Archive for February, 2009

Danielle Steel Goes Digital

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Danielle Steel, the best-selling author, has decided to convert 71 of her novels into e-books to be downloaded digitally.

The e-books were released on Feb 24th. The titles include her latest book One Day at a Time and other popular works such as The Promise and Leap of Faith.

The cost for the digital version of the books can vary, but are still cheaper than buying a new hardcover print of any best-seller. They typical cost of a best-seller in e-book form retails for about $9.99.

Publishing houses like HarperCollins, Random House and Simon & Schuster say that sales of e-books for any device – including laptop downloads – constitute less than one per cent of total book sales.

That may be so, but the reason authors like John Grisham and Tom Clancy have also taken their books digital is because there are signs of building momentum. Publishers report that sales of e-books have tripled or quadrupled in the last year.

Although regular books aren’t going anywhere any time soon, things are changing.

Markus Dohle, chief executive of Random House, the world’s largest publisher of consumer books, said, “E-books will become the go-to-first format for an ever-expanding group of readers who are newly discovering how much they enjoy reading books on a screen.”

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Christie Home Opens to Public

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

This one’s for all you die-hard Mystery fans:

Agatha Christie’s Georgian villa where the writer spent her summers and entertained guests with readings from her thrillers will open to the public for the first time on Saturday, February 28th, after a $7.8 million restoration.

Visitors can see the bedroom where Christie slept, the dining room where she entertained, and the drawing room where she thrilled friends with readings from her latest whodunit.

It took two years to restore the 18th-century home, called Greenway, and the rooms are much as they were when Christie lived there in the 1950’s, complete with books, boxes of chocolates and bouquets of flowers. Even the scratches on the bedroom door made by the family dog remain.

Christie bought Greenway in 1938. It is located near Glampton in Devon, England, about 200 miles southwest of London. She spent her summers there until 1959.

Greenway Then
Dame Agatha Christie, and her husband Max Mallowan, in 1946.

Born in Devon in 1890, Christie had deep roots there. It is a region of beaches, dramatic river valleys, hills and wild moorland. Fifteen of her books have Devon settings, including And Then There Were None, and Ordeal by Innocence. Christie died in 1976, at the age of 85.

Christie’s grandson, Mathew Prichard, said he hoped the renovation would let visitors “feel some of the magic and sense of place that I felt when my family and I spent so much time there in the 1950s and ’60s.”

Visitors can see Christie’s bedroom, with its view of grounds sloping down to the River Dart, the formal dining room and a manuscript room full of Christie first editions.

During World War II, the house was used by the U.S. Navy during preparations for D-Day. The home’s restorers have retained a vivid frieze of wartime scenes painted on the library walls by Lt. Marshall Lee, a U.S. Coast Guard war artist. Christie had kept them as a memento of their stay.

Although Christie never wrote any of her novels in Greenway, the drawing room is where friends and family would gather to hear Christie read from her latest manuscript and then try to guess whodunit. It is said that her archaeologist husband, Max Mallowan, would wake from a doze to announce the name of the murderer.

Christie’s heirs donated Greenway to the National Trust nine years ago, but until now only its lush gardens have been open to the public.

greenwaynow3

Greenway is the mystery-lovers’ Mecca. The National Trust said that once the house has been open for a while, they may even consider holding murder-mystery tours and Christie-themed events.

For die-hard fans, one floor of the main house has been turned into a five-bedroom vacation apartment, available for $3,600 a week in high season. The trust also hopes to offer overnight guests a meal in the dining room where Christie once dined.

Robyn Brown, who manages Greenway on behalf of the National Trust said, “It’s my dream, that on the last night of their stay, we will ring a gong in the hall and they will come down for drinks in the library and then have dinner in the dining room.”

For fans of Christie, what could be better?

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‘The Graveyard Book’

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

Coraline may be 3rd in the box office, but it’s Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book that caught my interest.

I recently read an article about The Graveyard Book receiving the Newbery Medal for children’s literature. Having grown up reading stories about ghosts and ghouls, I just had to check it out. However, it would only add to my ever growing stack of books to read – so I decided to get the audio book version and listen to it during my commutes to and from work.

The audio version of The Graveyard Book is wonderfully narrated by the very capable Neil Gaiman himself.

It is the story of Nobody Owens – Bod for short – who is orphaned when his family is killed by an assassin. He escapes to an old graveyard where he is protected and raised by its ghostly inhabitants.

