According to PW, John Lange, author of the soon to be reissued Hard Case Crime edition of Grave Descend, is actually a pseudonym for Michael Crichton. Read the article here:http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA6374596.html?text=john+lange
According to PW, John Lange, author of the soon to be reissued Hard Case Crime edition of Grave Descend, is actually a pseudonym for Michael Crichton. Read the article here:
The movie tie-in edition of The Prestige by Christopher Priest has arrived. While I haven't read the book yet, I am looking forward to seeing the movie.
I just finished Special Topics in Calamity Physics by Marisha Pessl last night. (Despite what the title sounds like, it is fiction.) High school student Blue Van Meer narrates her life story, which since her mom died when she was little, consists of moving every semester as her college professor dad takes a new lecturing job. (Her parents shared an enchanted love that "caused birds and other furry creatures to congregate on a windowsill.") However, for her senior year her dad has decided they should stay in one place for the entire year, and Blue will attend St. Gallway, where she meets the Bluebloods and teacher Hannah Schneider, who will die that year (first sentence of Part 1--I'm not giving anything away). The majority of the book is spent chronicling Blue's senior year, but the end takes a wild turn as Blue tries to solve the mystery of Hannah's death. The clique of students enamored of teacher plot and slightly dark tone is a bit reminiscent of Donna Tartt's The Secret History, but what I really love about this book are Pessl's clever descriptions and phrases. To read her description of someone as a Goodnight Moon or a walking wedge of Camembert are just so enjoyable. Her constant bibliographic references and tendencies to capitalize words for emphasis could almost be too clever, but it's part of what makes the book so good. The website is also entertaining:
You're Not You by Michelle Wildgen
Orchid Shroud: A Novel of Death in the Dordogne by Michelle Wan
The Highly Effective Detective by Richard Yancey
Here new book is Between, Georgia.
I will never look at the cover of a fashion magazine in the same way after reading Robin Hazelwood's semi-autobiographical debut novel Model Student: A Tale of Co-eds and Cover Girls. It's the mid-eighties and Wisconson native, Emily Woods, is pursuing her modeling career while trying not to flunk out of Columbia University--because jetting around the world for photo shoots doesn't leave much time for studying. There's a happy ending, but the book definitely shows the seedy side of the modeling business. I was completely sucked into the story, though. Even more entertaining is the slide show of bad eighties fashion on Hazelwood's website:
Crossover: A Cassandra Kresnov Novel by Joel Shepherd
For One More Day is the story of a mother and a son, and a relationship that covers a lifetime and beyond. It explores the question: What would you do if you could spend one more day with a lost loved one?

Haunted Ground by Erin Hart
Lake of Sorrows by Erin Hart
Journal: The Short Life and Mysterious Death of Amy Zoe Mason by Joyce and Kristine Atkinson
I have to grudgingly admire Karyn Bosnak. She's the one who ran up $20,000 in credit card debt (Starbucks lattes, designer clothes, Gucci purses, etc.) and then made a website asking people to send her money to pay the bill. And they did. Seriously. This week she makes her fiction debut with 20 Times a Lady. You can check out her website at:
The Orchid Shroud: A Novel of Death in the Dordogne by Michelle Wan
Water for Elephants by Sarah Gruen
The Ruins by Scott Smith
Brethren: An Epic Adventure of the Knights Templar by Robyn Young
The Resurrection by Tucker Malarkey
Due out in a couple of weeks, this one's been optioned by Julia Roberts:
Once Upon a Day by Lisa Tucker
Indecision by Benjamin Kunkel
So if you wonder why an obscure book published in 1999 suddenly has holds on it and is #300 in Amazon's sales rank, blame Lost.
Grab On To Me Tightly As If I Knew the Way by Bryan Charles
Ludmila's Broken English by DBC Pierre
The Girls by Lori Lansens
Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen
Piece of Cake by Swati Kaushal
I also finally got around to reading Curtis Sittenfeld's Prep.
I also started an ARC copy of Sequence by Lori Andrews.
Daniel Isn't Talking by Marti Leimbach
Adverbs by Daniel Handler
Memoirs of a Muse by Laura Vapnyar
By a Lady: Being the Adventures of an Enlightened American in Jane Austen's England by Amanda Elyot
The Sand Cafe by Neil MacFarquhar
Have Mercy on Us All by Fred Vargas
The Sand Cafe by Neil MacFarquhar
Some Like it Haute by Julie K. L. Dam
Fashionably Late by Beth Kendrick
Goodbye, Jimmy Choo by Annie Sanders
The Manolo Matrix by Julie Kenner
Paris Hangover by Kirsten Lobe
Elements of Style by Wendy Wasserstein
The Booster by Jennifer Solow