May 2015

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What I’m Reading: Undermajordomo Minor by Patrick deWitt

UndermajordomoI am a big fan of Patrick’s first novel, The Sisters Brothers – highly recommend if you haven’t already read it. It’s a darkly funny and slightly odd take on old westerns.

Undermajordomo Minor is also wonderfully weird but in its approach to fairytales. 

Lucien (Lucy) Minor is sorely out of place in his village of Bury. Friendless and loveless, Lucy is a compulsive liar and a weakling in a town famous for producing brutish giants. Sick of feeling out of place and being unloved even by his own parents, Lucy applies to a job as the Undermajordomo of the remote, foreboding Castle Von Aux.

While tending to his new post, Lucy soon discovers the place harbours many dark secrets, not least of which is the whereabouts of the castle’s master, Baron Von Aux. He also encounters the oh so colourful characters of the local village-thieves, madmen, aristocrats, and Klara, a beautiful woman whose love Lucy must compete for with the exceptionally handsome soldier, Adolphus.

Emily St. John Mandel, author of Station Eleven says “Undermajordomo Minor wears a fairytale cloak, but at its wondrous and fantastical heart lies an unexpectedly moving story about love, home, and the difficulty of finding one’s place in the world. Elegant, beautifully strange, and utterly superb.”

Anyone interested in a galley, let us know.

 - Annie

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Everybody loves DISCLAIMER!

9780062362254If you haven't already found that perfect thriller to satisfy your summer craving, definitely turn your eye to Disclaimer by Renée Knight.  I am a huge fan of this remarkable debut novel, about a woman who picks up a seemingly innocuous book from her bedside table and discovers it tells the story of the most horrible moment in her life.  Disclaimer went on sale last week, and now everyone can join in this love fest!

One very exciting new fan is New York Times book reviewer Janet Maslin, who recently called it "the Gone Girl of the season," saying "Once the gears start moving, Ms. Knight switches her pace to a gallop and keeps the sinister promises her narrative made at the start."

Library Journal also shared their love with a starred review, saying "Deliciously captivating, brilliantly twisty, and enticingly addictive, it hits the trifecta for a strong thriller!"

Make sure you put Disclaimer on top of your summer TBR pile and prepare to be captivated.

-Amanda

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Guest Blogger: M.P. Cooley and FLAME OUT

9780062300737_a82f2 Martha (M.P.) Cooley launched her literary career with last year's Ice Shear, which introduced us to June Lyons, a police officer in the rust belt town of upstate New York.  In its sequel, Flame Out, which went on sale a week ago, June faces long-held secrets and obsessions when she digs into a 30-year-old case.  

Today we want to give a warm welcome Martha to LibraryLoveFest who's come to share her own love of libraries.

***

I moved a lot as a child, living in thirteen houses in the first thirteen years. The moves involved new schools, new friends, new parks, and always, new libraries.  My Dad was a person who slotted his library card right behind his license in his brown leather wallet, and he would take my sisters and I on weekly trips to pick up as many new books as we could carry, upping our visits to twice a week in the summer. 

MP Cooley ap1It was those trips that made me a reader—a compulsive one at that.  When I started reading the Nancy Drew books I was a completest.  No skipping from book seven, Clue in the Diary, to book nine, The Sign of the Twisted Candles—I needed to first read book eight, Nancy’s Mysterious Letter. We lived in Auburn, NY at the time, and the librarian at the Seymour Library kindly ordered the missing books from other branches within the regional network so I didn’t skip even one. When I began to push for bigger reading challenges, they let me check out books in the adult section despite the fact that I wasn’t yet thirteen. Reading Stephen King books might have been a questionable choice for an eleven-year-old—although it is a testament to his storytelling that Salem’s Lot scared me so much that I threw is across the room—but I also had the opportunity to read Steinbeck, Hemingway, Daphne du Maurier and Agatha Christie.  Even today, when the internet means you can research a whole book without leaving the house, I have been enriched by libraries.  While researching my most recent novel, Flame Out, I needed information about the life of Ukrainians in the 1930s and 40s. I was pointed to a collection of oral histories that gave me a sense of the horror of living in a place where millions of people died every year from starvation and genocide in a way that traditional histories could not.

