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  • Author Archives: Laura

    • New books on my shelves!

      Posted at 8:35 pm by Laura, on March 6, 2012

      Apologies for the lack of posts – my birthday was a few days ago and I’ve been busy with family and friends.

      However, it’s certainly been a book-filled birthday! I received these books (and gift cards to purchase some of these books), and I’m really looking forward to reading them!

      The Flight of Gemma Hardy by Margot Livesey, Passion by Jude Morgan, Faithful Place by Tana French, The Dressmaker by Kate Alcott

      Fantastic Mr Fox by Roald Dahl, The Meaning of the Night by Michael Cox, Divergent by Veronica Roth, War Horseby Michael Morpurgo

      Posted in books, Update Post | 2 Comments | Tagged books, genre: adult fiction, genre: children, genre: classics, genre: dystopian, genre: fiction, genre: history, genre: mystery, genre: young adult, goodreads
    • Upcoming Books! [7]

      Posted at 8:26 pm by Laura, on March 4, 2012

      Title: The Back in the Day Bakery Cookbook: Cakes, Pies, Cookies, Bars, and Breads from the Best Little Bakery in the South
      Author: Cheryl and Griffith Day
      Genre:
      nonfiction, cooking
      Publisher: Artisan
      Publishing Date: March 6
      Summary: Food Network star Paula Deen introduces the couple behind Savannah’s Back in the Day Bakery and their cookbook. Broken down by baked good, including “Cupcakes and Cakes,” “Pies,” “Cobblers, Crisps, and Tarts,” and “Cookies,” chapters feature Southern favorites such as baked eggs with grits and ham, and buttermilk chess pie, along with old-time favorites like lemon meringue pie, and strawberry-rhubarb crisp. The author’s “homespun style” permeates the collection—from font and borders to recipes—including the “Savories” chapter, featuring dishes such as roasted chicken and vegetable cobbler (touted as “A potluck favorite”) and vegetable potpie. Sidebars on topics from clever packaging for baked goods to ingredient information for items such as sorghum, as well as a resource pages, add value to this retro-style book that’s all about comfort food.

      ~

      Title: The White Pearl
      Author: Kate Furnivall
      Genre: historical fiction
      Publisher: Berkley Trade
      Publishing Date: March 6
      Summary: “Malaya, 1941.” Connie Thornton plays her role as a dutiful wife and mother without complaint. She is among the fortunate after all-the British rubber plantation owners reaping the benefits of the colonial life. But Connie feels as though she is oppressed, crippled by boredom, sweltering heat, a loveless marriage. . . Then, in December, the Japanese invade. Connie and her family flee, sailing south on their yacht toward Singapore, where the British are certain to stand firm against the Japanese. En route, in the company of friends, they learn that Singapore is already under siege. Tensions mount, tempers flare, and the yacht’s inhabitants are driven by fear. Increasingly desperate and short of food, they are taken over by a pirate craft and its Malayan crew making their perilous way from island to island. When a fighter plane crashes into the sea, they rescue its Japanese pilot. For Connie, that’s when everything changes. In the suffocating confines of the boat with her life upended, Connie discovers a new kind of freedom and a new, dangerous, exhilarating love.

      ~

      Title: The Rescue of Belle and Sundance: One Town’s Incredible Race to Save Two Abandoned Horses
      Author: Birgit Stutz, Lawrence Scanlan
      Genre: nonfiction
      Publisher: Da Capo Press
      Publishing Date: March 6
      Summary: In December 2008, snowmobilers spot two abandoned horses high in the Canadian Rockies. Starving and frostbitten, the horses have trampled the ten-foot-deep snow into a narrow white prison. Those who reach them bring hay but also a gun, in case the horses are too far gone. A glint of life in the horses’ eyes earns them the hay. The harrowing yet inspiring story of their near impossible rescue–involving the volunteer efforts of an entire village, first the excavation of a trench six feet deep and over 3280 feet long, and then a nearly 20 mile descent at negative 40 degrees–is sure to be read in one breathless sitting.

