ALA's Notable Books Council announces 2008 top picks
PHILADELPHIA - The Notable Books Council of the Reference and User Services Association (RUSA), a division American Library Association (ALA), today released its 2008 list of outstanding books for the general reader. The titles are selected for their significant contribution to the expansion of knowledge and for the pleasure they can provide to adult readers.
Since 1944, the goal of the Notable Books Council has been to make available to the
nation's readers a list of 25 very good, very readable, and at times very important fiction, nonfiction and poetry books for the adult reader. The Council consists of members selected from the membership of RUSA's Collection Development and Evaluation Section (CODES).
This is "The List for America's Readers:"
FICTION
Bloom, Amy, Away, Random House (ISBN: 9781400063567)
Carlson, Ron, Five Skies, Penguin-Viking (ISBN: 9780670038503)
Chabon, Michael, The Yiddish Policeman's Union, HarperCollins (ISBN: 9780007149827)
Clarke, Brock, An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New England, Algonquin (ISBN:
9781565125513)
Clinch, John, Finn: a novel, Random House (ISBN: 9781400065912)
Englander, Nathan, The Ministry of Special Cases, Knopf (ISBN: 9780375404931)
Holthe, Tess Uriza, The Five-Forty-Five to Cannes, Crown (ISBN: 9780307351852)
Jones, Lloyd, Mister Pip, Dell (ISBN: 9780385341066)
McEwan, Ian, On Chesil Beach, Nan A. Talese (ISBN: 9780385522403)
Malouf, David, Complete Stories, Pantheon (ISBN: 9780375424977)
Pettersen, Per, Out Stealing Horses, Graywolf (ISBN: 9781555974701)
Trevor, William, Cheating at Canasta, Penguin/Viking (ISBN: 9780670018376)
NONFICTION
Ackerman, Diane, The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story, W.W. Norton (ISBN: 9780393061727)
Angier, Natalie, The Canon, Houghton Mifflin (ISBN: 9780618242955)
Ayres, Ian, Super Crunchers, Bantam Books (ISBN: 9780553805406)
Godwin, Peter, When a Crocodile Eats the Sun, Little Brown (ISBN: 9780316158947)
Groopman, Jerome, How Doctors Think, Houghton Mifflin Company (ISBN: 9780618610037)
Howell, Georgina, Gertrude Bell: Queen of the Desert, Shaper of Nations; FSG 780374161620)
Isaacson, Walter, Einstein: His Life and Universe, S & S, (ISBN: 9780743264730)
Kingsolver, Barbara, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life, HarperCollins (ISBN: 9780060852559)
Margonelli, Lisa, Oil on the Brain, Doubleday-Nan Talese (ISBN: 9780385511452)
Weisman, Alan, The World Without Us, St. Martins (ISBN: 9780312347291
POETRY
Bosselaar, Laure-Anne, A New Hunger, Ausable Press (ISBN: 9781931337328)
Kennedy, X.J., In a Prominent Bar in Secaucus, Johns Hopkins (ISBN: 9780801886539)
This list will be available on the Notable Books Web page on the RUSA/ALA Web site
(http://www.ala.org/rusa/notable.html) with annotations at a later date.
Members of this year's committee are: Sara Maxine Taffae (Chair), State Library of
Louisiana; Patricia L. Gregory (Vice-Chair), Saint Louis University; Alicia Kathryn Ahlvers, Kansas City Public Library; Susie F. Brown; Shaker Heights Public Library; Hope Cockrell, Denton Public Library; Daniel J. Gillane, Lafayette Public Library;
Steven Jablonski, Skokie Public Library; A. Issac Pulver, Saratoga Springs Public Library; Rhea Joyce Rubin, Rubin Consulting; Andrea J. Slonosky, Long Island University-Brooklyn Campus; Shawna Saavedra Thorup, Fayetteville Public Library; and Brenda Clark Wegener, Mercantile Library; with Brad Hooper, Booklist.
Saturday, January 19, 2008
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EDGAR AWARD NOMINATIONS ARE IN...
