AAP

Uncategorized

Spanish Influenza? Sounds Like a Case for Bess Crawford.

9780062015723_0_CoverIf you're one of the many people who watched this week's episode of Downton Abbey, you might find yourself suddenly curious about–spoiler alert–Spanish Influenza.  I did some googling this morning, and apparently in 1918, 20somethings were in trouble:

"Not only was the Spanish Flu (as it came to be known) strikingly virulent, but it displayed an unusual preference in its choice of victims—tending to select young healthy adults over those with weakened immune systems, as in the very young, the very old, and the infirm. The normal age distribution for flu mortality was completely reversed, and had the effect of gouging from society's infrastructure the bulk of those responsible for its day to day maintenance. No wonder people thought the social order was breaking down. It very nearly did." 

Seriously, though, if you haven't seen the episode yet, don't read this blog post, which questions the accuracy of Downton's experience with the epidemic.  Instead, I recommend taking some precautionary vitamin C and getting started on the Bess Crawford series by Charles Todd (a mother and son writing team who have garnered fans, and accolades, the world over).  The latest book in the series, An Unmarked Grave, has our intrepid battlefield nurse/sleuth taking on Spanish Influenza and a soldier's mysterious murder.  Fans of Jacqueline Winspear's Maisie Dobbs series and Agatha Christie devotees will especially enjoy Charles Todd.  But don't just take my word for it–if you're going to PLA next month, meet Caroline Todd (one half of the duo) and see for yourself.  Caroline will be participating in the AAP's Mystery Solved Panel and afterwards, signing at the HarperCollins booth (#523).  Not going to Philly? You can catch her on the Mystery PopTop Stage at ALA this summer.

So many mysteries, so little time!  You might just want to call in sick for this series.  

-Kayleigh

Uncategorized

From the Inside(rs) Out: Book Editors and the New Titles They Love

Logo For all of you going to ALA this weekend, I highly recommend attending AAP's fabulous event, "From the Inside(rs) Out: Book Editors and the New Titles They Love."  Hosted in collaboration with Nancy Pearl, National Public Radio Commentator, author of Book Lust, and beloved library action figure, it will be held Sunday, June 26, 2011, from 10:30 am – 12 pm in Room 392 of the New Orleans Convention Center, New Orleans, LA.  

Book publishing’s top editorial brass will share their passion with the library community and each will offer behind-the-scenes stories of two new fall 2011 titles. 

Bill Thomas, Senior Vice President, Publisher & Editor-in-Chief, Doubleday, presenting The Night Circus byErin Morgenstern and The Destiny of The Republic:  A Tale of Medicine, Madness and Murder of an American President by Candice Millard.  

Lee Boudreaux, Vice President, Ecco (HarperCollins) presenting The Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt: A Novel In Pictures by Caroline Preston, and The Arrogant Years:  One Girl’s Search for Her Lost Youth, from Cairo to Brooklyn by Lucette Lagnado.

Stephen Morrison, Editor In Chief and Associate Publisher, Penguin Books, presenting The White Woman on the Green Bicycle by Monique Roffey, and Theodora:  Actress, Empress, Whore by Stella Duffy.

John Sherer, Publisher, Basic Books (Perseus Books Group) presenting The Folly of Fools by Robert Trivers, and Heaven Cracks, Earth Shakes by James Palmer.

Michael Pietsch, Executive Vice President & Publisher, Little Brown & Company, presenting The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach and The Drop by Michael Connelly.

“Opportunities for librarians to hear directly from book publishing’s editors are rare and we are pleased to be able to provide this highly anticipated event to ALA members in partnership with AAP,” notes Mary Ghikas, Senior Associate Executive Director of the American Library Association.  All ALA attendees are invited.  

For more information on the event, please contact AAP’s Tina Jordan.

-Annie

31 Bond Street, AAP, Beautiful Maria of My Soul, Book Buzz, Brava, Valentine, Dolen Perkins-Valdez, Ellen Horan, Husband and Wife, Isabel Allende, Island Beneath the Sea, Jacqueline Winspear, Leah Stewart, Louise Erdrich, Maisie Dobbs, Making Toast, Marilyn Johnson, Noah Boyd, Oscar Hijuelos, Roger Rosenblatt, Shadow Tag, The Bricklayer, The Mapping of Love and Death, The Myth of You and Me, This Book is Overdue!, Wench

AAP Spring 2010 Book Buzz

ThisBookIsOverdue hc c It was great seeing old friends and making new ones at last week’s AAP Book Buzz here in NYC.  The AAP Library Committee is comprised of library marketers from various publishing houses. We get together several times a year to brainstorm about different ways we can connect our authors and books to libraries.  We decided to invite librarians from the tri-state area and barrage them with book talks and sandwiches!  It worked – we all had a lot of fun and it was a great opportunity to talk about some upcoming books that have us jazzed  (there’s just never enough time to talk about them all!)

Marilyn Johnson, author of the upcoming This Book Is Overdue! How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All kicked off the event with a brief talk about the increasing demands on librarians to keep up with the onslaught of new technology.  This book is an homage to librarians everywhere – and it is long overdue!

If anyone is interested in a galley of This Book Is Overdue, I have a few to spare.  Send an email to me at librarylovefest at harpercollins dot com and I’ll be happy to send one to you. 

Here is a list of the books I had presented.  Clicking on each title will bring you to its page in our online catalog.  Note: a few of these titles won't hit our catalogs until the beginning of November, so we've put them at the end of the list.  Happy reading!

-Virginia

Making Toast by Roger Rosenblatt

Shadow Tag by Louise Erdrich

The Bricklayer by Noah Boyd

31 Bond Street by Ellen Horan

Wench by Dolen Perkins-Valdez

Brava, Valentine by Adriana Trigiani


Scroll to Top