But these libraries give the community so much more than books they lend.  As a child, in a new place, the libraries give me a safe place to play.  Even now, I’ve had fun talking with book groups at libraries around the Bay Area, and got to see so much that they do:  movie nights for teens, story hours for toddlers, and even nutrition programs that combat food insecurity among kids during the summer.

At the end of my first novel, Ice Shear, Hale Bascom asks June for the hot spots in Hopewell Falls (a fictitious town based on the real city of Cohoes, NY).  June points him to the only hot spot she knows—the library.   

 ***

Thank you, Martha!  If you're planning on attending ALA Annual in San Francisco, make sure to stop by our booth 3101 on Saturday, June 27 at 2 to meet Martha—hailed by the BBC as “a writer to watch”—and pick up a copy of Flame Out, her latest June Lyons mystery.

-Amanda

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Visit the PopTop Stage at ALA!

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The PopTop Stage at ALA conferences is always a great opportunity to hear from authors on all sorts of topics while you're in the exhibit hall.  This year, make sure to mark your calendars to come hear authors Meg Waite Clayton, Bruce Henderson, and Lucy Sanna discuss various aspects of WWII as told through their latest publications:

WWII Faction: Experience This Historic Conflict Through Fact and Fiction

Saturday, June 27

1:00-2:00

Exhibit Hall, Moscone Center (mid 1400 aisle behind booths 1428 and 1424)

The Race for Paris 9780062354631by Meg Waite Clayton: a moving and powerfully dynamic WWII novel about two American women, a journalist and a photographer, and the British man who changes their lives forever by helping them break the story of Paris’s liberation from Nazi occupation.

Rescue at Los Baños by 9780062325068Bruce Henderson: the incredible untold true story of one of the greatest military rescues of all time, the 1945 Los Baños prison camp raid in the Philippines.

The Cherry Harvest by 9780062343628Lucy Sanna: A memorable coming-of-age story exploring a hidden side of the home front during World War II, in which a Wisconsin farm community invites Nazi POWs to work the local orchards…with consequences no one could have imagined.

Don't miss out on this great panel!  And make sure to stop by the HarperCollins Publishers booth 3101 throughout the show for even more great titles and author signings.

-Amanda

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Guest Post: Jean Marie Kelly from Harper360, on THE SHED THAT FED A MILLION CHILDREN

Today we welcome a very special guest to LibraryLoveFest to share some exciting news.  Say hello to Jean Marie Kelly, publisher of Harper360, who has come to talk about Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow and The Shed That Fed a Million Children.

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Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow with children

COVER_SHED THAT FED_final

One of the books presented at the HarperCollins adult buzz at ALA Midwinter earlier this year was The Shed That Fed a Million Children, about the founding of Mary’s Meals, a charity based on the simple idea that if you give a child one meal a day in a place of education, you can begin to change the world. They have programs running in 13 countries including Malawi, Haiti, Liberia, Kenya, and South Sudan. The book is going on sale on May 26 but today the organization reached a huge milestone: they are now feeding 1 million children every school day. And it all began with one man, Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow, and a shed in the Highlands of Scotland.

Last night I stopped at the store on my way home to grab some things for dinner: some pasta, a can of tomatoes, parmesan cheese, some salad fixings. The total at the register came to a little over $19.00. And it struck me that $19.50 is the amount that Mary’s Meals says it costs to feed a child in Malawi or Liberia or Haiti for one year. And I was going to eat that in one night! It got me thinking about the things I take for granted in our world of plenty. But what can I, one person, do to make a difference? I think the lesson from Mary’s Meals is that one person can make a difference. And that one person can influence another person and that person influences the next. And so on.

So tonight instead of having my dinner, I’m going to donate the $19.50 to @marysmeals and hope you will help me #feeditforward I will post about this on Facebook and I’m going to ask three of my friends to do the same. Hey, it’s a lot easier (and drier) than pouring a bucket of ice water over your head!