BEST NOVEL
Christine Falls by Benjamin Black (Henry Holt and Company)
Priest by Ken Bruen (St. Martin's Minotaur)
The Yiddish Policemen's Union by Michael Chabon (HarperCollins)
Soul Patch by Reed Farrel Coleman (Bleak House Books)
Down River by John Hart (St. Martin's Minotaur)
BEST FIRST NOVEL BY AN AMERICAN AUTHOR
Missing Witness by Gordon Campbell (HarperCollins – William Morrow)
In the Woods by Tana French (Penguin Group – Viking)
Snitch Jacket by Christopher Goffard (The Rookery Press)
Head Games by Craig McDonald (Bleak House Books)
Pyres by Derek Nikitas (St. Martin's Minotaur)
BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
Queenpin by Megan Abbott (Simon & Schuster)
Blood of Paradise by David Corbett (Random House - Mortalis)
Cruel Poetry by Vicki Hendricks (Serpent's Tail)
Robbie's Wife by Russell Hill (Hard Case Crime)
Who is Conrad Hirst? by Kevin Wignall (Simon & Schuster)
BEST FACT CRIME
The Birthday Party by Stanley Alpert (Penguin Group – G.P. Putnam's Sons)
Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy
by Vincent Bugliosi (W.W. Norton and Company
Chasing Justice: My Story of Freeing Myself After Two Decades on Death
Row for a Crime I Didn't Commit by Kerry Max Cook (HarperCollins –
William Morrow)
Relentless Pursuit: A True Story of Family, Murder, and the Prosecutor
Who Wouldn't Quit by Kevin Flynn (Penguin Group – G.P. Putnam's Sons)
Sacco & Vanzetti: The Men, The Murders and the Judgment of Mankind by
Bruce Watson (Penguin Group – Viking)
BEST CRITICAL/BIOGRAPHIC AL
The Triumph of the Thriller: How Cops, Crooks and Cannibals Captured
Popular Fiction by Patrick Anderson (Random House)
A Counter-History of Crime Fiction: Supernatural, Gothic, Sensational by
Maurizio Ascari (Palgrave Macmillan)
Deviance in Contemporary Crime Fiction by Christiana Gregoriou (Palgrave
Macmillan)
Arthur Conan Doyle: A Life in Letters by Jon Lellenberg, Daniel
Stashower and Charles Foley (The Penguin Press)
Chester Gould: A Daughter's Biography of the Creator of Dick Tracy
by Jean Gould O’Connell (McFarland & Company)
BEST SHORT STORY
"The Catch" – Still Waters by Mark Ammons (Level Best Books)
"Blue Note" – Chicago Blues by Stuart M. Kaminsky (Bleak House Books)
"Hardly Knew Her" – Dead Man's Hand by Laura Lippman (Harcourt Trade
Publishers)
"The Golden Gopher" – Los Angeles Noir by Susan Straight (Akashic Books
"Uncle" – A Hell of a Woman” by Daniel Woodrell (Busted Flush Press)
BEST JUVENILE
The Name of This Book is Secret by Pseudonymous Bosch (Little, Brown
Books for Young Readers)
Shadows on Society Hill by Evelyn Coleman (American Girl Publications)
Deep and Dark and Dangerous by Mary Downing Hahn (Clarion Books)
The Night Tourist by Katherine Marsh (Hyperion Books for Young Readers)
Sammy Keyes and the Wild Things by Wendelin Van Draanen (Random House
Children’s Books – Alfred A. Knopf)
BEST YOUNG ADULT
Rat Life by Tedd Arnold (Penguin – Dial Books for Young Readers)
Diamonds in the Shadow by Caroline B. Cooney (Random House Children's
Books – Delacorte Press)
Touching Snow by M. Sindy Felin (Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
– Atheneum Books for Young Readers)
Blood Brothers by S.A. Harazin (Random House Children's Books –
Delacorte Press)
Fragments by Jeffry W. Johnston (Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
– Simon Pulse)
BEST PLAY
If/Then by David Foley (International Mystery Writers' Festival)
Panic by Joseph Goodrich (International Mystery Writers' Festival)
Books by Stuart M. Kaminsky (International Mystery Writers' Festival)
BEST TELEVISION EPISODE TELEPLAY
"It’s Alive" – Dexter, Teleplay by Daniel Cerone (Showtime)
"Yahrzeit" – Waking the Dead, Teleplay by Declan Croghan & Barbara
Machin (BBC America)
