Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Bests, faves, and so forth

A completely subjective, unordered, and unorthodox mish-mash of my various favorites from 2008...

The only book I purchased BEFORE I read it:
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by Kathi Appelt


Most compelling 
(and, not coincidentally, most disturbing):
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by Elizabeth Scott


The genre-defying wonder-book:
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by Carole Boston Weatherford


Most eagerly anticipated by yours truly:
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by Donna Jo Napoli


Favorite adult read:
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by Garth Stein


Best biography:
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by Sally Hobart Alexander and Robert Alexander


Thickest read of the year:
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by Neal Gabler
(I could also label this "most seductive," seeing as it wooed me into springing for a 10-day vacation to Walt Disney World)


Best book I can't believe I didn't blog:
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Ringside 1925:
Views from the Scopes Trial
by Jen Bryant
(Also, the only book I wrote notes in.
I NEVER write in books -- ask my mother.)


Best book I never would have picked up on my own:
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Boy Toy
by Barry Lyga


Most enjoyable craft manual:
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by Arthur Plotnik


Best twists/Most thought-provoking:
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by Mary E. Pearson


Best characterization:
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by Tony Johnston


Best plotting/
Best [least irritating] setup for a sequel:
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by Suzanne Collins


Most informative:
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by Linas Alsenas


Book I tried hardest to love with no "buts":
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by Karen Hesse


Most enjoyable reading experience of the year:
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by Margo Lanagan


Best niche book:
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The Diary of Grand Duchess Olga Nicholiaevna: 1913
translated by Marina Petrov
edited by Raegan Baker


Best unsolicited ARC:
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The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg
by Rodman Philbrick


Most Useful:
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Ekaterinburg:
The Last Days of the Romanovs
by Helen Rappaport


Favorite backlist read:
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by Karen Hesse


Best sequel:
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by Sharon Creech


Book I most enjoyed buzzing about:
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by Elizabeth C. Bunce


Best comeback by a long-favored author:
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What on Earth Have I Done?
by Robert Fulghum


Best debut:
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by Kristin Cashore


Book I would feel remiss if I didn't mention somehow:
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by Laurie Halse Anderson
(How about this: 
"Book that deserves a more inspired review than I managed to write"?)


Most creepy/kooky/atmospheric:
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by Christine Meldrum


Book that prompted the most sniggering:
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by Lois Lowry


Most eye-opening:
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Why Gender Matters
by Leonard Sax


The book I can't believe I didn't see coming until it arrived:
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by Donna Jo Napoli

Sunday, December 28, 2008

State of the TBR pile

STILL reading:

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How to Read Literature Like a Professor
by Thomas C. Foster


And I still harbor hopes that someday I might get around to reading this:

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The Animated Man:
A Life of Walt Disney
by Michael Barrier

Friday, December 26, 2008

Poetry Friday


Click here to see the fully decorated poem with its holly and mistletoe border, which was designed in 1881 by Queen Victoria's youngest daughter, Princess Beatrice.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Holiday tasties

First Kirby Larson did it, and then Barbara O'Connor did, too. So here I go -- a couple sacred family holiday recipes of my own.


First, Great Grandma Gass-Ball's molasses cookies:


Yeah, "flour." Try five or six cups -- enough so you can roll them out without breaking your wrists. Then sprinkle a little sugar on top and bake at 350 for 10-15 minutes or so. Oh, and we recommend dark molasses. Otherwise they're a little wimpy.

(Maybe next summer I'll share her BBQ sauce recipe. Maybe.)


And now, pound cake. I dunno whose recipe this is, but it happens to be in Grandma Miller's handwriting:

Look out -- there's baking powder in the ingredients list but not in the instructions, so don't forget to dump a teaspoonful in there with the flour. Also, it takes an hour and 40 minutes only if you're making a bundt cake. I do two loaf pans for 50-60 minutes instead.

Monday, December 22, 2008

WINTER LIGHTS, by Anna Grossnickle Hines

WINTER LIGHTS
by Anna Grossnickle Hines

(Greenwillow)


In a celebration of the bright spots in a dark season, Hines has written 15 poems conveying the warmth of Christmas, Hannukah, Chinese New Year, Kwanzaa, and even the flashlights under the covers. Illustrating each poem is a richly colored, intricately pieced quilt, which Hines sewed herself over two and a half years, using 11.5 miles of thread!

(Review shamelessly cut & pasted from the Halfway Down the Stairs winter 2005 newsletter. But hey, I wrote it, so I have cut & paste rights, right?)

