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March 31, 2008

Infected!

Tomorrow marks the release of Scott Sigler’s Infected.  Becky LeJeune at No More Grumpy Bookseller (an avid Shelfarian), did a great review of Sigler’s novel. 

                           Infected

I've been anxiously awaiting Scott Sigler's Infected ever since I first learned of its publication, and the circumstances behind it. 

Sigler, author of two previous novels, Earthcore and Ancestor, is the kind of author you just have to admire, if not downright adore. Stubborn as can be, Sigler refused to take rejection sitting down, and thank GOD. When he couldn't get published, he began offering his books as weekly podcasts, soon after, developing a hard-core fan base. The industry finally took notice and like David Wellington, another web-based author with the same sort of idea, Sigler was snatched up by Random House and now has a major multi-book deal.

Infected is a story about "biological possession" (Sigler's own words). People all over the country are showing strange symptoms that include severe paranoia and extreme violent tendencies. The CIA and the CDC are working together to find the cause of this strange outbreak before it gets too widespread. Meanwhile, ex-football star Perry Dawsey has just become infected. The reader is treated to a totally grossed-out play-by-play as the infection spreads and I have to tell you I have not been so creeped out since The Hot Zone. Sigler's use of graphic description and really believable science make this an exceptional read. I have buggy skin just thinking about the book!


Similar titles brought to mind by this book are, as mentioned, Preston's non-fiction account of marburg and ebola outbreaks in The Hot Zone and, believe it or not, Tess Gerritsen's Gravity (the last of her medical thrillers). Oddly enough, Infected seems to have been at least partially inspired by the totally weird Morgellon's disease.

So, if you're in the mood for an incredibly yucky and wonderfully gory sci-fi/horror/thriller, I highly recommend you run out and get Infected when it hits shelves on April 1. This book junkie is thoroughly enjoying every agonizing minute of it!

Visit Scott Sigler on Shelfari.


Happy Reading,

Amanda

March 27, 2008

Released this Week:

Brett_favre      Hollywood_crows      Worlds_at_war

·         Compulsion: An Alex Delaware Novel by Jonathan Kellerman

·         The Ten-Year Nap by Meg Wolitzer

·         Mistaken Identity: Two Families, One Survivor, Unwavering Hope by Don & Susie Van Ryn & Newell, Colleen & Whitney Cerak

·         Climate Confusion: How Global Warming Hysteria Leads to Bad Science, Pandering Politicians and Misguided Policies that Hurt the Poor by Roy Spencer

·         Sports Illustrated: Brett Favre: The Tribute by Sports Illustrated

·         The Open Road: The Global Journey of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama by Pico Iyer

·         Dark Day in the Deep Sea by Mary Pope Osborne & Sal Murdocca

·         Worlds at War: The 2,500-Year Struggle Between East and West by Anthony Pagden

·         Hollywood Crows: A Novel by Joseph Wambaugh

·         Wrath of a Mad God by Raymond E. Feist

·         Blood Noir by Laurell K. Hamilton

·         Buckingham Palace Gardens: A Novel by Anne Perry

·         Vindicated: Big Names, Big Liars, and the Battle to Save Baseball by Jose Canseco


Happy Reading,

Amanda

March 26, 2008

7 Deadly Words

Bob Harris at the New York Times criticizes book reviewers of literary overindulgence.  He points out "seven deadly words" that book reviewers are guilty of mis/overusing.  How do you fare?

  • poignant: Something you read may affect you, or move you. That doesn’t mean it’s poignant. Something is poignant when it’s keenly, even painfully, affecting. When Bambi’s mom dies an adult may think it poignant. A child probably finds it terrifying.

  • compelling: Many things in life, and in books, are compelling. The problem is that too often in book reviews far too many things are found to be such. A book may be a page turner, but that doesn’t necessarily make it compelling. Overuse has weakened a word that implies an overwhelming force.  Reviewers often combine these first two words. Like Chekhov’s gun. If there is a poignant in a review’s third paragraph, a compelling will most likely follow. Frequently reviewers forestall the suspense and link the words right away, as in “this poignant and compelling novel…”

  • intriguing: It doesn’t mean merely interesting or fascinating although it’s almost always used in place of one of those words. When it is, the sense of something illicit and mysterious is lost.

  • eschew: No one actually says this word in real life. It appears almost exclusively in writing when the perp is stretching for a flashy synonym for avoid or reject or shun.

