Thank you!
As you may know by now, Best of Books was named as a Readers' Choice Award winner in the balloting that was announced July 26. BOB went through two rounds of voting by readers of The Oklahoman and NewsOK.com. The first was to determine which bookstores in the state would be on the finalist list; BOB was honored to be among those five that were selected. Then voting began again to determine the overall winner.
The simple boldface of our name determined that Best of Books was the winner.
"It's a great honor to be selected as a finalist for this award, but even a greater one to win the overall vote. It means that our brand is reaching our core audience in Edmond as well as the state," said Joe Hight, president of Best of Books.
Thank you!
This is the third reader vote that Best of Books has won this year.
First, BOB was selected by readers of the Edmond Sun for a 2015 Sunshine Award.
Then, Best of Books was selected by readers of Edmond Life & Leisure as its favorite bookstore.
"When you look at the Edmond businesses and institutions that are among those honored for these awards, you can't help but be proud and humbled that Best of Books is among them," Joe said.
Best of Books also was honored early in the year as a finalist for the Edmond Chamber of Commerce Small Business of the Year.
Joe said he had two words to summarize his feelings and the way he feels about Edmond and Oklahomans who have supported BOB. He said Best of Books will continue to seek creative ways to encourage reading and for events that will appeal to different audiences.
By the way, those two words are:
THANK YOU!
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
YA authors to highlight special ODL tour in five state cities this fall; BOB named as official bookseller
Best of Books has been named as the official bookseller for the Oklahoma Department of Libraries' Double R Author Tour featuring YA authors Sonia Gensler and Tara Hudson this October.
The ODL received a four-year grant from The Reading Trust to place recent children's and Young Adult books that have been honored as Oklahoma Book Award medalists or finalists in libraries across the state. Also, as part of the grant, ODL will be the host of a tour each fall of authors who have been Oklahoma Book Award medalists or finalists in the Childrens'/YA category.
Other sponsors of Double R, also known as the Reading Round-up, will be The Friends of Libraries in Oklahoma and the Friends of the Oklahoma Center for the Book.
YA authors Sonia Gensler and Tara Hudson will be visiting five Oklahoma communities, said William R. Young, ODL's public information manager. In each community, the two authors will visit a local school during the afternoon and the public library in the evening.
Sonia will also be signing her new book Ghostlight at noon Aug. 22 at Best of Books.
In October, the five communities chosen for the first year of Double R tour and the dates of the author visits are:
-- Sulphur, Oct. 7.
Sonia Gensler:
The ODL received a four-year grant from The Reading Trust to place recent children's and Young Adult books that have been honored as Oklahoma Book Award medalists or finalists in libraries across the state. Also, as part of the grant, ODL will be the host of a tour each fall of authors who have been Oklahoma Book Award medalists or finalists in the Childrens'/YA category.
Other sponsors of Double R, also known as the Reading Round-up, will be The Friends of Libraries in Oklahoma and the Friends of the Oklahoma Center for the Book.
Sonia Gensler |
Tara Hudson |
YA authors Sonia Gensler and Tara Hudson will be visiting five Oklahoma communities, said William R. Young, ODL's public information manager. In each community, the two authors will visit a local school during the afternoon and the public library in the evening.
Sonia will also be signing her new book Ghostlight at noon Aug. 22 at Best of Books.
In October, the five communities chosen for the first year of Double R tour and the dates of the author visits are:
-- Sulphur, Oct. 7.
-- Prague, Oct. 21.
-- Blanchard, Oct. 22.
-- Piedmont, Oct. 27.
-- Lawton, Oct. 29.
Here are Sonia's and Tara's books for the October tour:
Sonia Gensler:
-- Ghostlight (Available Aug. 4)
-- The Revenant
(Oklahoma Book Award Winner) (Will be placed in public libraries.)
-- The Dark Between
(Oklahoma Book Award Finalist) (Will be placed in public libraries.)
-- Elegy (Will be placed in public libraries.)
-- Arise (Oklahoma Book Award Finalist) (Will be placed in public libraries.)
