Wednesday, December 7, 2011

An Intimate Evening with Storm Large

If you love Portland-based singer/songwriter/actress/force of nature Storm Large as much as we do, you will be happy to know that she has added “author” to her list of credits. This January 10th, Simon & Schuster will publish Storm Large’s memoir, CRAZY ENOUGH.  We can hardly wait!

This book is a rough, raw, and compulsively readable first-person account of how one woman lived with the terror of losing her mind – and lost it, only to find herself.  It’s a story few would have the guts to tell so honestly.  But honestly, what else can we expect from Storm Large? If you were lucky enough to see her one-woman show called “Crazy Enough”, you know what we mean.

And now here’s our amazing news:
Storm has enthusiastically agreed to spend an intimate evening talking about her life and her book (and signing books) here at Broadway Books.  It will be a private event at our cozy little store, open to a limited number of people who sign up by pre-ordering and pre-paying for her book.  

The event will be at the store on the evening of Monday, January 2, 2011. We have special permission from the publisher to sell books on this date, which is eight days before the official publication. If you would like to join us for a book, a glass of wine and a schmooze with Storm, here is what to do:  

  1. Call us (503) 284-1726 or come into the store no earlier than Tuesday, December 13 at 10 am. 
  2.  Pay us $25  (the price of Storm’s book) for each person who will attend our event.
  3. We’ll put your name on the list to attend the party, and we’ll give (or mail) you a receipt which will be your ticket to the party.
  4. Come to the party with your receipt, and we’ll give you a book and an appropriate beverage and you’ll get to meet one of Portland’s most gifted, dynamic, and generous performers.  And she’ll sign your book!
We are expecting this event to sell out quickly.  Mark your calendars for December 13 and give us a call or come in!  We cannot accept orders for this event on our website.  Pre-ordering the book through the website does not qualify you for a ticket; you must order the book by phone or in person to obtain a ticket to the event. 

What a dynamite way to start the year! 

Day 7: We're getting Elemental

It's Day 7 in our 24 Days of Books, and today we're talking about a book-in-a-box. A truly fabulous book-in-a-box.

A couple of years ago, one of our bestselling holiday gifts -- and my gift-of-the-year pick -- was The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Element in the Universe, by Theodore Gray. The book showcased every element in the universe in stunning photography on black paper, providing information about each element including the way each element lives in the world.

This year the author/publisher (Black Dog & Leventhal) team has done it again, producing Theodore Gray's Elements Vault, by Theodore Gray and Nick Mann. As the subtitle of the package notes, the "vault" includes "treasures of the periodic table with 20 removable archival documents, a model pop-up atom, a poster, plus 10 real elements including pure gold!" That's right. Pure gold. Doesn't that special person in your life deserve real gold this year??

Theodore Gray's Elements Vault picks up where The Elements left off. Organized into the nine major groups of the periodic table, the book includes all new text, new stunning photographs, and even more information about each of the elements. The book also includes twenty removable historic documents related to the elements and to the field of chemistry, such as Einstein's famous letter to Roosevelt explaining the potential of uranium for use in nuclear weapons, an advertisement for lithium-laced 7UP soda, Mendeleev's original notes on the periodic table, and more.

Each document is individually packaged in an envelope attached to the book page, so the document can be removed and examined and then put back for safekeeping. The book also includes a gorgeous poster of the unique rainbow spectrum emitted by each element in the periodic table, as well as real samples of pure elements, including gold.

Just as The Elements appealed to -- and was accessible by -- people of all ages, Theodore Gray's Elements Vault will be a welcome addition to your family library, with hours of fun and interesting exploration guaranteed. Books about the periodic table have been hot of late -- including The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements , by Sam Kean, and Periodic Tales: A Cultural History of the Elements, from Arsenic to Zinc, by Hugh Aldersey-Williams.

If you want to move beyond the periodic table, you might try Theodore Gray's Mad Science: Experiments You Can Do at Home, but Probably Shouldn't. In this book, Gray demonstrates essential scientific principles through fifty-four thrilling, daredevil experiments, each accompanied, of course, by full-color photographs that give you a front-row seat to rarely seen chemical reactions and glorious subatomic activity.
Black Dog & Leventhal has also produced another Elements-like book this year for people with an interest in astronomy, Solar System: A Visual Exploration of All the Planets, Moons and Other Heavenly Bodies that Orbit Our Sun, by Marcus Chown. This book replicates the eye-popping visual presentation of The Elements, while teaching readers of all ages about the wonders of our solar system.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Day 6: P.D. James Channels Jane Austen

Welcome to Day 6 in our 24 Days of Books, which happily coincides with "new-release Tuesday" (Tuesday being the day of the week when many publishers release hot new titles). The hot new title of the day is Death Comes to Pemberley, by the grand master of the detective novel, P.D. James (with the P.D. standing for Phyllis Dorothy, if you're curious).