  • craft (used as a verb): In “The Careful Writer,” Theodore M. Bernstein reminds us that “the advertising fraternity has decided craft is a verb.” Undeterred, reviewers use it when they are needlessly afraid of using plain old write. They also try to make pen a verb, as in “he penned a tome.”

  • muse (used as a verb): Few things in this world are mused. They are much more often simply written, thought or said. “War is hell,” he mused. Not much dreamy rumination there. Stretching for the fanciful — writing “he crafts or pens” instead of “he writes”; writing “he muses” instead of “he says or thinks” — is a sure tip-off of weak writing.

  • lyrical: Reviewers use this adjective when they want to say something is well written. But using the word loosely misses the sense of expressing emotion in an imaginative and beautiful way. Save lyrical for your next review of Wordsworth. (For the complete article)

Happy Reading!

Amanda

March 25, 2008

Have you entered The Panic Years?

I enjoy movie previews.  Seriously.  Not to say I appreciate every preview I see. There are times I actually want to watch the movie (instead of spending 5 minutes fast forwarding to get to MENU).  One of my close friends closes his eyes during previews.  His reasoning?  He doesn't want to spoil the movie if he might ever see it.  I can understand the logic, but I need a teaser.  It's the same way with books. I'll be honest, I have grand plans to read all the books in my TBR pile, but it takes a push for a book to land in my purse or on the nightstand.  Today I  got "pushed" by a blog posting about Doree Lewak's "The Panic Years: A Guide to Surviving Smug Married Friends, Bad Taffeta, and Life on the Wrong Side of 25 Without a Ring".

                                13459483_2

If the "previews" for this book are telling of what's found between the covers, then I can justify adding it to my wish list.  Let me ask you this: Are you one of the millions suffering from the Panic Years?  Watch Doree Lewak humorously diagnose the tell-tale signs of The Panic Years.  If any of this sounds familiar, then you've got to read this book with me.

·         Your mom slips you the number of her tennis partner’s son … for the fifth time.

·         It’s down to you and the five-year-old flower girl at the bouquet toss.

·         Upon hearing “Guess what? I’m engaged!” for the second time in one week, you disconnect your phone.

·         You actively scheme to win back your ex—even though he’s already engaged to someone else.


Happy Reading,

Amanda

Too much? Palahniuk's "Choke" Reviewed

Choke

Review from Baby Got Books

“Choke” is a term often used to describe someone who comes up short. In describing Choke, by Chuck Palahniuk (and to quote a phrase used throughout the book), “choke” isn’t the right word, but it’s the first word that comes to mind.

Palahniuk seems to be somewhat of a counterculture hero (at least according to some folks I’ve heard talk about him), whose most famous book (I think) is Fight Club (a movie a saw and just really didn’t get); he clearly knows how to write for shock value about uncomfortable and disturbing situations.

I read a blurb about Choke and decided to give it a shot. When all was said and done, I have to admit to being somewhat disappointed. I didn’t like the main character/narrator/”protagonist”, Victor Mancini; he’s just flat out unlikeable, although that might be the point. The story follows him around with flashbacks to his childhood, as he deals with a strange mother, his own sexual addiction, and some other strange characters that fill out the story. His struggle to find out who he really is becomes the reader’s struggle. And I just didn’t think it was a worthwhile struggle.

The main storyline, or so I was lead to believe by the commentary that induced me into trying this book, was supposed to be Mancini’s scam of pretending to choke in restaurants, getting saved by a good samaritan, and having that person feel a sense of responsibility for Mancini, sending him money on his birthday and otherwise helping him out. But that really was a small thread of the book. The bulk of the book was spent on his so-called sexual addition (complete with — earmuffs, youngsters — more talk of his “dog” and “white soldiers” than I felt like dealing with) and his mother, who was apparently in the final stages of Alzheimer’s while in a nursing home, and who was giving him reason to question who he thought he was.

I’ll give Palahniuk credit for sort of tying things together at the end. It wasn’t perfect, but considering how low the bar had dropped by the time I was two-thirds of the way into the book, he should get a medal for not making me want to burn the thing when I was through with it. And I guess I shouldn’t hold Palahniuk responsible for my own pre-conceived notions about what the book would be like, which were based on other people’s subjective opinions. In fact, Palahniuk starts the book with the following:

If you’re going to read this, don’t bother.