-- Hereafter
(Oklahoma Book Award Finalist) (Will be placed in public libraries.)
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
Writer-editor collaboration emphasized at Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference in big, bold Texas
BOB Blog note: Joe Hight recently attended the recent Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference, which he calls the best in the country for nonfiction writers. He also wrote this blog.
No one should doubt The Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference is all Texan. It's big. It's bold. It's loud. And it even has a Friday night "Southwest Soiree" at a place called the Austin Ranch, a western-theme banquet hall near the Hilton hotel where the conference is held in Grapevine.
It's also big and bold in that "The Mayborn," as it's called, brings in some of the top nonfiction authors in the country. The 11th annual one was no different with famed author Barbara Ehrenreich being among the speakers.
One panel that was particularly interesting was called "Lessons in Collaboration: Two Nonfiction Writers Worked with a Highly Involved Editor to Produce Acclaimed Works of Literary Nonfiction." (You see, the titles of the workshops are big, bold -- and long, too.) It featured Jeff Hobbs, author of the recently published "The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace" and Helen Thorpe, who wrote "Soldier Girls: the Battles of Three Women at Home and at War." The editor of their books was novelist Colin Harrison, who's also vice president and senior editor at Scribner.
All three don't live in Texas and don't fit the big and bold image either. Hobbs will call you "sir" and jokes he doesn't like to read Harrison's novels because they're too dark. Thorpe doesn't look at all like the former wife of a national political figure, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper. She also admitted Harrison had to push her to get out of her house to see the nightlife of her book's main characters. Harrison kept deferring to the two writers to question and talk to each other during the workshop. He also seems to be the type of quiet but demanding editor every writer wants or should have.
"Both books had an extraordinary degree of difficulty," Harrison said. However, that didn't stop him from calling for the writers to rise to "a level that cannot be faked; it must be summoned by the trumpet in the mountains."
"A writer should be really challenged," he said.
Hobbs' book was about Robert Peace, his best friend and roommate at Yale. Peace was an outgoing, intelligent young man who also happened to sell marijuana on the side, Hobbs said, and who was "killed violently and painfully," surrounded by marijuana in a house about a mile from where he grew up in Newark, N.J.
His book is on the "Staff Picks" of recommendations at Best of Books.
"I had no claim to objectivity. I cared a lot about my subject," Hobbs said about Robert Peace, who he called "Rob." But I also "had the responsibility of telling the whole story."
Thorpe said her challenge in writing "Soldier Girls" was in organizing the shelves full of notebooks and the "mountain of material," as Harrison called it. She followed the lives of three women soldiers, who were all deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq, over a 12-year period. She finally had to resort to software in which she could dictate her notebooks out loud and then refer to them later.
Hobbs and Thorpe said Harrison likes proper usage of words, strong verbs and movement in writing. He'll push you to get precious details and to connect the flaws that propel the "human mystery."
And, Hobbs said, he'll question you if he thinks there's too much swearing in your book.
But, most of all, an editor of Harrison's caliber will keep encouraging you "to look for the trumpets," whether you live in Texas or not.
No one should doubt The Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference is all Texan. It's big. It's bold. It's loud. And it even has a Friday night "Southwest Soiree" at a place called the Austin Ranch, a western-theme banquet hall near the Hilton hotel where the conference is held in Grapevine.
It's also big and bold in that "The Mayborn," as it's called, brings in some of the top nonfiction authors in the country. The 11th annual one was no different with famed author Barbara Ehrenreich being among the speakers.
One panel that was particularly interesting was called "Lessons in Collaboration: Two Nonfiction Writers Worked with a Highly Involved Editor to Produce Acclaimed Works of Literary Nonfiction." (You see, the titles of the workshops are big, bold -- and long, too.) It featured Jeff Hobbs, author of the recently published "The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace" and Helen Thorpe, who wrote "Soldier Girls: the Battles of Three Women at Home and at War." The editor of their books was novelist Colin Harrison, who's also vice president and senior editor at Scribner.
