THINGS TO DO IN ROCHESTER
To all of our Rochester, NY readers (surely, we must have some) - don't miss the chance to see Laila Lalami who is making a number of area appearances.
To all of our Rochester, NY readers (surely, we must have some) - don't miss the chance to see Laila Lalami who is making a number of area appearances.
Not sure how this one got past us, but you'll have a chance this evening to hear Micheline Aharonian Marcom (author of the superb Three Apples Fell From Heaven) when she appears at Duttons Books on March 18 to read from her new novel Draining the Sea. Opportunities to visit Duttons are disappearing quickly, and we can't think of a better reason to get out there. Evenings in Literary L.A. don't get much better.
(And if you're reading this in NY, we also highly recommend Lydia Millet and Martha Southgate, also appearing tonight as part of the Pacific Standard Fiction Series.)
Don't forget, Charles Bock will be at Vroman's tomorrow evening, so check him out and make up your own mind about Beautiful Children. (We'll be there as well.) In preparation for the visit, the L.A. Times runs a weirdly un-bylined story today.
But he wanted to paint a picture of the people "who keep the machine working: They don't go to the Strip, they don't see Cher's new show. But when they drive around, every thoroughfare has ads for the strip clubs, for locals-only slot clubs; there's payday loans everywhere."
The NBCC has rechristened its "Best Recommended List." The new iteration? The much catchier GoodReads. Which is a good reminder to alert you all to an event I will be moderating on Tuesday evening at Skylight. Yes, I know it's election day, so cast your vote early and then come by and get your mind off the results. Details:
Tuesday, February 5, 2008, 7:30 p.m.
Panel: The NBCC GoodReads Winter List.
In December, the National Book Critics Circle launched "The Best Recommended" project - now rechristened GoodReads - in which the NBCC asked its members to recommend books that they'd recently read and truly loved, trendy or obscure.
On February 5, the NBCC will announce its second round of recommendations and this panel will look both at the recommendations themselves, as well as the art of recommending: Who are your best recommenders (we all have them, right?), the worst recommenders (someone who consistently doesn't get your taste)? What constitutes a meaningful recommendation and what do you look for when you hear one? What about the business of recommending itself: who has the authority to do it, where do good ones come from and how does it sell books, if at all?
Please join the NBCC award winning poet Amy Gerstler, the NPR book critic Veronique de Turenne, the novelist Katherine Taylor, the novelist and critic Darcy Cosper, and the blogger and novelist Mark Sarvas for this entertaining and lively discussion, and bring along some of your own recommendations!
Don't forget to stop in and say hi to TEV Guest Blogger emeritus Tom Dolby when he hits Book Soup Wednesday night to read from and sign his new novel The Sixth Form.
You will have two opportunities to catch up with Jami Attenberg tomorrow, whose novel The Kept Man is showing up in all the finest places. She'll be at Book Soup in the afternoon and at Vermin on the Mount in the evening. We'll be there as well to have her sign a copy for next week's TEV giveaway!
Word reaches us from editor Whitney Pastorek about the December 10 shindig to bid farewell to the print edition of Pindeldyboz. (The website, we're assured, is going strong.) Pastorek advises us that "To celebrate this momentous occasion, we're also having a huge blowout party December 10th in NYC, at the Slipper Room on the lower east side. I've got $600 in the bank account and I plan to spend it all. At the very least, that means pizza for a lot of folks."
Pizza? Literary types? The Slipper Room? If we were still in New York, we'd be so there. Hope you'll stop in and check out the fun. Details here.
In his recent TEV guest review of Home Land, Jim Ruland called Sam Lipsyte the "funniest writer of his generation," and we're quite inclined to agree. We tore through Home Land in two joyful sittings and can't remember the last time we've laughed so hard. Lipsyte's constellation of oddly sympathetic losers is rendered with a sparkling, inspired prose style that's sent us off in search of all his prior work. In Lewis Miner's (a.k.a Teabag) woeful epistolary dispatches to his high school alumni newsletter ("I did not pan out."), we find an anti-hero for the age. Highly, highly recommended.