After a couple pages, you won’t want to be here. So forget it. Go away. Get out while you’re still in one piece.

Save yourself.

Maybe I should have listened. Although I made the mistake of thinking that that the narrator was going to shock or disturb me in some rewarding way, rather than thinking he was going to disappoint me with his story and some of his crude sexual references.

March 20, 2008

What is a National Treasure?

To some book lovers it's David McCullough!  

McCullough has published several tomes that are collectively a narrative of America. An insightful storyteller, he has tackled the monumental: whether the building of the Brooklyn Bridge or the complex life of man like Harry Truman. His books, John Adams and 1776, are the basis of the truly awesome 7 hour drama now running on HBO. I was blown away by the first 2 (of the 7) episodes I saw on Sunday. His publisher of 40 years, Simon and Schuster, ran a full page ad in The New York Times yesterday congratulating McCullough for his achievements, which include winning the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. They, too, called him a national treasure. As someone who has read his books, as well as been lucky to have met him and hear him speak, I would have to agree!

David Nudo

March 19, 2008

Shelfari Launches MySpace Application

Myspace_profile2

MySpace Application

We are pleased to announce the launch of our MySpace application.  Now you can add books to your MySpace profile page (Shelfari members can link their accounts to the application). You can click to see a full sized version of your shelf, add & rate books, view your friends who have the Shelfari app and share it with those who don't.  Our (fantastic!) developers have been busy creating this application, so don't miss it. 

 

Recent Friend Activity Feed

The Recent Friend Activity feed has been updated.   Friend activity has been condensed into little snippets, like "Amanda has been busy shelving 24 books, writing a review and rating 11 books”.  Now you can keep up with more friends at once. 


Search Engine

The search for books, authors and friends has been optimized for quicker, better results.  Check it out!


Amanda

March 18, 2008

Final Odyssey: Arthur C. Clarke

"Arthur looks like a scientist. His work is infused with science and even more importantly, a respect for science in the same way that a diva's appearances are infused with perfume. But for all that, what has struck me the most in reading his work over the decades is that his science is never dry. It's filled with the same sense of wonder I felt when I first encountered SF as a child, that feeling of amazement and joy that true scientists experience when they make a new discovery, when they contribute some small fact to the great body of human knowledge. Reading Arthur C. Clarke is like opening Forrest Gump's box of chocolates, with one important exception: you always know what you're going to get, and it's all good."
- Alan Dean Foster

A modern day time traveler passed away today at the age of 90.  Sir Arthur C. Clarke was an author and a scientist, his published works include: 2001: A Space Odyssey, Rendezvous with Rama, Childhood's Light, and many more.  Clarke was a visionary force in technology, best known for conceptualizing the geostationary communications satellite.  He is also famous for Clarke's Three Laws:

  1. When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right.  When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong.
  2. The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
  3. Any sufficient advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

Thank you, Sir Arthur Clarke!  You have indeed left your mark.

-Amanda

March 17, 2008

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

       What Counsel has the Hooded Moon

What counsel has the hooded moon
Put in thy heart, my shyly sweet,
Of Love in ancient plenilune,
Glory and stars beneath his feet--
A sage that is but kith and kin
With the comedian Capuchin?

Believe me rather that am wise
In disregard of the divine,
A glory kindles in those eyes,
Trembles to starlight. Mine, O Mine!
No more be tears in moon or mist
For thee, sweet sentimentalist.

~James Joyce (Irish Poet)

March 13, 2008

On the Road...Again

51k1dpeejpl__ss500_If you are just waking from the winter hibernation like I have, you need to get over to the New York Public Library pronto!  Why? Well, before the beat generation artifacts on display to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Jack Kerouac's On The Road closes on Sunday.

The show called "Beatific Soul: Jack Kerouac On The Road" is more like a archive of mid-20th century literary culture. Photos, notebooks, sketches, and a facsimile of the scroll manuscript (since I was in deep slumber I missed the original which was on view until Feb. 24) Kerouac typed while on his cross-country journey with Neal Cassady in the late 1940s. 

As a casual visitor, I would be rather non-plussed, but as a beatnik at heart, the exhibit is a sight to behold. Now, excuse me while I read One The Road again! Don't forget, daddy-o, this exhibit ends on Sunday, March 16.

David Nudo