All three don't live in Texas and don't fit the big and bold image either. Hobbs will call you "sir" and jokes he doesn't like to read Harrison's novels because they're too dark. Thorpe doesn't look at all like the former wife of a national political figure, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper. She also admitted Harrison had to push her to get out of her house to see the nightlife of her book's main characters. Harrison kept deferring to the two writers to question and talk to each other during the workshop. He also seems to be the type of quiet but demanding editor every writer wants or should have.
"Both books had an extraordinary degree of difficulty," Harrison said. However, that didn't stop him from calling for the writers to rise to "a level that cannot be faked; it must be summoned by the trumpet in the mountains."
"A writer should be really challenged," he said.
Hobbs' book was about Robert Peace, his best friend and roommate at Yale. Peace was an outgoing, intelligent young man who also happened to sell marijuana on the side, Hobbs said, and who was "killed violently and painfully," surrounded by marijuana in a house about a mile from where he grew up in Newark, N.J.
His book is on the "Staff Picks" of recommendations at Best of Books.
"I had no claim to objectivity. I cared a lot about my subject," Hobbs said about Robert Peace, who he called "Rob." But I also "had the responsibility of telling the whole story."
Thorpe said her challenge in writing "Soldier Girls" was in organizing the shelves full of notebooks and the "mountain of material," as Harrison called it. She followed the lives of three women soldiers, who were all deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq, over a 12-year period. She finally had to resort to software in which she could dictate her notebooks out loud and then refer to them later.
Hobbs and Thorpe said Harrison likes proper usage of words, strong verbs and movement in writing. He'll push you to get precious details and to connect the flaws that propel the "human mystery."
And, Hobbs said, he'll question you if he thinks there's too much swearing in your book.
But, most of all, an editor of Harrison's caliber will keep encouraging you "to look for the trumpets," whether you live in Texas or not.
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
What do you think of 'Go Set a Watchman'? National debate continues over Harper Lee and her book
By now, it's no secret that "Go Set a Watchman" is setting all sorts of sales records.
It's already sold 1.1 million copies nationwide. It's easily the top seller at Best of Books with nearly 160 copies sold since last week's debut. The fascination with Harper Lee, and the story of Scout, Atticus and the fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama, or Monroeville, Lee's actual hometown of 6,300 people, also extends beyond the latest book. "To Kill a Mockingbird" and the nonfiction "The Mockingbird Next Door: The Life of Harper Lee," by Marja Mills, are also selling well at Best of Books.
While there's no doubt about the sales, there has been doubt about the book itself from the time it was announced. Since it was released to the public, negative reviews and press have surrounded "Go Set a Watchman."
In The Oklahoman on Sunday, Book Editor Ken Raymond wrote an interesting Page 1A story about the debate and negative reviews. He also pointed out:
"I found the book disappointing. I suspect many others will, too. Whether that’s fair or not is debatable."
The only one who seemed to disagree with the reviews was Best of Books president Joe Hight, who was quoted in the story as saying in an email to Ken:
“I’ve been amused by the negative reviews surrounding ‘Go Set a Watchman.’ I’ve also been amused by those who think the novel should be just like ‘To Kill a Mockingbird,’ only 20 years later, or Harper Lee was coerced or even had no say in the publishing of her new latest book.
“What if someone found a copy of a manuscript that would advance the story of ‘The Old Man and the Sea’? Would anything top the genius of Ernest Hemingway’s work on the first book? Probably not, but we sure would want to read it.
Due to space, Ken couldn't use all of Joe's statement. Here is the rest of it:
"The same should be expected of 'Go Set a Watchman.' It’s a charming book; I laughed out loud several times. It’s a serious book of revelations about a young girl growing up into a young idealistic woman and discovering the people she knew for so long weren’t the people she thought they were. It’s a revealing book that should be published and read.
" 'Go Set a Watchman' advances a story that we’ve grown to love and admire. It’s revived the discussion about racism and its ugly impact on our society. And it advances the discussion of the motivations behind the first book and why or what it created at that point in history.
