Author Archives: Carol

Carnegie Award Finalists Announced

The shortlist for the 2013 Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction has been announced, and includes titles that have been flying off the shelves this past year. If having your personal book selection validated by a team of library and reading experts is a pat on the back to your good taste, then the titles below may give you a literary glow for the rest of the day.

The finalists for fiction are:

This Is How You Lose Her by Junot Diaz
The Round House by Louise Erdrich
Canada by Richard Ford

This Is How You Lose HerRound HouseCanada

In nonfiction, the nominees are:

Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher: The Epic Life and Immortal Photographs of Edward Curtis by Timothy Egan
(770 EGA)
The Mansion of Happiness: A History of Life and Death by Jill Lepore (973 LEP)
Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic by David Quammen (614.43 QUA)

Short Nights of Shadow CatcherMansion of HappinessSpillover

The nominees are selected by a seven-member committee comprised of library professionals from the American Library Association’s Booklist magazine’s editorial staff and the Reference and User Services Association (RUSA). Finalists were drawn from the past year’s Booklist Editor’s Choice lists and the RUSA CODES Notable Books List.

Winners will be announced during the 2013 ALA Conference in Chicago on June 30.

The Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction were established in 2012 to recognize the best fiction and nonfiction works published for adult readers in the previous year. They are funded through a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York and were established to reflect Andrew Carnegie’s deep belief in the power of books and learning to change the world.

What’s On Your Bookshelf?

That seems to be the burning question preying on the minds of at least two publishers lately. Indulging in a bit of biblio-voyeurism, both Yale Press and Little, Brown have come out with anthologies that offer a–perhaps–Freudian glimpse into the minds of authors, artists, musicians and even chefs (they read more than cookbooks!) by playing an updated version of the old “what would you read if you were stranded on a desert island?” parlor game.

When setting up a new abode, what books come out of the packing cartons first?

Edited by Leah Price, Unpacking My Library: Writers and Their Books examines the actual bookshelves of authors ranging from Alison Bechdel to Edmund White. Price’s interviews reveal the kind of surprising truths one can only glean through a keen analysis of the books these renowned authors revere as being influential to their development as writers. (Jonathan Lethem treasures Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita while Claire Messud is more of an Anna Karenina kind of gal.)

bookshelfMy Ideal Bookshelf, edited by Thessaly La Force and gorgeously illustrated by Jane Mount, takes a different approach. Beginning with the premise that the books we choose to display on our bookshelves say a lot about our self-image, La Force compiled an encyclopedic representation of authors and cultural icons, from chef Hugh Acheson to legal scholar Jonathan Zittrain, and asked them to select those books they feel best represent the people they’ve become. Dave Eggers credits Saul Bellow’s Herzog while Stephenie Meyer still has a fondness for Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women. Who knew?

It’s a fun mental exercise, this defining oneself by the books one treasures. So, because I know you’re dying of curiosity, here are ten books I’d be sure to take along if I’m ever sent to that proverbial desert island.

speedThe Speed of Light by Elizabeth Rosner. Haunting story, gorgeously told.
A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving. One of the best opening sentences ever.
Fair and Tender Ladies by Lee Smith. Part of my heritage is in this book.
And Ladies of the Club by Helen Hooven Santmyer. At the end of 1,176 pages, I wanted to start all over again.
historyThe History of Love by Nicole Krauss. Two words: “and yet…”
Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides. Three words: “Ach! Honey mou!”
The Tower, the Zoo and the Tortoise by Julia Stuart. It made me laugh.
The Lovely Bonesby Alice Sebold. It made me cry.
tortillaThe Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan. It changed the way I live.
Tortilla Curtain by T. C. Boyle. It changed the way I think.

So, there’s my bookshelf.  What’s on yours?

 

 

 

 

The Bannedest of the Banned

As we acknowledge Banned Books Week (September 30-October 6, 2012), there seems to be no more appropriate choice to lead the discussion than Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses. Published in 1989, the book immediately earned Rushdie worldwide recognition of the worst sort. Based on his interpretation of segments of the book deemed critical of the Islamic religion, Iran’s then clerical leader, the Ayatollah Khomeini, issued a death threat, or fatwa, against Rushdie.

Now, more than 20 years later, Rushdie chronicles this intense period in his life in a brutally honest, behind-the-scenes mesmerizing memoir, Joseph Anton.  The title is the pseudonym he chose to live under during his years in hiding, and was an honorific compilation of the names of two of his favorite authors, Joseph Conrad and Anton Chekhov.

Joseph Anton is that most oxymoronic of books, both literary and a page-turner.  You know what happens—Khomeini dies and Rushdie lives—yet the suspense of how he manages his professional career and personal life during this time makes for riveting reading.