      ~

      Some books to look forward to in the future include:

      • Time magazine writer Lisa Cullen’s debut novel THE PASTORS’ WIVES, following the lives of three women whose lives converge and intertwine at an Atlanta evangelical mega-church, a dramatic portrayal of the private lives of pastors’ wives, caught between the demands of faith, marriage, duty and love, inspired by her magazine reporting
      • Nicholas Mennuti’s debut EXILE, written with SAFE HOUSE screenwriter David Guggenheim (originally announced by publisher as Guggenheim’s book written with Mennuti), a fast-paced, Hitchcock-esque thriller about an American businessman living in exile in Cambodia, who gets mistaken for a mysterious government operative
      • Two-time National Book Award finalist Melissa Fay Greene’s WONDER DOG, based on the NYT Magazine story, about a pioneering service-dog-training school in rural Ohio, the challenged children and families whose lives are transformed by the dogs trained there, and the modern science of human/canine interactions underpinning the joyful and life-saving breakthroughs

      Happy reading!

      Posted in Upcoming Books | 0 Comments | Tagged genre: fiction, genre: history, genre: nonfiction, publishing, upcoming books
    • Random House Raises E-Book Wholesale Prices Significantly – PL

      Posted at 9:52 pm by Laura, on March 2, 2012

      Random House Raises E-Book Wholesale Prices Significantly – Publisher’s Lunch – Michael Cader

      Random House announced their library ebook pricing, effective as of March 1, which will dampen some of the enthusiasm for the house’s commitment to the “unrestricted and perpetual availability of our complete frontlist and backlist of Random House, Inc.” in ebook form. The new prices, which librarians tell The Digital Shift represent up to a tripling, are calibrated to “bring our titles in price-point symmetry with our Books on Tape audio book downloads for library lending. These long have carried a considerably higher purchase price point than our digital audio books purchased for individual consumption.” The new price structure for library wholesalers is:

      • New hardcovers, “for the most part” are $65 to $85.
      • Titles available for several months, or generally timed to paperback release, move to a range of $25 to $50.
      • New children’s hardcovers are $35 to $85.
      • Older children’s titles and children’s paperbacks are $25 to $45.

      The response to this depends on the various libraries, and also each library’s ebook lending patterns from patrons. Pricing levels, of course, will adjust accordingly.

      Posted in library, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged ebooks, library, news, publishing
    • James Atlas Joins Amazon Publishing; Atlas & Co. Stops Releasing New Titles – PW

      Posted at 9:47 pm by Laura, on March 2, 2012

      James Atlas Joins Amazon Publishing; Atlas & Co. Stops Releasing New Titles – Publisher’s Weekly – Calvin Reid

      According to accounts from sources, James Atlas, founder of the independent publishing house Atlas & Co., has joined Amazon Publishing and his indie house has stopped releasing frontlist titles. Atlas is said to have reached an agreement with Amazon’s Larry Kirshbaum to publish a series of short biographies for Amazon Publishing.

      Hmmm…

      Posted in Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged magazine, news, publishing
    • Parragon Books: Little Learners

      Posted at 9:43 pm by Laura, on March 2, 2012

      Introducing Paragon Books: Little Learners! These books are geared toward babies’ and toddlers’ development, including

      • foam and cloth books
      • stroller books (animals, colors, numbers)
      • slide-and-see books
      • bath-time books
      • and many more!

      I think this is absolutely precious, and I’m thrilled to see that not everything has gone digital, especially for children. A very important part of childhood cognitive development (from what I’ve learned in many of my psychology classes) is interaction with the physical world. This includes sights, sounds, touching various textures, discovery – these things aren’t fully developed (especially touch) with e-technology.

      Posted in books, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged books, genre: children, news, publishing
    • Book Purchases Up, But Not From Bookstores – PW

      Posted at 8:26 pm by Laura, on February 29, 2012

      BISG Report: Book Purchases Up, but Not From Bookstores – Publisher’s Weekly

      Consumers who read e-books are increasing their purchase of books—both print and e-book formats—online and especially through in-app purchasing, and decreasing their use of brick-and-mortar stores, according to the first installment of Volume Three of the Book Industry Study Group’s “Consumer Attitudes Toward E-Book Reading” survey.