P.D. James has written more than twenty books, most of them featuring investigator and poet Adam Dalgliesh of New Scotland Yard. The first Adam Dalgliesh novel, Cover Her Face, was published in 1962, followed by thirteen more. The now-91- year-old James had long pondered the idea of combining her two great enthusiasms: reading Jane Austen, one of her long-time favorite authors, and writing detective fiction. [In fact, she is such a fan of the writer that she named one of her daughters Jane.]

Unsure of whether her creative energy would hold out for a fifteenth book featuring Dalgliesh (although she isn’t quite ready to confirm his retirement), she decided to pursue her idea of writing a detective novel based on the characters in Pride and Prejudice -- "Its heroine, Elizabeth Bennet, clever, witty and energetic, is probably the most enchanting female character in English literature." Austen buffs will have great fun spotting references which roam freely in the Austenian landscape of Death Comes to Pemberley.

The book begins in 1803. Elizabeth and Darcy have been happily married for six years and have produced two fine sons. They are preparing for the annual autumn ball which will take place the next evening when a coach careens up the drive carrying Lydia, Elizabeth’s disgraced sister, who with her husband, the very dubious Wickham, has been banned from Pemberley. Lydia stumbles out of the carriage, hysterical, shrieking that Wickham has been murdered. With shocking suddenness, Pemberley is plunged into a frightening mystery.

"Nearly all my detective stories have had their genesis in a place and setting, which is important to any work of fiction and is particularly so in a crime novel, especially if there is contrast between peace, order and beauty and the contaminating eruption of violent death. This contrast is assured by setting a murder mystery in the grounds of Pemberley, a house that in my book enshrines married happiness, children, a household at peace with each other and a daily life in which duty to the community, learning, tradition and an ordered, civilised lifestyle embody all that is good about the age"

According to the bio on her website, her favorite foods are roast duck and freshly picked peas and new potatoes and raspberries and cream. She has no favorite weapon as a crime writer, saying "The weapon should always be appropriate to the murderer."

Detective fiction, she says, is an inherently optimistic genre, affirming our belief that we live in a rational, comprehensible and manageable universe.

Here is a longish (about five and a half minutes) video of the author talking about her newest book:

Monday, December 5, 2011

Day 5: Some of the Season's Best Cookbooks


It's Day 5 in our 24 Days of Books, and today we're cookin'!! I know we usually only talk about one book a day, but we've got a big appetite when it comes to cookbooks. This is the time of year when publishers produce some of the most beautiful cookbooks, designed to be given as gifts but often purchased by people who just can’t resist the allure of a gorgeously illustrated book about the best of all subjects, FOOD! Seriously, what’s not to like about food? No matter what your dietary restrictions, there is a cookbook for you. Here are five of our favorite new ones:

Dishing Up Oregon: 145 Recipes that Celebrate Farm-to-TableFlavors by Ashley Gartland is a collection of yummy recipes by chefs from Oregon’s very best restaurants, wineries, and purveyors of local foods. Using grown-in-Oregon ingredients that are fresh-fresh-fresh, these recipes celebrate the bounty that is available to lucky Oregonians. From grilled Oregonzola figs to hazelnut-crusted salmon with brown butter and balsalmic vinegar to blackberry bread pudding, these mouthwatering dishes will appeal to anyone who loves local food. Included are hundreds of full-color photos of the food, the chefs, the venues and the landscape, as well as sidebar essays about some of our most precious resources: the dairies, farms, wineries, and other suppliers whose products we all enjoy.

We’re so happy that the cookbook editors have finally figured out that many of us are vegan and/or gluten-free.  Here’s a wonderful little book that just came in: Gluten-Free and Vegan Holidays:  This book is by Jennifer Katzinger, the author of Flying Apron’s Gluten-Free and Vegan Baking Book. It’s a collection of delicious and stylish recipes that are perfect for celebrating throughout the year. Even if you aren’t vegan and/or gluten-free, mightn’t someone at your table be? These are the holidays covered: Thanksgiving, Hanukkah, Christmas, Valentine’s Day, Saint Patrick’s Day, Passover, Easter, Fourth of July, and Halloween. Also: special sections on holiday cookies, cakes and breads, and a whole chapter of birthday cakes!

