Archive for the ‘books’ Category

Master and Margarita: the Musical

Saturday, August 26th, 2006

Andrew Lloyd Webber announced that he is going to write a musical version of Bulgakov’s novel which also happens to be one of my favorite books. It’s not so far off, considering that Bulgakov actually wrote much of the novel with the stage in mind. I’ll keep an open mind, but the whole thing is bound to be a tremendously complicated undertaking, considering that it is actually three distinctive plots intricately woven together.

It just so happens that the Master and Margarita will be my Library Book Discussion for this Fall. I wanted to do it on Halloween, but I’ll save the oversized black cats and my centurion costume for another day.

Now playing: New Order – Temptation on XM Streaming Online

A strange choice for a summer read

Tuesday, August 15th, 2006

From Slate: Bush reads Camus’ The Stranger on summer vacation. I can see it, sun, heat, the beach. Personally, for themes of futility and authenticity, I’d recommend The Fall or even better, The Zombie Survival Guide (not Camus, but, hey, it’s got illustrations!).

Book Group Expo: San Jose

Tuesday, June 20th, 2006

I attended the Book Group Expo in San Jose over the weekend and was pleasantly surprised. Four fellow librarians from the county also attendend along with as many as five hundred (?) book club fans and fanatics, authors, independent book sellers, wine merchants… You get the picture. For $25, I saw dozens of authors speak about everything from the creative process to using real-life as an inspiration. Some of the highlights included seeing one of my favorite librarian buddies, the opening salon author Khaled Hosseini, a hilarious salon with three authors ZZ Packer, Andrew Sean Greer (The Confessons of Max Tivoli), and Sarah Gruen (Water for Elephants), and meeting the lovely and elegant Leslie Sbrocco host of Check Please, Bay Area (I am definitely thinking about applying to be on the show). Overall it was a great experience. I really get the sense that authors do like to visit book clubs and really appreciate them. I also got the sense that small independent book sellers are struggling and book clubs & author visits are their lifeblood. I hope they do it again next year when our library can have a booth alongside the San Jose Rep and where we can actually show off the resources that the library has to offer book clubs.

Book Review: Fired! : tales of the canned, canceled, downsized, and dismissed

Sunday, June 4th, 2006

Fired! Tales of the Canned, Canceled, Downsized, and Dismissed by Annabelle Gurwitch

You might remember Annabelle Gurwitch from TNT’s Dinner and a Movie. More recently you didn’t seen her in a Woody Allen Broadway production…oh, because she was fired. Well, she’s not alone in being fired. Gurwitch has collected stories from a cadre of comedians, actors, writers, and friends, her mother, and even former Clinton Labor Secretary and commentator Robert Reich. Not all the stories are about being fired from jobs, some are about firing themselves from dead end jobs and even firing themselves from dating. I guess that could be considered a job. Unfortunately, not all of the tales are as amusing or engaging. Most are barely anecdotes lacking structure and often even punchlines. Overall, only a few of them are worth the read.

Book Review: Candy Girl: A Year in the Life of an Unlikely Stripper by Diablo Cody

Sunday, June 4th, 2006

Cody, who is sharp, literate and infinitely rock-n-roll, takes a joy-ride that is both hilarious and harrowing. Her memoir starts with her facing a terminal case of cubicle death as a low-level copy editor. She decides to inject a little chaos into her life by entering a dance contest at a seedy strip club. The initial rush is enough to overcome the eww factor and before long she finds herself delivering lap-dances at a series of “gentlemens clubs.” The managers at Choice, DeJa Vu, Shieks and the other friendly sounding clubs each have their own particular take on how to fleece their dancers, yet Cody manages to earn enough money to finally quit her day job. Her penultimate stop puts her in a glass cage performing for a parade of clichéd perverts and bizarre, laughable fetishists, one who surprisingly doesn’t seem to have a problem with Gastroenteritis. Don’t expect something salacious, the memoir is an entertaining expose of someone choked by an upbringing of “normalcy, decency and JIF sandwiches with their crusts amputated” who manages to jar herself free by stripping and ultimately realizes she is more than a confection or a concession.

Book Expo in DC

Saturday, May 20th, 2006

Today was the first day of the Book Expo and it was great. Too bad I’m not going for the rest of the weekend.