"Pie-Lette" – Pushing Daisies, Teleplay by Bryan Fuller (ABC/Warner Bros
Television
"Senseless" – Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Teleplay by Julie Martin &
Siobhan Byrne O’Connor (Wolf Films/NBC Universal)
"Pilot" – Burn Notice, Teleplay by Matt Nix (USA Network/Fox Television
Studios)
BEST MOTION PICTURE SCREENPLAY
Eastern Promises, Screenplay by Steven Knight (Focus Features)
The Lookout, Screenplay by Scott Frank (Miramax)
Michael Clayton, Screenplay by Tony Gilroy (Warner Bros. Pictures)
No Country for Old Men, Screenplay by Joel Coen & Ethan Coen, based on
the book by Cormac McCarthy (Miramax)
Zodiac, Screenplay by James Vanderbilt, based on the book by Robert
Graysmith
(Warner Bros. Pictures)
ROBERT L. FISH MEMORIAL AWARD
"The Catch" – Still Waters by Mark Ammons (Level Best Books)
GRAND MASTER
Bill Pronzini
RAVEN AWARDS
Center for the Book in the Library of Congress
Kate's Mystery Books (Kate Mattes, owner)
THE SIMON & SCHUSTER - MARY HIGGINS CLARK AWARD
In Cold Pursuit by Sarah Andrews (St. Martin's Minotaur)
Wild Indigo by Sandi Ault (Penguin Group – Berkley Prime Crime)
Inferno by Karen Harper (Harlequin – MIRA Books)
The First Stone by Judith Kelman (Penguin Group – Berkley Prime Crime)
Deadman's Switch by Barbara Seranella (St. Martin's Minotaur)
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Monday, January 14, 2008
GUEST BLOGGER: LAURA BENEDICT
Laura Benedict is the author of Isabella Moon, her first novel which was published a few short months ago to wonderful reviews.
From Mount Olympus to Days of Our Lives: My Rules for Writing
When I first sat down to write a thriller, I gave myself two rules: 1) Something had to happen to move the story along in every chapter, and 2) The events could possibly happen on a scary, sexy version of my favorite television soap opera, “Days of Our Lives.” Does that sound funny to you? Whenever I give a reading or a talk and tell that story, it’s always followed by nervous giggles from most of the women and uncomfortable looks from attendant men. In academic crowds, people sometimes frown.
You see, soap operas aren’t considered acceptable role models for writers of literature. Soap operas are melodramatic---souped up on plot and emotion. They bring to mind housewives eating ice cream out of a box in front of the television, unattended children, piles of laundry. (Few people extend their disdain to men camped out in front of “Friday Night Lights,” or HBO’s “Rome.” But I digress.)
I have always loved plot: tattered copies of Bronte novels and Shakespeare’s plays have been among my most prized possessions. Years ago, someone gave my daughter a copy of D’Aulaires’ Greek Myths. Do you have any idea what Zeus’s sex life was like, what intrigues swirled around him, what agonies his family members put each other through? I adored the big family drama novels of the twentieth century. I swooned over The Thornbirds, Dr. Zhivago, and The Carpetbaggers. My more recent plot-driven favorites are by Elmore Leonard and Elizabeth George. Okay, so there might be a rather more direct connection between The Carpetbaggers and “Days of Our Lives” than Ancient Greece and modern-day Salem (the imaginary town where “Days” takes place), but my point is the same. It’s all about story and vibrant characters who tend to do the things we at home generally have the good sense not to—but really wish we could.
Before the writing of my novel, ISABELLA MOON, really got under way, I spent a considerable amount of time asking myself, “What’s the strangest/wildest/most unlikely thing that could happen right now? What would really be fun and astonishing?” How freeing it was to put the character-writing skills I’d developed over the years to use in a plot that pleased and entertained me.