Incidentally, I may be taking a holiday blog-break. Unless something juicy and irresistible comes up, don't expect to see much beyond Poetry Fridays and TBR Sundays from me until after the new year. Fa-la-la, my friends.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

State of the TBR pile

Finished:

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Guardian, by Julius Lester
Art & Fear, by David Bayles and Ted Orland
Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You, by Sam Gosling


It's finally dawned on me (again) that I do WAY better with non-fiction this time of year. Plus, this bio is long overdue, so it shall be the sole book on the Christmas (and likely the New Year's) TBR list:

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The Animated Man: A Life of Walt Disney
by Michael Barrier

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Stars upon thars

On Goodreads lately, I've noticed there are a number of folks who have a habit of rating books they didn't like well enough to finish. This may be a holdover from my anti-censorship days at the bookshop, but it still strikes me as unfair to rate a book without seeing it through to the end. Seems to me, marking a book as "abandoned" pretty much speaks for itself without adding the extra wallop of a one- or two-star rating, especially since Goodreads, unlike Amazon, allows you to review without rating, and vice versa. (Not that I'm immune to this myself, mind you -- I just took a reconnaissance break to visit my own Goodreads profile and discovered I had a handful of ratings to retract from books on my own Abandoned shelf.)


So what say you guys? Do you think it's fair to rate a book you haven't read, or is this the sort of nuance you have to be an author to get riled about?

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Currently reading:
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How to Read Literature Like a Professor
by Thomas C. Foster
(It's way better than it sounds.)

Friday, December 19, 2008

Poetry Friday

After the meal we light the first light in our lamp of stone.
Mother touches the flame to the wick. We are thick with tart and thankful,
for though we have lost much,
yet this much remains. I hold Aaron,
crumbs clinging to his moist chin,
I hold my brother up in the glow of the Hanukkah light,
and the flame dances
in Aaron's dark eyes.


~Karen Hesse

Excerpted from the poem "First Night, First Light" in The Stone Lamp: Eight Stories of Hanukkah Through History.

(Hanukkah begins Sunday at sundown.)

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Currently reading:
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Snoop:
What Your Stuff Says About You
by Sam Gosling

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Poll: The Graveyard Book

Someday I will learn how to embed a fancy push-button poll into a post. Today is not that day.*


So, I'm 110 pages into Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book and my indifference has been mounting steadily over the last 30 pages. (I started to wander when the ghouls entered the scene.) Should I:

A) Stick it out -- it'll grab me soon
B) Try again after Christmas
C) Bail -- if I'm not hooked by now, I won't ever be



*Edited to add: Oh my GOD, how/when did that nifty poll magically appear?

*gibbers incoherently*



(Beacon Press)
May 2009

Look at that. Just look at it. Holy cripe, I want.

Mind you, I have known this bio was in the works for quite some time, but that does not lessen the excitement one little bit. I even had the privilege of reading an early manuscript nineteen months ago. But now it has a cover and an ISBN and everything. Now I can proudly proclaim that it's by the very smart Kim E. Nielsen, who wrote The Radical Lives of Helen Keller and vetted Miss Spitfire, and is possibly every bit as crazy for Annie Sullivan as I am. 

This is, in fact, the first solo adult biography of Anne Sullivan Macy since the 1930's, and by golly it is going to be GOOD. It was killer last May, and it can only have gotten better in the meantime. I am practically clawing at the cover.

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Currently reading:
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Guardian
by Julius Lester

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Merry Christmas to me

My Christmas present to myself arrived yesterday, and I'm thrilled to bits:

Ispoved' Tsareubiyts
[Confessions of Regicide]
by Yu. A. Zhuk

Because nothing says "Happy Holidays" quite like the testimony of an execution squad, yes?

About Kids vs. For Kids

Seems like once or twice a season, we'd get a book in at the shop that was exquisitely written, yet didn't stand a chance with kids. (Every now and then, one of those books wins the Newbery, but that's another can of worms.) And any time a debate arose about whether such a book should have been marketed for children or adults in the first place, the term "Adult Sensibility" usually came up. All of us bookstore broads knew exactly what a story with an adult sensibility felt like, but God help us if anyone wanted an actual definition. It's still not something I can define concisely; nevertheless, I'm going to try to at least explain.


Imagine an event from your childhood that makes for an interesting story or anecdote. Now imagine the different ways you might tell your story if you were:

1. A child telling another child
2. A child telling a teen
3. A child telling an adult

4. A teen telling a child
5. A teen telling another teen
6. A teen telling an adult

7. An adult telling a child
8. An adult telling a teen
9. An adult telling another adult

Which parts of your story would you accentuate, and which parts would you gloss over, depending on who you are and to whom you're speaking? How might elements like length, structure, vocabulary, tone, style, and focus change depending on your audience? 

Of course everyone wants to say that stories for kids tend to be simpler (or worse yet, "easier") than stories for adults, but that's not quite right. Most people who care about children's literature know that if you're telling stories for kids, it isn't enough to start with "once upon a time" and use a lot of short words until you come to the "happily ever after." This isn't about dumbing down -- it's about relevance and appeal. It's about respecting you audience's tastes.