Meg Cabot signed her new teen novel How to Be Popular for me.
Meg Cabot and me

I also met Chris Kimball from America’s Test Kitchen. He was really nice and friendly despite the absence of a smile in the picture.
Chris Kimball and me

On the other side of the spectrum I met the man behind the Toxic Avenger, Lloyd Kaufman and his Troma Team pitching the Toxic Avenger: The Novel.
troma

Google was out in force pushing Google books, wooing publishers, authors and everyone else. They really are doing what libraries should be doing with searchable content. They have a huge booth, a couple of Google Books Shuttles ferrying attendees around. They also have a psuedo ice-cream cart.
Google Books Booth at Book Expogoogle ice cream

Daily Show Authors

Wednesday, April 12th, 2006

In case you missed it… I nearly did. The Daily Show has a list of authors that have plugged their books with Jon Stewart. From the Daily Show website:

You are reading this because a) you can read, and b) you like to read. And because you saw a guest on the Daily Show talking about a book, and you said, “I can read, I like to read, and I might like to read that book.” That’s why we’ve gathered information about the book-related guests on the Daily Show, and packaged it up all nice and pretty for you. You’re welcome.

You can even watch the interview… Great for book clubs. I wonder if anyone is running a Fake News Club where a group of people could discuss a fake news story featured on the show.

Book Review: Assassination Vacation by Sarah Vowell

Tuesday, April 11th, 2006

One of my favorite contributers to This American Life on NPR is Sarah Vowell. Whether she is trying to discover what it means to be “Goth” by dressing up and clubbing in San Francisco or dishing with Conan O’Brien, Vowell delights in a myriad of morbid fascinations with perky diatribes and witty, yet well researched exposés. She continues in the same vein in her latest book, Assassination Vacation, where she travels to famous, infamous, and not-so-famous tourist destinations associated with the assassinations of presidents Lincoln, Garfield, and McKinley. The book is jam-packed with interesting historical trivia and amusing tales of her visits to tombs, plaques, and kitchy relics, bits of bone, tissue, and hair in museums and roadside attractions. The book is a funny, well-written reminder of the indelible traumas our nation has endured as well as our collective preference for venerating our heroes through velvet paintings and snow-globes.

Read this book!

Book Review: ReadyMade: How to Make {Almost} Everything a Do-It-Yourself Primer

Wednesday, March 15th, 2006

ReadyMade: How to Make {Almost} Everything a Do-It-Yourself Primer by Shoshana Berger and Grace Hawthorne.

Runaway craft projects meet recycling-chic in this book by the publishers of ReadyMade magazine & website. Illustrated steps guide you through the process of making coat-hanger wine racks, cd case murals, Fed-Ex cd racks, shopping bag rugs, chandeleirs using silverware and water-bottles, beer can room dividers, denim dog beds and much more. The book is organized by raw material with short witty histories of paper, plastic, wood, metal, glass and fabric. Each chapter has a few unweildy (and some just plain senseless) projects that fall into the “why I don’t do this everyday” category. A few sections just titled “This is not a project” cover how to use chopsticks… to eat, or how to build an ark. Go figure.

While you read this book, just keep repeating mini-manifesto #05 “I will attempt to keep all consumer goods in circulation, and out of the big Wal-Mart in the sky, by reusing them. If anything it’ll make you want to make a lounge chair out of a couple of weeks of plastic water bottles. Good fun.

Book Review: Work 2.0

Monday, February 6th, 2006

Work 2.0: Building the Future, One Employee at a Time by Bill Jensen, 2002 (preface 2003) is as much corporate leadership self-help as it is innovative restructuring rah-rah. The book actually has a wealth of great advice even though much of it is cloaked in corporate cliches, and tries to invent catch-phrases that really don’t have a lot of traction. The premise of the book is that in order to survive in the new economy, leaders are going to have to rethink the way they organize and manage work, workers, and themselves. The books refrain, My Work My Way, is Jensen’s way of saying that workers need to be given the leeway to dictate how they work, get respect from leadership, and be heard when important customer and front-line decisions need to be made. Jensen also urges leaders to become Extreme Leaders who give their employees respect, listen to workers who know first-hand what needs to be done, and hold themselves accountable. The book offers a few tools for leaders to gauge their work like worksheets, but it mostly preaches about what changes will happen in the workplace with and without the adoption of the Work 2.0 ideology.

One of the more intriguing ideas is that the Invisible Workplace, the place where social networks within the company, know what’s going on before the senior execs and often before the market itself. Much of it simply riffs on a variation of the tipping point personas (Gladwell’s connectors, mavens, salesmen) using another management consultant’s terminology. By tuning into the social networks that exist in any corporation, Extreme Leaders will have a better idea of what is really going on instead of surrounding themselves with brown-noses and kiss-asses who insulate and isolate themselves and leadership. No matter how it is put this is the difference between poor leadership and great leadership.

The writing is snappy and informal, and a little repetetive. The text, full of bulleted lists and bold headings, flows quickly and won’t tax a casual reader despite occasional SHOUTING outbursts.

Scant on real case-studies, solid research, or many concrete examples the book is a quick fix for managers and leaders who are looking for one, today. The recent fad for the 2.0 convention (Business 2.0, Web 2.0, Library 2.0) makes the book a management resource for today, but not really tomorrow.