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Ninja Fun

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We've got Ninja Fever over here, just in time for our kid's favorite holiday. While we're out brandishing  nunchucks and collecting candy door-to-door, those without thrill-seeking Ninjas might want to check out tonight's programming at Politics and Prose:

Local author Eric Nuzum’s reads from his new book, The Dead Travel Fast.  The book is filled with plenty of fantastic and funny facts about the history and legends of Count Dracula and the author’s own search for vampires today. Nuzum seek sout the famous and not-so-famous haunts of the Count.

Politics and Prose adds: Join us for Bloody Marys as we discuss vampires. In the spirit of Halloween, costumes are encouraged.

Two-fer Tuesday

Scales3Court TV lauches its  “Search For The Next Great Crime Writer” contest . Amateur writers of crime and mystery have the opportunity to present their manuscripts. A panel of judges, including best-selling crime authors David Baldacci, Sandra Brown, and Harlan Coben, will select the winner from a pool of finalists.  The winner receives a Grand Prize of $5,000, as well as a publishing contract.

The contest will run in conjunction with the second season of Court TV’s Murder by the Book, which premieres next Monday, November 5th at 10pm.  The 13-episode, one-hour series featues the jurors and best-selling authors David Baldacci, Sandra Brown, and Harlan Coben.

Contest video

Trailer for Murder by the Book:

Monday Musings

NewspapercoffeeWe're back from W.VA with a hot list of new and noteworthy items deserving your attention.

First up is the long-awaited release of Your Ten Favorite Words by our favorite poet, Reb Livingston.

" …Reb Livingston’s poems are a shot in the arm and a throb in the brain, a rebellious erotics of language, an irrepressible manifesto of the vagaries of the libido, complete with deep mischievousness and dark misgivings. If you’ve been wondering where poems by the next generation of whip smart, tender/tough women can be found: Eureka! A book full of them is right here."

Amy Gerstler, author of Ghost Girl, Medicine and Crown of Weeds

This is Ms. Livingston's first full-length collection of poetry and you owe it to yourself to order a copy.

Listen, hear: The latest five installments of The Bat Segundo Show are now up. The podcast shows include Inside the Actors Studio's James Lipton, noted cognitive scientist Steven Pinker, feminist writer Naomi Wolf, The Wonder Years's  Danica McKellar, and Charles Schulz biographer David Michaelis.

Dzanc heavy-hitter Roy Kesey's book tour for All Over has launched. Read all about it here.

In DC Tonight: C.M. Mayo reminds us that Peter Behrens will be reading tonight at Politics and Prose.

In NYC Tonight: To Bee or Not To Bee. Tickets are still available for the literary spelling bee to benefit the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses. Last year Billy Collins misspelled villanelle —who will falter this year?

This year's spelling hopefuls include: Jonathan Burnham, Colin Channer, Michael Cunningham, Paula Froelich, Lev Grossman, Adam Haslett, Alex Kuczynski, Patrick McGrath, Sara Nelson, Thisbe Nissen, Emily Nussbaum, Abigail Pogrebin, Gretchen Rubin, Returning Champ Robert Seitsema, Dani Shapiro, Tad Smith, Christopher Sorrentino, Judith Stone, Lynne Tillman, and Meg Wolitzer.

Ticket price is a bit steep ($75, tax-deductible),but proceeds support the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses, a non-profit providing everything from marketing help to fundraising guidance to independent literary publishers since 1967. More info here.

Friday Frolic

Frolic11We're packing up kith and kin and heading to Wild and Wonderful West Virginia for our annual retreat weekend: 20 families, 6 communal meals, and dormitory style barracks. Oh boy…

Before we head out for rural parts unknown, we thought we would leave you with a few interesting tidbits to keep you busy with the clickity-click on this cold and wet Friday morning:

  • Marco Roth takes on Philip Roth over at Nextbook.
  • Bethane Patrick offers her thoughts on the closing of Franz Bader Bookstore here in DC:

" The Franz Bader Bookstore was founded by Bader, an Austrian Jew who with his wife Antonia fled the Nazis in the late 1930s. He opened his own shop in 1953 and over years and a couple of moves established a place where architects and artists could not only find the specialty books they wanted, but the advice that they needed"

  • A way cool interview with mathematician Ed Belbruno, author of Fly me to the Moon. Belbruno, named one of the top influential thinkers about space by New Scientist Magazine, discusses how he used chaos theory to get the world’s first spaceship (a Japanese spaceship named Hiten, which means “A Buddhist Angel that Dances in Heaven”) to the moon without using fuel…
  • Imagine there's no people: World Without Us author Alan Weisman on, well a world without us. Imagine.
  • It's never too late for the Writer's Center. Yes, there's still time to sign up for workshops in nonfiction, structuring your novel, finding your creative voice and more. There's even a weekend crash course in grammar and a cool adult-child workshop in "publishing" your own handmade book. For more information, pay a visit here.
  • 10 Writer's receive $50,000 Whiting Writers' Award. This year’s winners include two poets, three fiction writers, three non-fiction writers, and two playwrights. We’re assuming our check is in the mail.