The story might also change depending on the teller's distance from the event. Children or teenagers relating something that happened in recent memory might load the story with vivid sensory details still fresh in their mind. On the other hand, adults have greater opportunity to be more reflective about how an event fits into the greater context of life.

An example:
Last Christmas my uncle converted some old home videos onto DVD as family gifts. One of them is of the Christmas Eve when I was in second grade, a holiday I remember quite well. But watching that video now, 20 years later, fascinates me endlessly.

There are so many things I can see now that I didn't pick up on then. The rather extravagant way my uncle humored me when I presented him with a duck-shaped lint brush I'd picked out ALL BY MYSELF. The way our mothers and grandmother giggled over the occasional spicy remark that sailed right over our precious little heads. And there were deeper things, too: hints of the tension that would eventually break my aunt and uncle's marriage. The way my great-great aunt watched my cousins and I open our gifts -- my great-great aunt who I'd much later learn had given up her only children, a set of illegitimate twins, for adoption some sixty years ago. That's the sort of perspective that constitutes an adult sensibility. 

Because to a  seven-year-old, this is the story of The Year I Wore My Long Pink Dress and Heather and I Got Television Sets for Christmas! My memories aren't all superficial, though. As a kid, I noticed that despite the occasional blaze of mischief old Aunt Grace was usually so quiet; I didn't know the word wistful" then, but I think perhaps that's what I was seeing. I also picked up on the atmosphere between my aunt and uncle, and felt a keen, silent mix of thankfulness and guilt that my household had smoother edges than my cousins'. I heard the grown-up ladies laughing and momentarily wondered why. I may not have dwelled on these moments at the time, but they lodged in my memory even if I didn't understand their significance just then.

Even so, I would have told that story differently then than I'd tell it now. Not only my voice, but my perspective and focus were different. No matter how inquisitive and observant, a seven-year-old kid telling about that Christmas Eve isn't going to expound on signs of past and future family intrigue. A kid wants to get to the presents already, and a writer who focuses for any significant length of time on anything but the loot sacrifices the authenticity of a child's perspective. In a novel for adults you can get away with that, while in a kids' story you risk losing touch with your audience. 

Why? Because no matter how old you are, it's almost impossible to simultaneously experience and process your emotions. Adults, by simple virtue of their age and exposure to life, have the luxury of being able to stand at a distance and consider their childhood, while kids are mostly just trying to survive each moment as it hits. 

But here's the catch: when you're an adult writing for children, you can begin to narrow the gap between the two perspectives. If you've got a delicate hand, you can take those persistent hints and nuances and give kids a leg up on what they mean, and why they make us feel the way they do. Watching a character wade through these incidents and emotions gives kids some tools to recognize and navigate the undercurrents in their own lives.

Here's the point I've been circling: Point-of-view and Perspective are not synonymous. Point-of-view is about whose eyes you're looking through. Perspective is about taking those sights and making sense of them via the brain and the experiences behind the eyes that saw them. And that difference means you can write a picture book about an elderly woman that a six-year-old will enjoy, or a novel narrated by a six-year-old that appeals to adults. Which is why books like To Kill a Mockingbird and The Secret Life of Bees -- books told from a child's point-of-view with an adult perspective -- are stories about kids, not for kids. Oddly enough, even the best children's authors aren't immune to writing with adult perspective from time to time. However, this is the part where I resist naming certain children's books I believe are really novels about children, because every example I can think of is by a living, lauded author I'd rather not risk irritating. Suffice it to say that one of them is among my own top five favorite books.

Monday, December 15, 2008

A SMALL MIRACLE, by Peter Collington

A SMALL MIRACLE
by Peter Collington

(Knopf)

From the Ingram wholesale website:
"Back in print by booksellers' popular demand, this wonderfully satisfying contemporary parable features the wooden figures in a church's Christmas Nativity scene that miraculously come to life to save a starving old woman who has done a good turn for them."

Back at Halfway Down the Stairs, we liked to claim credit for bringing this sweetheart back into print a few years ago. Ok, probably we weren't the only booksellers who adored it enough to beg for a reprint in Publisher's Weekly's Cuffie awards year after year, but still. Like Mo Willems's Pigeon, we have dreams, you know.

Anyhow, I could hardly walk a customer through this story without stifling snivels and snurps. Once the nativity figures come peeping out of the church to help the gypsy lady, I was mostly reduced to pointing and grunts. Which actually works remarkably well as a sales pitch, because this is a wordless picturebook. COMPLETELY wordless. Go on and see if you can make your way to the end without letting it slay you. I triple-dog-dare you.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

State of the TBR pile

Finished:
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The Preservationist, by David Maine
Holes, by Louis Sachar (audio)
Scat, by Carl Hiaasen


To try again after the holidays:
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Carolina Harmony, by Margaret Taylor McDowell


Next week:
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The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman
The Devil's Paintbox, by Victoria McKernan

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Currently reading:
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The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman