



Okay - this is too cool. I know one of the main drawbacks to reading on e-readers (at least for me) is the inability to easily make notes on the text. Well along comes Moleskine with this very beautiful case for the Kindle that allows for refillable notebooks tucked on the left. And don't you love the elastic band mimicking their popular cahiers? Hmmm - I wonder if they'll make them for Sony Readers. Read more on the Moleskine blog here.
Christopher Dinsdale has just won the 2010 Writers Award which comes from the Elementary Teachers Federation of Ontario. CM Magazine said of this book it is "the Davinci Code for adolescents. The novel is skillfully written...with scenes of action and advebture. Christopher Dinsdale may become the Dan Brown for the pre-teen set".
Hooray! The Twin by Gerbrand Bakker, translated by David Colmer, has just won the IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, one of the richest book awards in the world (Bakker wins €100,000 and Colmer also garners €25,000 for his translation). I haven't yet read this, but it's been recommended to me by so many people who really loved it. And of course I have ultimate faith in the librarians who nominated this for the longlist in the first place. Hopefully this win will put Bakker on the literary world map (among those who don't already avidly read and love international fiction where he is well known), in much the same way the IMPAC prize helped Per Petterson's profile when he won for Out Stealing Horses.
gry. Poor Measle is also very lonely living in the big, old creepy house which Basil owns, and his only pleasure is going up to the attic to look at Basil’s elaborate train set, which he’s not allowed to touch.
y escape the train set and become life size again. Along the way Measle proves to himself that he’s actually very smart and courageous he finds out that he’s not an orphan after all. I loved the off-kilter, and at times dark, British humour and the funny black and white illustrations that accompany the story. This book is the first in the Measle Stubbs’ series and book two, The Funfair of Fear is also available now. These books are great for kids eight years old and up, and will appeal to fans of Lemony Snicket and Roald Dahl.

I have always been a big fan of Amy Krouse Rosenthal...her series of kid's picture books ( Little Pea, Little Hoot, and Little Oink) and of course Duck! Rabbit! (check out the clip on You Tube) are total faves in our household.
The Unknown Masterpiece by Balzac is probably one of his most famous short stories (although I hadn't previously read it). It's paired here in this NYRB edition with "Gambara" and both are translated by Richard Howard. In the first story, two painters become obsessed with seeing the work of a third - the unfinished painting of a beautiful woman supposedly so lifelike that the work of art outshines the model. But Frenhofer, the master artist in love with his creation - quite literally - refuses to show his masterpiece to anyone until enticed by an offer from one of the other painters to lend him his beautiful mistress as a nude model. What the two painters eventually see on the canvas is perhaps as shocking (but different) as the revelation in Wilde's Portrait of Dorian Gray.


catalogues and yes, I can never resist picking up a few books for myself. I'll blog about some of my discoveries and upcoming books in a few days, but first a nod to the other thing I love about Congress - the talks by influential thinkers, writers and artists.
ith perhaps an uncle or a grandmother. The photos were exhibited in refugee camps and the project reunited 3,500 children with a member of their extended family. He's helped Afghani women start up their own radio station, and Afghani children their own magazine written by, and for, themselves. He talked about the importance of bringing education into the home and said that he judges a country's level of civilization by the percentage of their gross national product that governments spend on education. The book has an introduction by his friend Sebastian Junger and it would make a perfect visual companion to Junger's recently published War.
This is spectacular! Janet sent this to me...please share! Finally a Lady Gaga video I don't mind my daughter watching. It was created to get everyone in the spirit of the NYC Libraries hosting a read in to help restoration of funding to their local library systems.
. . . instead of looking at the clothes or the shoes or maybe the guys, (okay, maybe Aidan) - we look instead at the books. Well you can't help it when you sell all of them (I didn't stick around through all the credits to see if Random House got an acknowledgement). But in case you're curious:

Original Letters from India by Eliza Fay is the account of several nerve-wracking voyages from England to Calcutta made by this indomitable woman near the end of the 18th century, and recounted in letters sent home to her sisters and friends. Her first trip was accompanying her husband who hoped to make his fortune as a barrister in the Indian city and the description takes up the majority of this book as the entire journey takes twelve months and eighteen days. Harrowing adventures are recounted along the way - the precariousness of going over the Alps on a mule, the dangers going through Egypt and sailing down the Red Sea, and the horrors of being imprisoned for several months in Calicut by Hindu rulers waging war against the British.From various passages it is clear that our heroine was of the hungry type. People who write long letters often are. . . She ate and ate till the end - asparagus, pork, tunny, turtle, preserved peaches, ghi.As Simon Winchester writes of the letters in his introduction: "Shelley would have been proud. And Jane Austen, just shocked, shocked."
Maybe this was an odd choice of book to read on an airplane, but it certainly made my recent trip out to Calgary fly by.
I can't tell you how pleased I am that Troubles by J.G. Farrell has won the Lost Booker contest, instituted to recognize books from 1970 that, due to a scheduling snaffle, weren't eligible for the Booker Prize. What is especially nice about the win is that it was voted on by viewers instead of a jury and it won handily with 38% of the vote. Troubles, part of Farrell's Empire Trilogy that includes The Siege of Krishnapur (which also won the Booker) and The Singapore Grip, has been my favourite read so far in my NYRB Reading Challenge (here's why) and I can't recommend this book highly enough. The Guardian reports on the win here. Hooray - this has completely made my day.

d “The History of Illustration and its Technologies”. The scope of these essays is truly international and they are accompanied by almost 200 b&w illustrations.And now for the contest part of this post!
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If you live in the GTA and are available on Tuesday May 25th for lunch, I'm hosting a draw- appropriately called:
WIN LUNCH WITH OUR SUPERNATURAL TOUR AUTHORS!
Prize #1- Lunch with Lesley Livingston, Kim Harrison and Aprilynne Pike Tuesday May 25th at 12:00 pm, plus a set of all six books for you to have signed.
Prize #2- A set of all six books, signed by the authors
Contest Rules:
Skylark by Hungarian writer Dezső Kosztolányi, translated by Richard Aczel, was originally published in 1924. The plot is simple and takes place over just one week as the 35 year old Skylark, the only child of the Vajkays, goes away to visit relatives. And at the end of the week she returns. The lives of this family will probably continue in much the same way, but a little heartache will definitely linger longer with the reader.The parents have led simple, rather restrained lives of boring routine. They rarely go out except to church and this week without their daughter initially seems long and empty until they go to a local restaurant for lunch and suddenly get absorbed into the social life of their town and its inhabitants. Their entire world starts to open up and this is accompanied by a corresponding change in the descriptive language of the novel that exuberantly celebrates the senses. Sunshine makes everything glitter; gypsy bands are suddenly heard in the distance and most of all, the smell and taste of food is incredibly enticing (reading this novel has definitely prompted a recipe search for Hungarian vanilla noodles). The Vajkays go to the theatre, the father reunites with his old friends, gets drunk, gambles, stumbles home early in the morning and comes to some rather disturbing but very honest truths about his feelings toward his daughter. And then Skylark comes home; for her the week has also resulted in some harsh revelations about herself.
The joy of this book is definitely in the writing, which delicately balances the comic, the sentimental, th
e stifling and the despair. It asks tough questions about kin and kindness, self and self-deception. A good companion read would be Stefan Zweig's The Post-Office Girl for a similar story of being trapped in an unhappy and frustrating life. I was also strongly reminded of Leo McCarey's very moving film Make Way For Tomorrow. It's a completely different story about grown children finding their elderly parents a burden, but the emotions are similar, as are the themes of obligation and communication (or lack thereof) between the generations.
Thank God it's Friday!
This week's Eye Weekly cover is graced by Dan Clowes; the graphic novelist who has written Ghost World and Art School Confidential. His latest book Wilson will be launched at TCAF tomorrow. This book was one of my Dewey picks. This is a free event at Toronto Reference Library. Another cool Clowes piece of of info is that he has designed the latest book bag for The Strand Bookstore in New York City. We can't buy it here but you can you can order from their website.
An Agent walks into a bookstore...this piece from Shelf Awareness is very funny. Literary agent Dan Lazar decides to spend a day in a real live independent bookstore to see what happens. His take on life at an indie is hilarious...and he gets a true understanding of how books are handsold in a wonderful store and what really matters to buyers and readers. Enjoy!
I just finished reading the manuscript of Andrew O'Hagan's delightful new novel The Life and Opinions of Maf the Dog, and of His Friend Marilyn Monroe - it'll be published in Canada in the fall, and will definitely be one of my Dewey picks. Yes, the book is narrated by a dog (but he's a very intelligent, philosophically observant one, not cutesy at all) and I usually stay far away from this type of book. But as Jessica Grant's equally funny Come, Thou Tortoise has taught me, I shouldn't be pre-judging talking animals until I hear what they have to say. And as O'Hagan outlines here in an interesting essay for The Guardian, there's a long and rich history of animal narrators in literature. He also explains why the novel opens in Charleston, the famous home of Bloomsbury painters Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant (another reason I find this book so intriguing).
This Thursday Type Books in Toronto will be launching Kenk, a graphic novel about the notorious bicycle thief Igor Kenk. Kenk was arrested in 2008 and over 3,000 bikes were found in his possession. The New York Times has called him "the world's most prolific bicycle thief". Craig Small, who is working on the companion movie to the graphic novel, put together this amazing window. 
Happy News! Marc Strange's Body Blows has been awarded Best Paperback Original by the Mystery Writers of America. For a complete list of the award winners check out The Edgars. I was at my local Book City where they had the local hero's book prominently displayed on the counter.