      I think it’s very interesting that, when e-readers first appeared, the public cried over the “loss of the print book” (I know I definitely did). But, as this study shows, print book purchases are increasing! This could be for multiple reasons. From my experience, I’d say it’s because if I liked a book I read on my Nook, I ended up buying a print version to display on my shelves.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, ebooks, ereaders, news, publishing
    • Charlotte Brontë’s lost manuscript “L’Ingratitude” to be published

      Posted at 8:23 am by Laura, on February 29, 2012

      London Review of Books: Charlotte Brontë’s lost manuscript L’Ingratitude – available to read in French and English

      The Guardian: Charlotte Brontë’s lost short story to be published

      A long-lost short story written by Charlotte Brontë for a married man with whom she fell in love is to be published for the first time after being found in a Belgian museum a century after it was last heard of.

      The tale, written in grammatically erratic French and entitled L’Ingratitude, is the first-known piece of homework set for Brontë by Constantin Heger, a Belgian tutor who taught both her and her sister Emily, and is believed to have inspired such ardour in the elder sibling that she drew on their relationship for her novel Villette.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged authors, genre: children, genre: classics, history, magazine, news, newspaper
    • Book Review: “Carmilla” by Sheridan Le Fanu

      Posted at 8:34 pm by Laura, on February 28, 2012

      Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu

      A young Anglo-Austrian woman living at her father’s castle is the narrator of this novella. When a mysterious and beautiful stranger is stranded at the castle in odd circumstances and becomes a guest, the heroine quickly forms a close bond with her —but she subsequently discovers that her “friend” has a dark and lethal secret.

      I read this in two hours, standing still in the kitchen as my housemates cooked and ate around me. Time did not seem to pass at all, I was so engrossed.

      A classic vampire novella (and in recent light, a lesbian vampire novella apparently), this chilling, tale offers readers a whole new experience and conception of “vampire.” With the Twilight series, we’ve romanticized and de-villainized the vampire to a laughable degree. Anne Rice sexualized and humanized the vampire. Bram Stoker offered a classic capable of reworkings for every decade since – the fear of contagion, fear of AIDs, fear of homosexuality – that allows the reader to be awed and terrified of and attracted to the vampire ideal.

      Carmilla contained several popular ideas of the modern idea of vampire – being staked, puncturing humans with the teeth, sleeping in coffins – while dismissing other notions such as bursting into flames in the sun; Carmilla was perfectly capable of walking in the daylight.

      The history behind Carmilla’s character is haunting as well! The most intense image that is still seared into my brain is of her in her coffin, laying in a pool of blood several inches deep, eyes wide and skin healthy. So terrifying! Le Fanu wonderfully crafted thrilling images and suspenseful events in this short Gothic tale!

      Rating: didn't like it it was ok liked it really liked it it was amazing (my current rating) of 5

      Goodreads: 3.79 of 5

      Posted in Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: classics, genre: fiction, genre: gothic, genre: horror, genre: mystery, goodreads, review
    • Oscar Movies See Sales Increase – PW

      Posted at 4:52 pm by Laura, on February 27, 2012

      Tracking Amazon: Oscar Movies See Sales Increase -Publisher’s Weekly

      A number of books that inspired films nominated for an Academy Award this year are seeing a sharp uptick immediately following the Sunday night telecast of the show.

      The biggest jump was The Descendants by Kaui Hart Hemmings. It jumped to #114 from #1,164 (a 921% sales spike). Which book were you rooting for during the Oscars?

      Personally, I was very surprised about War Horse and disappointed about Harry Potter. However, I was extremely happy for The Help, Hugo, and The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore. A big congratulations to The Artist – back to the basics (for film, sound, music, and screenplay!) for the movies!

      Posted in books, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged books, movies
    • Penguin Sales are Roughly Flat as Profits Rise – PL

      Posted at 4:46 pm by Laura, on February 27, 2012

      Per the Trend, Penguins Sales are Roughly Flat as Profits Rise – Publisher’s Lunch – Michael Cader

      For the full year, ebook sales “doubled on the previous year and accounted for 12 percent of Penguin revenues” worldwide, and “more than 20 percent in the US” and they “expect this percentage to increase significantly again in 2012.”

      …

      Alongside the “fantastic” peformance at DK, Makinson said that children’s publishing “was very strong…around the world,” and is “one of the few areas of the market continuing to show very healthy trends.” In the US, Penguin USA ceo David Shanks added that their children’s group “actually sold a lot more books than they had the previous year, even without Borders” in the marketplace.

       

      Posted in Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, ebooks, news, publishing
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    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to travel, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm always down for chips-and-queso nights. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
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