***

Thank you, Jean Marie, and a huge congratulations to Mary's Meals for feeding one million school children every school day!  Let's see if we can help feed it forward.  Please check out this link to learn more about how you, too, can donate to Mary's Meals and help provide food for children in need around the world.

-Amanda

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So Many Book Birthdays Today!

SevenevesJesus cowDisclaimer

Today is a day for reading! Or at least for getting copies of great books to add to your TBR pile. 

Seveneves by Neal Stephenson – all you Neal Stephenson fans, prepare to be excited because this is another amazing novel filled with meticulously researched science and speculative futuristic awesomeness. The Earth is destroyed with only a handful of women remaining, and 5,000 years later their progeny set out to reclaim their planet.

The Jesus Cow by Michael Perry – this is Mr. Perry's first adult novel. Known for his humorous non-fiction like Visiting Tom and Population: 485, this novel has the same very funny voice, and explores real questions about faith and love. Harley Jackson, a low-key, bachelor farmer, discovers the face of Jesus imprinted upon the flank of his calf one cold Christmas Eve and must deal with the consequences of sharing it with the world.

Disclaimer by Renée Knight – a remarkable debut in the vein of Before I Go to Sleep and Gone Girl, this is a brilliantly conceived, deeply unsettling psychological thriller about a woman with a terrible secret determined to keep it and the book she is mysteriously sent that could destroy everything in her life.

So many varied and excellent choices to pick from today. Happy Book Birthday to all!

– Annie

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WANTED: YOU at the HarperCollins
Adult Book Buzz
!

Stop by during visiting hours to hear about our stash of hot titles!

 

Wanted-image

Saturday, June 27, 2015
8:30-10am
Moscone Convention Center
Room 3006 (W)

Refreshments will be served and seating is limited, so RSVP to librarylovefest@harpercollins.com today!

 

See you there!

 Virginia, Annie and Amanda

 

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The Body in the Birches by Katherine Hall Page

Body in the birchesThe next installment in the Faith Fairchild mystery series went on sale this week. In The Body in the Birches Faith finds the body of the housekeep in the woods near The Birches, a lovely summer cabin whose ownership is currently being hotly contested. The very valuable estate has been in the Proctor family for generations, and with this much money involved, it’s just a matter of time before trouble arises.

Meanwhile, Faith's own children are finding themselves in situations that could very well be related to the murder, and Faith must figure out who the criminal is before her family becomes the next target.

Get your copy now – it's perfect holiday weekend reading!

– Annie

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Texas Rising by Stephen L. Moore: On Sale Today

TexasRising_HC.FINALJACKETTexas Rising is a thrilling narrative history of the Texas Revolution and the rise of the legendary Texas Rangers (anyone else a Walker fan??) who patrolled the violent western frontier.

In 1836 Texas was an incredibly dangerous place to be. But it was also a time of bravery, a time to die for what you believed in and a time to stand up against the cruelty of the Mexican army. Hence the Texas Rangers were born! A ragtag crew of men fighting on horseback, often outnumbered by as many as fifty to one. Yet under General Sam Houston they achieved victory against nearly impossible odds, earning a legendary place in American history.

Now, acclaimed Texas historian Stephen L. Moore’s Texas Rising, brings to life the Rangers’ heroic deeds during the Texas Revolution and on the Texas frontier. It is also the official nonfiction companion to the Memorial Day 2015 History Channel series TEXAS RISING (produced by the same team that made the Hatfields & McCoys).

So get a copy, read it, and then check out the History Channel for an education on this interesting time in American history.

– Annie

 

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What I’m Reading: Name of the Devil by Andrew Mayne

Name of the devilFans of magic and mystery, rejoice! The next book from the author of Angel Killer is on Edelweiss and coming out this summer.

Name of the Devil finds FBI superstar, Jessica Blackwood, back in action at the center of a very strange and religious-themed multiple murder. Horribly mangled bodies have been found in trees and a church appears to have spontaneously combusted. 

Jessica uses her unique abilities to suss out a pattern that no one can see that takes her from Mexico to Miami and may or may not involve his eminence, the Pope. 

This is a fast, fun, action-packed read with more of the details about magic that magician, Andrew Mayne, wove into his first story. There is also more backstory on Jessica's childhood, filled with questionable adult behavior on the parts of her father and grandfather. And of course…Damien plays a large role in helping Jessica out of binds.

However, the most interesting part of the book for me was the character of Max who collects data. He has figured out how to tap into information that was housed on computers at the dawn of the internet, plane manifests, adoption records – forgotten information on old hard drives. It's a very cool (albeit slightly terrifying if in the wrong hands) concept.

Download an egalley now!

– Annie

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Pssst! Go get this book!

Church of marvelsMy favorite book of the year (yes, I know we aren't supposed to play favorites) goes on sale today! Happy Book Birthday to Leslie Parry and her wonderful debut historical fiction novel, Church of Marvels.

If you haven't heard me rave about this then we haven't hung out recently. Set in turn-of-the-century NYC, it's the story of three characters on the fringes of society, desperately searching for love and acceptance and uncovering a lot of secrets on their journeys. 

There are side shows and lunatic asylums and opium dens involved and the writing is fantastic. 

Go get yourself a copy now!

Congratulations, Leslie!

– Annie

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Guest Post: Kristen Green, author of Something Must Be Done About Prince Edward County

PEComp_approvedSomething Must Be Done About Prince Edward County is part investigative journalism, part sweeping, multigenerational family story, that reveals a little known event in American history: the period after the Brown vs. Board of Education decision when one Virginia school system—that of the author’s hometown—refused to integrate.  Today we welcome author Kristen Green to LibraryLoveFest to talk about her experience with libraries as a place of welcome and encouragement.

***

Parenting young children is always difficult, but it was particularly challenging in Massachusetts, a state of seemingly endless winters.

In 2009, I had just completed a stimulating graduate school program and was now home with my newborn and two-year-old daughters. I wanted to get out of the house every day—even bitterly cold ones—to connect with other people and get fresh air. But where to go? Restaurants, coffee shops, and stores were difficult to navigate with my spontaneous, sometimes ill tempered, children. I could feel the other patrons staring through me whenever we entered a business.

Then, it dawned on me to check out the place I had felt at home as a child: the local library. Cambridge’s renovated flagship library had just reopened.

I bundled up the girls and zipped them into blankets on their stroller, then walked briskly to the beautiful new library. Informed by a librarian that I was welcome to take my stroller inside, I smiled and headed for the elevator. At the third floor, the door opened onto a world tailor-made for children and their families. The ceiling was decorated in a canopy of leaves; the reading carpet felt like a bed of river rocks, only softer. The librarians had planned a full schedule of storytelling and sing-along sessions. Children ate snacks brought from home at child-sized tables and chairs. I could nurse in a private spot and change my baby’s diaper in a clean bathroom with a changing table.

Amaya at the Cambridge Public Library

Kristen Green's daughter, Amaya, searched for the Cambridge Public Library's oversized Curious George whenever the family visited the main branch.

I started taking the girls to the library every weekday. When we arrived, my eldest daughter, Amaya, would run up and down the aisles looking for the library’s toddler-sized Curious George stuffed monkey, then lug it around as we perused books. I would park the stroller next to the reading carpet while Selma, my younger daughter, slept. Then I would read with Amaya and watch as she interacted with other children, played with blocks and baby dolls, and colored on paper with crayons the library provided. On the reading carpet, we met up with friends, and we made new ones.

In this town where few indoor spaces felt welcoming to a mother of small children, the librarians embraced my girls and me, and even accepted their unpredictable behavior. Spending time at the public library kept me from feeling isolated and helped us to build community. All the while, books were the backdrop, offering hope that my girls would grow up loving to read as much as I do.

***

Thank you, Kristin!  Make sure you check out Something Must Be Done About Prince Edward County, which Jesmyn Ward, author of Men We Reaped, calls, "Moving and clear-eyed, damning and hopeful: this is an essential read," on sale June 9.

-Amanda

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