One of the loveliest compliments a reviewer ever paid me was to say that the supernatural elements in ISABELLA MOON were as natural and realistic as the books’ characters. Little did she know how delighted I would be to read that, because I wanted my characters to be just as sensible as the inhabitants of Salem were when the beautiful and good Dr. Marlena Evans started inexplicably causing trouble. Was she depressed, mentally ill, or drunk? No. She was possessed by a demon, of course! So they got her an exorcist and she was soon right as rain. At least until a few years later when she was discovered to be a serial killer, but wasn’t really. It all had something to do with the victims’ bodies not really belonging to the victims, but to corpses surgically altered to look like the intended victims.
Pass the ice cream!
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Sunday, January 13, 2008
Matrimony Proposal for Reading Groups
I received an email from Joshua Henkin, author of MATRIMONY, which was selected as one of the New York Times top 100 Books of 2007. I thought I would share:
"I wanted to let you know about a standing offer I have out to book groups, which is that I'd be happy to participate by phone (or in person, if the book group is in the New York, New Jersey, Philly area) with book groups that discuss MATRIMONY."
If your book group is looking for an author to speak with, or you are in the tri-state area and would like to have an author discuss his book with your book group, get in touch with Josh through his website: JoshuaHenkin.com
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Thursday, January 10, 2008
I'm feeling Plum Lucky...
Janet Evanovich kicked off her Plum Lucky tour in my backyard, at the Borders in Boca Raton. She is a favorite of three generations of women in my family - me, my mother-in-law, and my daughter. My mother-in-law isn't mobile enough to wait in a line, but my daughter and I are, and wait we did.
Refreshments were served, the lines kept growing and finally Janet arrived, daughter Alex in tow. By then about 300 very patient people were waiting close to an hour. 
While I was disappointed that Janet didn't give a talk or read or anything, she got comfortable behind a table and spent as much time with each person as they wanted. She chatted, signed all the books everyone had with them, and took pictures with whoever wanted to. Alex handed out stickers and balloons to everyone who wanted them. And to their credit, Borders, via Crystal the community relations person, casually moved the elderly and disabled to the front of the line.
Even the sales staff had fun - this is Cathy, who gave me my wristband for my place in line at 9:30 in the morning and was still smiling at 7:30 that night! A good time was had by all.
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Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Carnival of the Criminal Minds, No. 7
Happy New Year, and welcome to the carnival!
When I was a kid, I never wanted to run away to the circus, but when I hit the terrible teen years, the carnival was a temptation. All those bad boys...but alas, I steered clear until now.
This carnival features the reading freak better known as the BookBitch. In years past, I could safely say I read a book a day. While on vacation, I'd been known to double that. But this past year, with graduate school, working on a research intensive book, my job, my family, well, I don't think I read more than 300 books. Told you I was a freak.
The thing is, when you read as much as I do, there is a constant need for more books. There are thousands published each year, but many just don't tempt me. When I find authors I like, I go back and read all their books and then have to start over again.
So I am going to share with you here The Secret. Not the Rhonda Byrne, Oprah hyped Secret, but the secret to finding a never ending supply of good books. Ready? Just two words: new authors.
Sure, there are plenty of authors that have been around for years that I haven't gotten to yet, and that's fine, in fact, it's even reassuring to know that they are there, just waiting in the wings for the day I have nothing to read. For instance, I haven't read the Kate Shugak series by Dana Stabenow, the Kathleen Mallory books by Carol O'Connell, or even the Hoke Moseley books by Charles Willeford, among others. But all these new books are a constant source of temptation. Books are delivered to my door daily; advance reading copies of what could be the next big blockbuster. Catalogs effusing one wondrous book after another.
It sometimes gets to be a little overwhelming, to be honest. Even I can't read the 25-50 books that arrive on my doorstep each week. But I can't resist looking at them all. Reading the blurbs, the letters hyping each book as the Next Big Thing. And when I find one I can't resist, I succumb to temptation and read it.
Often I receive books by authors no one ever heard of. Brand new. First book out in print. What a thrill to find a Marcus Sakey, Randall Hicks, Robert Fate or a Chelsea Cain! And then it's an even bigger thrill to share my new found treasure. With my readers. With my friends. With my patrons at the library. With the librarians and booksellers and readers and writers on the listservs I frequent. I am extremely opinionated (probably no one ever noticed that about me...)and when I find a book I love, I want everyone else to read it, and hopefully love it too - and then tell their friends about it.
With that in mind, I'd like to introduce you to some new writers. They all have their first thriller just out or coming out in 2008.
Let's start with CJ Lyons. CJ is a pediatrician turned thriller writer whose first novel, LIFELINES, is due out in March. I was privileged to read it, and I just loved it! It's a medical thriller with great characters, a terrific, twisty storyline and heart. It reminded me of a grown-up, much edgier Cherry Ames, for the seven people who remember those books.
I pulled this from her blog, Vital Signs --
Homicidal Holidays
"I love talking with mystery/suspense authors because we can talk about the fun things in life, including the best ways to kill someone and get away with it.
So, given the winter holiday season, I thought I'd throw out a few ideas on Homicidal Holiday Hazards..."
Read the rest here: CJ Lyons Vital Signs
I met Susan Arnout Smith at the first ThrillerFest in Arizona. She approached me, told me she had a book contract with St. Martins Minotaur, and she gave me this one sentence synopsis: "It's about a woman being stalked by a very bad man, who targets her through her 5-year old daughter, and then he grabs the kid and forces the mother to play the kid's favorite game, called The Timer Game, to get her back." We were outside on a 100 degree day in Phoenix in July, and that sentence gave me chills.
Well, THE TIMER GAME comes out January 8th, and Susan is the guest blogger this week on the Moments in Crime blog. This is a blog from St. Martins Minotaur, and features a different crime fiction author each week. Last week was Linda L. Richards, whose new book has such a great title: DEATH WAS THE OTHER WOMAN. There have been some terrific posts, so check it out.
Another new writer is Kelli Stanley. Kelli writes what she calls "Roman Noir." Her book, Nox Dormienda (A Long Night for Sleeping) is due out in July from Five Star Mysteries. This is a tidbit from her blog:
A Novel Year!
"Words are strange little creatures. Writers try to herd them, which is sometimes like trying to herd cats. We stretch and poke and challenge them, too, so maybe they have a right to get annoyed with us."
Read the rest here: Writing in the Dark
www.kellistanley.com
I met Laura Benedict last summer at ThrillerFest 2 in NYC, and her book, ISABELLA MOON, was generating lots of buzz. It's out now, and my reviewer, Becky LeJeune loved it, saying, "Benedict’s debut is a compelling read that brings to mind a strange combination of Sherwood Anderson’s Winesburg, Ohio and Stephen King’s Needful Things. Laura Benedict is definitely one to watch." And you can start watching her with this snippet from her blog:
IN ORLANDO, IF IT BLEEDS, IT LEADS
"How much do I love Orlando, Florida’s Local 6 News Station’s website? I discovered it a couple years back through several Matt Drudge links (he’s also big on British rags). Local 6 is one of the most sensational sites on the web, and I find it a little shocking that it shares its home with The Most Magical Place on Earth. Talk about fodder for fiction. "
Read the rest here: Notes From the Handbasket
Andy Harp has his first book out, A NORTHERN THUNDER from Bancroft Press. It came out in October to an excellent review from Booklist, among others. I love legal thrillers and Andy is a former Marine turned District Attorney, and writes about what he knows. When I told him about the Carnival, he sent me this piece to share -
The Crime Scene
"Every crime scene I have been to has this foreboding air about it that you feel the anguish of the victims down to your bones. Prosecutors know it. As a District Attorney, I still remember the dried, caked on crimson brown blood that covered the car seat. Combat veterans are familiar with it. A bomb may obliterate the soldier beyond identifiable body parts, but you feel the loss of life as if there is a spirit that still hangs on there."