One of the most beautiful cookbooks this season is Yvette Van Boven’s Home Made: The Ultimate DIY Cookbook. Ms. Van Boven, who divides her time between Amsterdam and Paris, is a freelance food stylist and recipe writer and runs a lunch restaurant and catering business in Amsterdam. She is also an illustrator.  This book is FULL of photos, illustrations, hand-lettering, and more than 200 recipes that are as creative and unique as the author. From something as simple as biscuits to something as gourmet as duck confit, this book is a delight. Make your own cheese! Pickle a bit of mackerel! Concoct chocolate and caramel truffles! With two ribbon markers and a beautiful binding and hand-drawn endpapers, this $40 book is worth much more and makes a charming gift for almost any occasion.

All About Roasting: A New Approach to a Classic Art by Molly Stevens belongs on the shelf of any serious cook. A great companion to Ms. Stevens’ earlier book, All About Braising, this book brings her trademark thoroughness and eye for detail to the technique of roasting meat, poultry, fish, vegetables, and even fruits. Show-stoppers include roast goose with potato-sage stuffing, porchetta made with a loin of pork, and brown-sugar roasted pineapple. Tons of photos, wine and beer pairings, recipes for  sauces, condiments, relishes and vinaigrettes and more. If you’ve ever wanted to know the very best way to roast anything – from a chicken to a batch of cherries – this is your book.

Essential Pepin by Jacques Pepin is a stunning collection of more than 700 all-time favorite recipes from the author’s life in food. This encyclopedic volume includes a searchable DVD demonstrating every technique a cook will ever need. “This book is a distillation of the very best of his creations, showing both the remarkable breadth of his cooking and the beautiful continuity of his dishes over the past sixty years. He makes food the way it should be made: simple, seasonally ripe, pure, and impossible to resist.” – Alice Waters

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Day 4: Conversations with Jacqueline Kennedy

Welcome to Day 4 of our 24 Days of Books. Today we offer you Jacqueline Kennedy: Historic Conversations on Life with John F. Kennedy. The book is based on conversations between Jacqueline Kennedy and Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., that took place in her Washington house in the spring and early summer of 1964. At home and at ease,  she spoke about her husband and their time in the White House, with young Caroline and John Jr. occasionally popping in. She was in her mid-30s and recently widowed but determined to set down her thoughts for history.

The book's foreward is written by Caroline Kennedy, with an introduction and annotations by the historian Michael Beschloss. Most importantly, it contains eight CDs with never-before-released interviews. After the interviews took place, the tapes of those sessions were sealed and later deposited in the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, in accordance with Mrs. Kennedy's wishes.

Here is Caroline Kennedy writing in the book's foreward about the decision to release the tapes at this time:  "In 1964, as part of an oral history project on the life and career of John F. Kennedy, my mother sat down with Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., to share her memories and insights. Recorded less than four months after the death of her husband, they represent a gift to history and a labor of love on her part....The moment seems right — enough time has passed so that they can be appreciated for their unique insight, yet the Kennedy presidency is still within living memory for many who will find her observations illuminating....My parents shared a love of history. To them, the past was not an academic concern, but a gathering of the most fascinating people you could ever hope to meet."

The book and tapes show a politically curious first lady, sometimes caustic and often witty, who had strong views about everyone around her. What’s especially striking is how candid the first lady was in these interviews, and her willingness speak her mind.

The Kennedy family has been a subject of great interest to the baby-boomer generation. [Two other Kennedy-related books receiving much positive acclaim right now are the new biography of Jack Kennedy by Chris Matthews (Jack Kennedy: Elusive Hero) and the novel by Stephen King (11/22/63) about a time traveler who tries to prevent the assassination of President Kennedy.] But this book/CD package gives us the opportunity to hear from the former first lady herself, providing insights on the many significant people and events that shaped JFK's presidency and offering us perhaps the most informed, genuine, and immediate portrait of John Fitzgerald Kennedy we shall ever have, as the past comes alive through the words and voice of an eloquent eyewitness to history. The book is illustrated and the package handsomely produced.