"Yes, 'Go Set a Watchman' could have used some more editing. Don’t we all need editors? But the writing style is that of Harper Lee, and it engaged me from the beginning. Isn’t that what a good book should do?"
Joe has since read more of the book and again emphasized the need for better editing of it: "There seems to be times when you're lost in a conversation or the language could have been more clear. I hope at some point there's a better edited version of it that's released to the public.
"I still have enjoyed it overall. Others who have bought the book from us have expressed similar sentiments about enjoying it. We haven't received any negative reviews from customers yet."
What do you think about "Go Set a Watchman"? Let us know.
While the debate rages, we'll also add it's fun to see the national discussion and debate over a book. That shows its significance of it and reading to all of us.
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Why a dinner event for 'Go Set a Watchman'? Bob Dotson's idea at signing in April becoming reality
So much has been written about "Go Set a Watchman" and its launch today.
There have been personal essays in state publications such as one by an Oklahoma City University professor in The Oklahoman. Rumors of a third book in The New York Times. Longer pieces about Harper Lee and her hometown of Monroeville, Alabama from national magazines like Smithsonian.
Best of Books president Joe Hight even appeared on NewsOK.com to talk about the launch.
It's created a frenzy -- a good one about books and classics -- not seen since the launch of "Harry Potter."
Best of Books had more than 100 preorders ready and waiting for customers this morning.
Its partnership with next-door neighbor Bayou Grill to present a " 'To Kill a Mockingbird'/'Go Set a Watchman' Southern Dinner & Entertainment" also sold out two seatings this evening. Nearly 110 people will be fed and entertained.
But how did BOB decide to do a dinner when other stores were doing midnight openings, early openings and all-day readings instead? It began in March during a rainy day when Bob Dotson of NBC's "American Story" came to the store to sign his book with the same name.
At the time, Bob was talking to Joe about signings and suggested that Best of Books consider what a store in his home state of Connecticut did: Have a dinner with a event revolving around a book or author. Great idea, Joe thought, but the timing had to be right for the first one. Then came the furor surrounding "Watchman."
After the event this evening, Best of Books may partner with Bayou Grill for more events in the future. Let us know what kind of dinner event you like or might want to attend; give us suggestions. It just needs to revolve around books, authors or history.
Before then, BOB sends a special thanks to Bob for his idea that is now a reality.
There have been personal essays in state publications such as one by an Oklahoma City University professor in The Oklahoman. Rumors of a third book in The New York Times. Longer pieces about Harper Lee and her hometown of Monroeville, Alabama from national magazines like Smithsonian.
Best of Books president Joe Hight even appeared on NewsOK.com to talk about the launch.
It's created a frenzy -- a good one about books and classics -- not seen since the launch of "Harry Potter."
Best of Books had more than 100 preorders ready and waiting for customers this morning.
Its partnership with next-door neighbor Bayou Grill to present a " 'To Kill a Mockingbird'/'Go Set a Watchman' Southern Dinner & Entertainment" also sold out two seatings this evening. Nearly 110 people will be fed and entertained.
But how did BOB decide to do a dinner when other stores were doing midnight openings, early openings and all-day readings instead? It began in March during a rainy day when Bob Dotson of NBC's "American Story" came to the store to sign his book with the same name.
Bob Dotson |
After the event this evening, Best of Books may partner with Bayou Grill for more events in the future. Let us know what kind of dinner event you like or might want to attend; give us suggestions. It just needs to revolve around books, authors or history.
Before then, BOB sends a special thanks to Bob for his idea that is now a reality.
Friday, July 10, 2015
Fourth of four-part BOB blog: Author/illustrator of a well-known character bringing her new Bob to BOB
Fourth of four-part blog: Yes, we waited until the end of the week to announce who will be coming to Best of Books in September. Now it's time to reveal the author's name and her new book in the final blog about BookExpo America in New York.
The lines wrapped around several rows as people waited in line for her signature on her new book. The author/illustrator is switching to a new character after publishing books for nearly a decade about the same frisky Siamese cat who thinks he's a Chihuahua: SkippyJon Jones.