Looking ahead:

  • Busy weekend over at Politics and Prose: Friday brings Judith Viorst, Saturday there's Susan Faludi, and Sunday evening there's recent guest blogger Joshua Henkin.  We're sorry to miss it...

Anybody have any good weekend events or plans to share?

Wednesday Night Live

DceventIn DC tonight, Politics and Prose hosts a bevy of Atlantic Monthly contributors, including Christopher Hitchens , Robert Dallek, Mark Bowden, James Fallows, William Langewiesche, and Congressman John Conyers, to celebrate the publication of The American Ideal an anthology of the last 150 years of The Atlantic Monthly. Yes, 150 years. We didn't realize that Martin Luther King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” first appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, as well as Robert Lowell’s epic “For the Union Dead." Come out tonight to celebrate, listen, admire and learn.

Card_07In NYC tonight, there's a happy gathering at the Happy Ending Music an Reading Series. Join our dear friend Min Jin Lee as she reads with Dzanc wonder boy Roy Kesey and author Benjamin Percy. The doors open at 7:00, the show starts at 8pm sharp.

Monday Musings

CoffeecupIt was a busy, busy weekend...

On Friday I covered The Women of Brewster Place—as a musical!—for  The Washington Post.  Later that evening, we caught Stephen Colbert explain "truthiness" to Tim Russert at Lisner. Then off to meet up with a friend in town for the The Society for the History of Technology conference. In between I found time to shuttle kids to swim lessons, apple picking and a day at the zoo where I was traumatized by the free-range spiders at the dark and creepy invertebrate house

It's Monday and we're still reeling from Friday, but here goes, a few links for your perusal:

NYC Event: It's time again for Opium Magazine's Literary Death Match. Tonight catch  writers duke it out for the literary heavyweight title: Thomas Cooper (Opium) v. Giancarlo Trapano (New York Tyrant) v. Susan Buttenwieser (failbetter) v. Pedro Ponce (Quick Fiction). Judges includes guest blogger Ben Greenman, Happy Ending host, Amanda Stern, and Joshua Furst, the author of Short People. Doors open at 7 at the Kitchen, show starts at 7:30, and $7 gets you in the door.

Prize news: last week Irish author Ann Enright won the 2007 Man Booker Prize for her novel The Gathering. Enright is the second Irish woman to win the prize and joins fellow her countryfolk: Iris Murdoch, Roddy Doyle and John Banville. The Gathering moves its way to the top of our To-Be-Read pile, as we admit that we really didn't love On Chesil Beach, Ian McEwan's novel that was considered a forerunner for the Booker by insiders.

Favorite Quote from Doris Lessing on wining the 2007 Nobel Prize for Literature this month:

"Oh Christ!" she said, when told about the monumental honor. "I couldn't care less."  —The Washington Post

[Go ahead, visit Lessing's Myspace page, you know you want to...]

Our Most Recent Couldn't-Put-Down Book? Shalom Auslander's Foreskin's Lament. Interested? Check out Nextbook podcast interview here, video trailer here and over at Amazon.

Happy Monday — xxoo, tHB

Do Good, Tuesday

KidbookHere's a note that's been languishing in our inbox for far too long. From accomplished writer and salsa dancer, Julianna Baggot:

The Book Box Project: getting books to kids who need them most

About a month ago I got an email from the Department of Corrections, to call a specific officer, as soon as possible. I was at first a little panic-stricken and immediately indignant. I was pretty sure that I'd been wrongly accused, but would end up paying a hefty fine regardless. (I'm a guilty indignant pessimist.)

The officer, it turns out, wanted — of all things — books. He wanted them for kids with incarcerated parents. While waiting to see a parent in prison, you can't have games or toys, but you can have books. Why not provide them, and, all the better, why not a book the kids can start and take home? The officer was contacting me in my role as cofounder of a nonprofit that gets free books to kids who need them most: Kids in Need - Books in Deed -- www.booksindeed.org. The program is housed at the FSU Foundation, and for almost a year we've been working to get books into the homes of kids in Title I schools, shelters, as well as underprivileged mothers-to-be, to under-funded libraries, and now prisons and the foster care system.

The Book Box Project is something we've set up through Kids in Need— Books in Deed.

It's simple.

Get a cardboard box, put it in your office, school, church, front stoop, or at the doorway of your next party. Let us know that you're collecting, and we'll send you an email that you can then forward to your friends and coworkers. Have everyone pitch in to fill the box with new and slightly used books for children. We'll give you a list of organizations to choose from (shelters, Title I schools, prisons, and foster care in the state of Florida — home to some of the poorest counties in the country). Once the box is full, you can ship it directly to the organization in need.