Saturday, December 3, 2011

Day 3: Happy 50th, Milo! You've Never Looked Better

Welcome to Day 3 in our 24 Days of Books. Today in honor of Take Your Child to a Bookstore Day, I'm going to talk about one of my all-time favorite books, forever and ever and ever,  The Phantom Tollbooth, by Norton Juster and illustrated by Jules Feiffer. It's quite amazing to me that the book is now celebrating its fiftieth anniversary -- I can't possibly be that old.

The book tells the story of Milo, who is always bored and who comes home from school one day to find a large package containing a tollbooth, three precautionary signs, some coins for tolls, a map, and a book of rules and traffic regulations. He climbs into the small electric automobile he hadn't driven in months, and off he goes on his adventures in Dictionopolis and Digitopolis, soon to be accompanied by a watchdog named Tock.

As a child I loved the wordplay and puns of the book and all of the wonderful characters: the Humbug, Officer Shrift (he was short), Faintly Macabre, the Whether Man and the Senses Taker, King Azaz (The Unabridged) of Dictionopolis and his brother, the Mathemagician, ruler of Digitopolis, and of course King Azaz's advisers: The Duke of Definition, the Minister of Meaning, the Earl of Essence, the Count of Connotation, and the Undersecretary of Understanding -- and many many more. As I grew older, and continued to re-read the book, I delighted in the satire and wit, the double entendres and the humor. It's just darned fun, for readers of any age.

To commemorate the book's fiftieth anniversary, Random House has just published The Annotated Phantom Tollbooth,” with notes by Leonard Marcus; and a fiftieth-anniversary edition, with a series of short essays by notable readers about the effect the book has had on their lives.

The Annotated Phantom Tollbooth tells the fascinating story of the book and of the author and illustrator. Here is a tiny snapshot of what we learn (but there is so much more the book offers): Norton Juster was born in  Brooklyn in 1929, just two months before the onset of the Great Depression, his father a Romanian-born Jew who immigrated to the US as a young boy, and his mother coming from a hardscrabble Polish-Jew family. His older (by four years) brother Howard was a golden boy who breezed through life ahead of Norton, leaving him in his shadow.

Juster's father and brother were both architects, and he graduated from the University of Pennsylvania's school of fine arts assuming he too would build a career as an architect. After earning his Bachelor of Architecture degree, Juster went to England on a Fulbright Scholarship to study civic design/urban planning.

In 1954 he enlisted in the military, joining the Civil Engineer Corps of the United States Naval Reserve. While stationed in Newfoundland, he began to write and illustrate a story for children, to combat the misery and boredom. His final posting took him back to Brooklyn, and a small basement ("garden") apartment, where he eventually became acquainted with one of his neighbors, Jules Feiffer, who was then writing a cartoon strip for the Village Voice.

That meeting led eventually to the partnership that created The Phantom Tollbooth -- written by Juster after he had quit his architecture job after receiving a grant from the Ford Foundation to write a book on urban planning (a book he never did write) -- and published by Epstein & Carroll in September 1961. At first the book went nowhere. Juster's mother, Minnie, "terrorized" booksellers on her son's behalf. Then, spectacular reviews began to appear: the New Yorker, the New York Herald Tribune, the New York Times. Jane Jacobs, the urban-design critic and neighborhood activist (and a friend of Juster's), wrote in the Village Voice that book derived its special flavor from a fusion of the "most outrageous fantasy" with an "urgent and vivid sense of reality." And she wrote of Feiffer, the illustrator, that he is "a man who can draw an idea."

The annotated book contains the entire text of The Phantom Tollbooth, accompanied by annotations which draw upon interviews with Juster and Feiffer and Juster's notes and drafts and  that provide cultural and literary commentary, artistic context and background, and other commentary by Marcus, a nationally acclaimed writer on children's literature.

In a recent article in The New Yorker, Adam Gopnik, wrote about the anniversary of The Phantom Tollbooth, it's beginnings, and its continuing appeal to readers of all ages, speaking with both Norton Juster and Jules Feiffer. Here are some of the comments from that article (but please do read the entire article):

The Phantom Tollbooth was signed and edited by Jason Epstein. Says Juster: "He was a wonderful editor, and he used to scare the hell out of me. At a certain point, he’d stop and say, ‘It’s your book. Do what you want with it.’ I’d get rigid.”

The book was published in 1961, and no one had much hope that it would find an audience. “Everyone said this is not a children’s book, the vocabulary is much too difficult, the wordplay and the punning they will never understand, and anyway fantasy is bad for children because it disorients them,” Juster said, four million copies later.

