of the show a girl's room with a computer and in the computer starts the show. Also there is a cursor that clicks when you choose to go over the chocolate hill or something like that... he, he.. So everything rhymes in spanish Dora, explroadora, computadora...
I think I better start watching more grow up stuff!
Ah ha! Tienes razón, Alicia! No me di cuenta de que las palabras se riman en español!
;-)
Hello!!! I'm new at jacketflap where I found your blog, I love your maps!!! it's so nice to do that!!!! and your doodles too!
come visit one day!
www.caracarmina.blogspot.com hope you like it!
good luck, and see you soon!
vuelo!
Hola Pajara Pinta-- ¡Gracias por visitarme! I will definitely check out your blog. :-)