Read the rest on Andy Harp's website: http://www.andyharp.com/
Many years ago there was a commercial where the tag line was, "try it, you'll like it". That's sort of been my philosophy about reading too. So I hope you'll try one of these new authors, or the many other new authors that are out there because you just may find something wonderful.
Don't forget to check out these Carnival rides:
previous -
Material Witness
next in line -
Detectives Beyond Borders
Thanks for reading.
Cheers, and best wishes for a happy, healthy New Year filled with love, peace, joy and lots of good books!
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Thursday, December 27, 2007
Why I do what I do...
...with books, my website, but mostly why I give away books.
This is for Chris, who is the reason I'm writing this. You know who you are.
I love books. I love to read, always have, since I was 2 years old. Yes, 2 - no snotty comments please or I'll be forced to have my mother call you and brag about me. Trust me, you don't want that.
I started my website when I was working for Borders as a way to keep track of the books I'd read, and the books I wanted to read. The Hachette Book Group, who was Time Warner books at the time, before they became AOL Time Warner, then went back to TW then became who they are now, were the publishers who got me started giving away books. They asked if I would mind giving away their books, and I was thrilled to do it.
Working for Borders was my first experience in getting free books, advance reader copies for the most part, and as an avid reader, what could be better! Since I loved getting free books, I figured other readers would too and I've given away thousands of books in the past 9 years.
As the site has grown, so have the contests and it began to take a lot of my time, basically most of my "free time". Often I found myself stealing time from work, from school, even from my family to take care of handling all the free book stuff. At the suggestion of a writer who is also a marketing genius, (thanks, MJ) I hesitantly started charging a small fee to run these contests on my website.
I am not a business person. I hate asking people for money, and I really, really hate chasing people for money. Which brings me to my sad tale of woe.
I not only do these contests for publishers, but also for independent publicists and authors whose publishers don't think web promotions are a good idea (yes, there are still some out there) or whose publishers don't have the budget, or authors who just want to do a little more to help promote themselves.
I met an author at the first ThrillerFest convention who had just landed a contract for his first book. He wanted to pick my brain a bit, but we kept missing each other and eventually just exchanged a few emails. A year later, his book was being published and his independent publicist (not the one assigned by his publisher but someone he hired on his own) arranged a book giveaway for my readers. This author, like many (most?) thriller writers, is a lawyer.
I ran the promotion last summer. There were well over 1500 entries, a very respectable number.
The author never paid my bill. He never paid the publicist for several other promotions she had arranged for him. In fact, she told me in the almost 20 years she'd been in the business, she'd never had problems with an author like she had with him, to the point of embarrassment. Oh, and he never sent out the books to the winners of the promotion I did for him either. Luckily, his publicist is a woman of honor and she sent them out at her own expense - not reimbursed, I'm sure.
Am I going to sue a lawyer for my piddly little fee? Hardly. The court costs, even in small claims court, would probably be just about what I would collect. Is his publicist going to sue? Doubtful. Sometimes we just have to suck it up and call it a learning experience.
In other words, he is the classic slimeball shyster lawyer, the reason why Shakespeare suggested killing them all, etc. etc.
But I refuse to dump on an entire profession because one guy shit on me. I know too many really nice guys who happen to be lawyers. I've dealt with probably a hundred lawyers-turned-authors who have treated me with nothing but respect and kindness.
But I do worry a bit more when I schedule promotions. Like I said, I hate asking for money, and I really hate asking for it twice.
I'm done venting. Go enter this month's contest- WIN BOOKS
There are a few days left and I am giving aways signed copies of almost all my favorite thrillers from 2007, plus some beautiful coffee table books, the latest Ian Rankin, and more!
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Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Library Journal's Best Books of 2007
The list selected by LJ editors: Margaret Heilbrun, Barbara Hoffert, Anna Katterjohn, Heather McCormack, Mirela Roncevic, & Wilda Williams
Everybody's a Critic: LJ Reviewers Pick Their 2007 Favorites, includes recommendations from a handful of LJ fiction reviewers, including your very own BookBitch
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Tuesday, December 18, 2007
VILLAGE VOICE PICKS BEST BOOKS OF 2007
See the list here: Village Voice
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Monday, December 17, 2007
10 books that make perfect presents
Cosmo’s book editor has recommendations for everyone on your list
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Slate picks the best books of 2007
Check out the list: http://www.slate.com/id/2179781/
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Friday, December 14, 2007
Best Crime Fiction from the Seattle Times
Adam Woog's best crime fiction of 2007
Adam Woog's column on crime and mystery fiction appears on the second Sunday of the month in The Seattle Times.