The other shaping experience was listening to the radio. As both artists stress, having a pure stream of sound as your major source of entertainment meant that your mind was already working imaginatively, without your necessarily realizing it. “It’s impossible today!” Feiffer said. “Everything is visual."

Milo [whom Gopnik describes as "not very actively parented"] is also one of the few protagonists in children’s literature—Dorothy is another—who have a wiser best friend throughout their journey, in this case Tock, the watchdog. Just as Dorothy learns from the smart Scarecrow, Milo learns from Tock’s timekeeper’s knowledge. Milo doesn’t educate himself; he gets educated. His epiphany is that math and reading and even spelling are themselves subjects of adventure, if seen from the right angle. The point of The Phantom Tollbooth is not that there’s more to life than school; it’s that normal school subjects can be wonderful if you don’t have to experience them as normal schooling.

For The Phantom Tollbooth is not just a manifesto for learning; it is a manifesto for the liberal arts, for a liberal education, and even for the liberal-arts college....Juster was writing a comic hymn to the value of the liberal arts at a moment of their renaissance, buoyed as they were by the G.I. Bill and new cadres of students.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Day 2: Moby Dick, or Why We Love Reading


Welcome to Day 2 of our 24 Days of Books. Today you get a bonus -- three terrific books instead of one, all sharing a Melville theme.

One of my favorite reading memories is the time I was assigned to read Moby Dick. We’re talking high school. I put it off and put it off, until at last I had two days to read this whale of a book and no choice but to barricade myself in my bedroom and ask Mom to slip food under the door.

Little did I know what a sea change awaited me.

I spent the next 48 hours on a ship looking for a great white whale and discovering a passion for reading. I was awash with adventure, drowning in metaphor, and totally carried away on a sea of language. All from the safety of my little bed.  

And here’s the thing: I have no memory of how I did in that English class, but thank you, Mrs. Hackett. You gave me the joy of reading, a gift which will last me to the end of my days. And Mom, thanks for the grilled cheese sandwiches.  

So here we are, 160 years after Moby Dick was first published, and it’s a banner year for lovers of Melville’s great American novel. Three new books for your consideration:

Moby-Dick in Pictures: One Drawing for Every Page by Matt Kish. This huge brick of a book is exactly what it says it is. Matt Kish, an Ohio artist, set out on an epic voyage of his own one day in August 2009.  He began illustrating Melville’s classic, creating an image a day over the next eighteen months based on text selected from every single page of the 552-page Signet Classics paperback edition. Completely self-taught, Kish refused to set any boundaries for the artwork and employed a deliberately low-tech approach in response to the increasing popularity of digital art. Found pages torn from old books are combined with ballpoint pen, marker, paint, crayon, ink and watercolor in a variety of styles. This book is beautifully printed on luscious paper and published by Tin House Books of Portland. Many of Matt’s original illustrations for this book are available through his blog. The book is available in a paperbound version and a slipcased hardbound version -- both are gorgeous.

Ishmael and friends find their perfect contemporary champion in Nathan Philbrick, whose Why Read Moby-Dick? is an enlightening and entertaining tour through the world of Melville’s classic. In this slim volume, the author brings a sailor’s eye and an adventurer’s passion to unfolding the story behind an epic American journey. He skillfully navigates Melville’s world and illuminates the book’s humor and unforgettable characters, finding the thread that binds Ishmael and Ahab to our own time. This book is designed to start conversations, inspire arguments, and make a powerful case that a classic tale can be discovered anew.

Chad Harbach’s novel The Art of Fielding, published recently to much acclaim, is the story of the Harpooners,  a baseball team from Westish College, a small liberal arts school whose president, Guert Affenlight, is a Melville scholar. Team star Henry Skrimshander makes a disastrous error, and the fates of five people are upended.  Besides Henry and Guert, there is Owen Dunne, Henry’s roommate and teammate, Mike Schwartz, team captain and Henry’s best friend, and Pelle Affenlight, Guert’s daughter who returns to Westish after escaping an ill-fated marriage. It’s complicated. But throughout, there are references to  Melville. And, as the Paris Review says, Harbach’s novel is “…a book about baseball in the way that Moby Dick is a book about whaling – it is and it isn’t.” This is a big-hearted novel whose author loves his characters, in spite of and because of their flaws. I gobbled it up.