This is pure story at its best. It is thrilling, clever, sinister and yet tender. The story’s language and humor can seem sophisticated, and is reminiscent of storytellers from long-ago, weaving a tale of haunting enchantment.

Bod reminds me of a young version of Dean Koontz’s, Odd Thomas. Although classified a YA novel, I enjoyed it immensely. Once I was so engrossed listening to the story that I missed making a scheduled stop at a local market to pick up dinner for the family. I only realized it when I was most of the way home. So I had to turn around and go back…which enabled me to listen to more of the story…

Whether you read or listen to it, I highly recommend The Graveyard Book.

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John Grisham Is Lovin’ Life

Saturday, February 7th, 2009

When you read how much John is enjoying himself, it makes you want it all the more…

Associated Press

John Grisham has no desire to ever run for office again.

Though his name pops up every now and then on ballots in Virginia and Mississippi, the mega-selling author, former lawyer and politician emphatically vetoes the idea of a return to public service.
Grisham
“I wouldn’t take a seat in the U.S. Senate if it was given to me and guaranteed for 20 years with no opposition,” says Grisham, who served as a Democratic representative in the Mississippi state House of Representatives from 1983 to 1990.

Getting fired up, he declares, “Look, I’ve got the easiest life in the world. I don’t want to go to Washington and sit through subcommittee hearings on Medicare. How much fun is that? No.”

Besides, he’s having too much fun writing books. Grisham, who turns 54 on Sunday and has started an official Facebook page to reach out to fans, had an especially good time working on his new legal thriller, The Associate.

Grisham’s 22nd book tells the plight of a bright young attorney who is in over his head at an amoral, high-powered corporate law firm. Shades of “The Firm” , the 1991 best seller-turned-blockbuster movie that established him as the Stephen King of his genre. This time, the drama begins when the handsome lawyer-hero, Kyle, gets blackmailed into spying on his employer after some shady agents discover an ugly secret from his past.

“It really reminded me of `The Firm.’ … It’s an escape. It’s popular fiction,” Grisham says.

With “The Associate,” Grisham tries to recreate the suspense of older hits such as “The Firm,” “The Pelican Brief” and “The Client,” without wrapping his plot around a weighty issue or social injustice. After writing books that veered into sports and coming of age, and a nonfiction account of a rape-murder, he returned to the familiar genre. The demands of fans for vintage Grisham began nagging at him.
(more…)

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Stephen King disses ‘Twilight’ Author

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

In an interview article in USA WEEKEND to be released March 6th, Stephen King was asked if his mainstream success over the past 35 years paved the way for the successful careers of Harry Potter creator J.K. Rowling and Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga)author Stephenie Meyer. He dishes out some hefty criticism about the most bankable author since J.K. Rowling, and offers his opinions on a couple of other well known writer’s.

USA WEEKEND
By Brian Truitt

(King) said he doesn’t know how much of an influence he had on Meyer, but he does know that Rowling read his stuff when she was younger. “I think that has some kind of formative influence the same way reading Richard Matheson had an influence on me,” King explains.

“People always say to me, ‘Well, what about H.P. Lovecraft?’ And the thing was, you read Lovecraft when you were a kid but I never felt that he was speaking my language. It was chillier than my heart was, and when Matheson started to write about ordinary people and stuff, that was something that I wanted to do. I said, ‘This is the way to do it. He’s showing the way.’ I think that I serve that purpose for some writers, and that’s a good thing. Both Rowling and Meyer, they’re speaking directly to young people. … The real difference is that Jo Rowling is a terrific writer and Stephenie Meyer can’t write worth a darn. She’s not very good.”

But then King recalls that when his mom was alive, she read all the Erle Stanley Gardner books, the Perry Mason mysteries, obsessively when he was growing up. “He was a terrible writer, too, but he was very successful,” King says. “Somebody who’s a terrific writer who’s been very, very successful is Jodi Picoult. You’ve got Dean Koontz, who can write like hell. And then sometimes he’s just awful. It varies. James Patterson is a terrible writer but he’s very very successful. People are attracted by the stories, by the pace and in the case of Stephenie Meyer, it’s very clear that she’s writing to a whole generation of girls and opening up kind of a safe joining of love and sex in those books. It’s exciting and it’s thrilling and it’s not particularly threatening because they’re not overtly sexual. A lot of the physical side of it is conveyed in things like the vampire will touch her forearm or run a hand over skin, and she just flushes all hot and cold. And for girls, that’s shorthand for all the feelings that they’re not ready to deal with yet.”

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