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Wednesday, December 12, 2007
January Magazine Best Books of 2007
Several lists here - January Magazine
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Terry Pratchett
Sad news about Terry Pratchett today - he's been diagnosed with "a very rare form of early onset Alzheimer's". He wrote a note about it on his DiscWorld News.
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Monday, December 10, 2007
TIME’s 50 Top Ten Lists of 2007
...including the Top 10 Fiction Books, Top Ten Non-Fiction Books, and Top Ten Children’s Books.
Top Ten Fiction Books:
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot DÃaz
Then We Came to the End: A Novel by Joshua Ferris
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
Out Stealing Horses: A Novel by Per Petterson
Tree of Smoke: A Novel by Denis Johnson
The House of Meetings by Martin Amis
No One Belongs Here More Than You by Miranda July
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling
Like You'd Understand, Anyway by Jim Shepard
The Post-Birthday World by Lionel Shriver
Top Ten Non-Fiction Books:
The World Without Us by Alan Weisman
Life of Picasso: The Triumphant Years, 1917-1932 by John Richardson
A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah
Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA by Tim Weiner
The Rest is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century by Alex Ross
Born Standing Up: A Comic's Life by Steve Martin
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life by Barbara Kingsolver
The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court by Jeffrey Toobin
The Center Cannot Hold: My Journey Through Madness by Elyn Sacks
Here If You Need Me by Kate Braestrup
Top Ten Children’s Books:
When Dinosaurs Came with Everything Written by Elise Broach, illustrated by David Small
Today I Will Fly Written and illustrated by Mo Willems
Motherbridge of Love Illustrated by Josee Masse
Iggy Peck, Architect Written by Andrea Beaty, illustrated by David Roberts
Great Joy Written by Kate DiCamillo, illustrated by Bagram Ibatoulline
Diary of A Fly Written Doreen Cronin; illustrated by Harry Bliss
The Chicken-Chasing Queen of Lamar County Written by Janice N. Harrington; illustrated by Shelley Jackson
Smelly Bill Written and Illustrated by Daniel Postgate
City Lullaby Written by Marilyn Singer, illustrated by Carll Cneut
Cherry and Olive Written and Illustrated by Benjamin Lacombe
To see all 50 of TIME’s Top 10 Lists of 2007, go to http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/top10/0,30576,1686204,00.html
Lists include:
1. Campaign Gaffes
2. Cartoons
3. TIME Top 10 Stories
4. Middle East News Stories
5. Asia News
6. Movies (Richard Corliss)
7. Movies (Richard Schickel)
8. New TV Shows
9. Returning TV Shows
10. Albums
11. Songs
12. Live Performances
13. Fiction Books
14. Non-fiction Books
15. Video Games
16. Web Videos
17. DVDs
18. Theater
19. Kids’ Books
20. Fashion must-haves
21. Fashion Trends
22. Museum/Art Exhibitions
23. Magazine Covers
24. Comics/Graphic Novels
25. TV Ads
26. Buzzwords
27. Scandals
28. Crimes
29. Underrreported Stories
30. Oddball News
31. Animal Stories
32. Awkward Moments
33. T-shirt Slogans
34. Photos
35. Sports Moments
36. Worst Biz Deals
37. Best Biz Deals
38. Toys
39. Gadgets
40. Sports Matches
41. TIME.com Most Popular Stories
42. Websites
43. Breakups
44. Medical Breakthroughs
45. Scientific Discoveries
46. Green Ideas
47. Religion stories
48. Natural Disasters
49. Man-made Disasters
50. Quotes
Posted by
BookBitch
at
12/10/2007 01:48:00 PM
0
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