Time may have softened the memory of the violence and instability of those days, but Rushdie brings it all vividly back to the forefront in this story of his life in hiding: the riots around the world that grew increasingly deadly; the uncertainty of his every action, from the quotidian to the colossal; and the damage done to his reputation, as once-supportive colleagues and peers first supported then denigrated him openly in the press.

I admit that I have never read any of Rushdie’s works, not The Satanic Verses nor Midnight’s Children, for which he won the Booker Prize, nor anything in the years since the fatwa was lifted.  Joseph Anton, however, made me a convert to the works of his true alter ego.

When The Satanic Verses was published in the United States in February, 1989, a full-page ad ran in The New York Times, paid for by the Association of American Publishers, the American Booksellers’ Association, and the American Library Association.  It read:

Free people write books. Free people publish books. Free people sell books. Free people buy books. Free people read books. In the spirit of America’s commitment to free expression, we inform the public that this book will be available to readers at bookshops and libraries throughout the country.

For The Satanic Verses or for any of the countless works of literature that have found themselves on this infamous list, there could be no finer words of support.  Pick up a banned book today.

It’s Magic, Really

Librarians just loooove to throw phrases around. When it comes to discussing books, we’re all “narrative arc” this and “dramatic monologue” that. One of the terms that is getting bandied about a lot these days is “magic realism.” Say what? How can something be both “magic” and “real” at the same time? And why do we apply this term to fiction, which isn’t real at all?

Maybe this will help clear up the confusion. In such novels, the characters and their actions (a.k.a. the plot — another literary term) are, for the most part, plausible. One would recognize them as people (as opposed to, say, rabbits) and one would believe the situations they encounter (getting pulled out of a hat, for instance. OK, maybe not.)

St. Charles Public Library IL - One Hundred Years of Solitude by Marquez

And then…something happens. Herbs and flowers from a backyard garden make their way into delectable food that influences people in wondrous ways, as in Sarah Addison Allen’s debut novel, Garden Spells. Or a character is transported to heaven while hanging clothes out to dry, as in Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s sublime One Hundred Years of Solitude, considered by many to be one of the benchmarks of the genre.

With its fusion of reality and fantasy, magic realism acknowledges the premise that not everything in the visible world can be rationally explained. Myth, fable and folklore have long interpreted the world in this manner. Magic realism draws upon these traditions to introduce extraordinary events into an otherwise straightforward narrative.

St. Charles Public Library IL - Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman

In addition to Allen and Marquez, other authors known for works of magic realism are Isabel Allende (The House of Spirits); Yann Martel (Life of Pi); Erin Morgenstern (Night Circus); Alice Hoffman (Practical Magic); Laura Esquivel (Like Water for Chocolate); and Joanne Harris (Chocolat).

So, if you’re hesitant to pick up a book described as “magic realism” because it sounds a little too New Age-y or smacks a bit of far-out fantasy, don’t be. You might find yourself pleasantly surprised by a very recognizable and approachable form of fiction.

Andrew Carnegie Medals of Excellence Winners Announced

On June 24, the recipients of the first Andrew Carnegie Medals of Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction were announced at the American Library Association’s annual conference in Anaheim, California.

St. Charles Public Library IL - Catherine The Great by Robert K. MassieThe nonfiction award was presented to Robert K. Massie for Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman.

 

 

St. Charles Public Library IL - The Forgotten Waltz by Anne EnrightThe fiction award was given to Anne Enright for
The Forgotten Waltz

Booklist magazine’s senior editor Donna Seaman sat down with Enright for an in-depth interview about her award-winning novel and her illustrious career.

You can access the interview here.

Awarding Excellence

For readers who turn to lists of award-winners to help them answer that perennial question of “What should I be reading?” there’s an important new award in town – the Andrew Carnegie Medals of Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction.  Honoring Andrew Carnegie’s deep belief in the power of books and learning to change the world, the Andrew Carnegie Medals were made possible by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York on the occasion of the foundation’s one-hundredth anniversary, and are co-sponsored by Booklist  magazine, published by the American Library Association (ALA) and the Reference and User Services Association (RUSA).

The Andrew Carnegie Medals will recognize the best fiction and nonfiction published in the United States during the previous year.  An annually appointed selection committee of library professionals from around the country who work closely with adult readers is chaired by uber-library Nancy Pearl (author of the popular Book Lust series), and includes three editors from Booklist magazine and three former members of the RUSA Notable Books Council.

In May, Pearl announced the shortlist of finalists, which was comprised of 50 titles culled from 2011′s Booklist Editor’s Choice and RUSA Notable Books lists. The awards will be presented at the ALA Annual Conference on June 24, 2012, in Anaheim, California.  The winners in each category will receive a $5,000 cash award.

So, without further ado, here are this year’s finalists.  How many of them have you read?