That's it.

Think about it and get in touch if you have any questions. We'd love to partner with you on this!

Please feel free to forward this on ...

For straight monetary donations: please send checks to:
Kids in Need – Books in Deed
Attn: Nancy Smilowitz
Senior Director of Development
Office of the Dean College of Arts & Sciences
Tallahassee, FL 32306-1280

Monday Conflicts

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Help! Two of our favorite authors are in town and we're truly conflicted: do we attend this reading or this one? Oh, decisions, decisions...

If we were in NYC tonight, the choice would be easy: Dallas Hudgens reads from his new book Season of Gene at Monday's edition of The Reader's Room at Mo Pitkin's. Dallas, our iPod programming friend, was last spotted on the net licking the windows over at Lauren's place. (Check it out: the Fab LC is running one of the coolest book give-away contests we've seen in a while.) Anyone out there attending the Hudgens reading care to send us a Friend of the Happy Booker Report? Operators are standing by...

[above image is a homemade alethiometer —more cool images here—from The Golden Compass, of course. We spent many, many, many enjoyable hours in the car this summer listening to Pullman—and a formidable cast of Brits; we highly endorse the audio version of His Dark Materials for those long road trips.]

National Book Award Nominees 2007

Town_crier_211How many have you read?

FICTION

Mischa Berlinski, Fieldwork
Lydia Davis, Varieties of Disturbance
Joshua Ferris, Then We Came to the End
Denis Johnson, Tree of Smoke
Jim Shepard, Like You’d Understand, Anyway

Fiction judges: Francine Prose (chair), Andrew Sean Greer, Walter Kirn, David Means, and Joy Williams.

NONFICTION

Edwidge Danticat,  Brother, I’m Dying
Christopher Hitchens, God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything
Woody Holton, Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution
Arnold Rampersad, Ralph Ellison: A Biography
Tim Weiner, Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA

Nonfiction judges: David Shields (chair), Deborah Blum,Caroline Elkins, Annette Gordon-Reed, and James Shapiro.

POETRY

Linda Gregerson, Magnetic North
Robert Hass, Time and Materials
David Kirby, The House on Boulevard St.
Stanley Plumly, Old Heart
Ellen Bryant Voigt, Messenger: New and Selected Poems 1976-2006

Poetry Judges: Charles Simic (chair), Linda Bierds, David St. John, Vijay Seshadri, and Natasha Trethewey.

Hump Day Guest Blog

Pile_of_booksGuest blogger Joshua Henkin stops by today to shake us out of our blogging doldrums. For those who want more of Joshua—and we all want more, because he rocks!— you can catch him live tonight at The Happy Ending Reading Series appearing with Chris Adrian and Kate Christenson.

Guest Blogger Joshua Henkin
Thanks, Wendi, for having me as your guest.  My new novel, Matrimony, is about the twenty-year history of a marriage—what happens when a couple meet in college (he’s a Wasp from New York City, an aspiring novelist, the son of a wealthy investment banker; she’s Jewish, from Montreal) and end up marrying earlier than they expected and the ways that their choices (faithlessness, failed ambition, the decision whether to have a child) and things out of their control (health and sickness, the death of parent) test the endurance of their relationship.

Pantheon is sending me on a crazy twenty-five-stop book tour, which will take me, among other places, to lovely Washington, DC, on Sunday October 28—first, in the early afternoon, to the Jewish Book Festival at Congregation Beth Emeth in Herndon, VA, and then, at 5PM, to the District itself, to Politics & Prose, one of my very favorite bookstores. 

Apropos of book tour, I’ve started to do a bunch of interviews, and when I’m not being asked about my own marriage, I’m being asked for advice by aspiring novelists.  This isn’t entirely surprising, since I teach creative writing in two MFA programs (Sarah Lawrence College and Brooklyn College).  What’s more, Matrimony, though principally about a marriage, is also in part about the writing life, since Julian, my protagonist, is an aspiring novelist. 

For a more detailed account of some of my thoughts about fiction writing, you might have a look at my three-part “Letter to an MFA,” which appeared on M.J. Rose’s blog Buzz, Balls & Hype, and at my forthcoming article, “In Defense of MFA Programs,” which will appear in the November/December issue of Poets and Writers.

But for now, I’d like to tell you briefly about my pet peeve, which is that too many writers write a perfectly good sentence but don’t know how to tell (and in some cases aren’t interested in telling) a story.  A college friend of mine wrote her psychology thesis on how adults group objects versus how children group objects.   The adult groups the apple with the banana, whereas the child groups the monkey with the banana.  Which is another way of saying that children are more natural storytellers than adults are.  So one of my principal tasks as a fiction writer and as a teacher of fiction writing is to get myself and my students to think like children again.

Continue reading "Hump Day Guest Blog" »

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