Nominees for the Andrew Carnegie Medal of Excellence in Fiction 2012

St. Charles Public Library IL - Swamplandia! by Karen Russell

Lost Memory of Skin by Russell Banks

The Forgotten Waltz by Anne Enright

Swamplandia! by Karen Russell

 

 

 

Nominees for the Andrew Carnegie Medal of Excellence in Nonfiction 2012

St. Charles Public Library IL - Catherine The Great by Robert K. Massie

Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman by Robert K. Massie

The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood by James Gleick

Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention by Manning Marable

A Wild Read

As I sit here in the relative comfort of the climate-controlled library, on a sturdy, ergonomically-engineered chair, with access to hi-speed Internet and, of course, all the wisdom of the Western world around me, I am about as far removed from Cheryl Strayed as a human could possibly be.

Who is Cheryl Strayed, you ask?  She is the gutsy, strung-out, effusive, dejected, brave, strong, and, ultimately, triumphant author of a new memoir entitled Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail.

I am the anti-Cheryl Strayed not because she is an author and I am a librarian.  I am the anti-Cheryl Strayed because she endured a grueling, physically and mentally challenging 1,100-mile hike along the rugged Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) when she was 22.  All by herself.  Because she wanted to.  The most physical discomfort I am willing to tolerate is a relatively low thread count on my sheets.

I can and did relate to Strayed’s mind-boggling memoir because I once hiked the East Coast equivalent of the PCT – the Appalachian Trail — when I was about Strayed’s age, which was a looong time ago. Full disclosure:  I only hiked about 20 miles of it, and I had my husband with me. But I still have nightmares about the ill-fitting hiking boots I was forced to wear, and I haven’t been able to choke down a granola bar since.

Ill-fitting boots figure prominently in Strayed’s memoir, and are an apt symbol of all the hardships she endured.  Never mind the wind.  Never mind the rain. Strange animals, strange people. Filtered water, faulty equipment.   And we will not talk about the bathroom facilities (or lack thereof).

But Strayed took them all on.  She was a woman on a mission.  At the time she took her first footstep on the PCT, her life was out of control.  Her mother had recently died; she was newly divorced and trying to extricate herself from an abusive relationship and a dangerous flirtation with heroin.  Hiking the PCT would be her way of atoning, of trying to figure out if climbing the continent’s highest peaks would help her overcome her life’s low points.

Fans of adventure and travel memoirs as well as those of personal growth (think Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love or Mary Karr’s Lit) will enjoy this candid, captivating, and courageous woman’s account of a daunting but determined spiritual, emotional and physical journey.

 

 

Make a Reading Promise

Or at least promise yourself you’ll join us on Saturday, April 14, at 2 PM in the Carnegie Room when the St. Charles Library Foundation, in celebration of National Library Week, welcomes author Alice Ozma.

Alice’s memoir, The Reading Promise: My Father, and the Books We Shared , tells the story of a reading project she and her father started when she was 9 years old.  Every night, for 100 nights, Alice’s father read out loud to her.  They called this “The Streak.”  On the morning of the 101st day, Alice asked why The Streak had to end.  The answer was — it didn’t.  And so Alice’s father, a school librarian and soon-to-be-single father, read out loud to Alice for 3,218 nights.  The Streak ended on the day he drove Alice off to begin her freshman year of college; their final reading session took place on her dormitory staircase.

The Streak survived bouts of laryngitis and spells of stomach flu.  It survived Alice’s parents’ separation and divorce and her older sister’s college years abroad.  It survived first dates and senior proms, school play rehearsals and final exams. And it created an unbreakable bond between a father and daughter and instilled in Alice a lifelong love of reading and passion for books.   In fact, Alice has made a commitment to spread the word about the joys of reading and the importance of making a reading promise — to a child, a friend, a family member — even oneself.

We’ve fallen in love with Alice and we’re sure you will, too! Check out her video and then join us on Saturday, April 14, at 2 PM in the Carnegie Room. It will be a great afternoon.  Promise.

 

A Heads-Up on the Heads-Up!

We’re working on the New Fiction and New Nonfiction lists for May, and it’s pretty exciting stuff!  Look for long-overdue fiction from John Irving — In One Person — a tale inspired by the AIDS epidemic in the US in the 1980s.  Toni Morrison is also out with a new novel, Home, about an embittered Korean War veteran who struggles against trauma and racism to rescue his abused sister.  Paul Theroux returns with The Lower River, the tale of a former Peace Corps volunteer who returns to Malawi after his divorce.

Nonfiction gems include a new collection of essays by Anna Quindlen who looks at middle-age as only she can in Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright pens Prague Winter: A Personal Story of Remembrance and War in which she chronicles her early life in occupied Czechoslovakia during the Nazi invasion.

So…place those holds, and happy reading!