The long lines were for Judy Schachner, who is introducing her new character Dewey Bob the raccoon in September. And she's coming to Oklahoma on Sept. 15 to introduce Dewey Bob to BOB and you.
Judy told Publishers Weekly that she will be forever devoted to SkippyJon Jones, but she hopes fans of what she calls "the Skippy cult," especially teachers, will embrace her new loveable raccoon and his story about his quest for new friends.
"This is a much gentler story, with a very different story line and style," she said. "I've always loved raccoons."
The nationally known writer/illustrator is scheduled to come to BOB a week after Dewey Bob is released to the public.
During BEA, she joked with Joe Hight that she hoped there wouldn't be any tornadoes during her first visit to the state. Joe assured her tornadoes are rare in September.
More details of Judy's visit here will be released later. We hope there will be long lines of Judy's fans in Oklahoma for Dewey Bob as there were during the recent BEA in New York City.
---
The lines wrapped around several rows as people waited in line for her signature on her new book. The author/illustrator is switching to a new character after publishing books for nearly a decade about the same frisky Siamese cat who thinks he's a Chihuahua: SkippyJon Jones.
The long lines were for Judy Schachner, who is introducing her new character Dewey Bob the raccoon in September. And she's coming to Oklahoma on Sept. 15 to introduce Dewey Bob to BOB and you.
Judy told Publishers Weekly that she will be forever devoted to SkippyJon Jones, but she hopes fans of what she calls "the Skippy cult," especially teachers, will embrace her new loveable raccoon and his story about his quest for new friends.
"This is a much gentler story, with a very different story line and style," she said. "I've always loved raccoons."
The nationally known writer/illustrator is scheduled to come to BOB a week after Dewey Bob is released to the public.
During BEA, she joked with Joe Hight that she hoped there wouldn't be any tornadoes during her first visit to the state. Joe assured her tornadoes are rare in September.
More details of Judy's visit here will be released later. We hope there will be long lines of Judy's fans in Oklahoma for Dewey Bob as there were during the recent BEA in New York City.
Monday, July 6, 2015
After sellout, BOB, Bayou Grill now planning second seating of 'To Kill a Mockingbird/Go Set a Watchman' Southern Dinner & Entertainment!
Late Sunday evening, the emails started to notify us that guests were quickly making online reservations to the "To Kill a Mockingbird/Go Set a Watchman Southern Dinner and Entertainment" on Tuesday, July 14. Then the phone calls started coming first thing Monday morning.
Within an hour, we were sold out on the 6 to 8 p.m. time slot, so Joe Hight called Bayou Grill owners Terry and Thais Goodwin to discuss the situation and ask a question: What about a second seating from 8 to 10 p.m.?
They answered immediately: Yes.
That means that if you missed making a reservation for the 6 to 8 p.m. time slot, you can get the same menu, entertainment and trivia contest from 8 to 10 p.m. Tuesday, July 14, at Bayou Grill, next door to Best of Books in Edmond's Kickingbird Square Shopping Center. Hight said the dinner and entertainment should be completed by around 9:30 p.m. if you're worried about getting home by 10 p.m.
You can make reservations for the 8 to 10 p.m. dinner with the book or without a book by calling 340-9202 or by going to www.bestofbooksok.com.
NOTE FOR THOSE WHO HAVE MADE RESERVATIONS: WE ARE ASKING TO PREORDER YOUR DINNER MENU ITEMS BY SENDING AN EMAIL WITH YOUR SELECTION -- appetizer, entrée and side -- to bestofbooks@sbcglobal.net. This will help expedite your order.
Here is the complete menu and listing for the evening:
Within an hour, we were sold out on the 6 to 8 p.m. time slot, so Joe Hight called Bayou Grill owners Terry and Thais Goodwin to discuss the situation and ask a question: What about a second seating from 8 to 10 p.m.?
They answered immediately: Yes.
That means that if you missed making a reservation for the 6 to 8 p.m. time slot, you can get the same menu, entertainment and trivia contest from 8 to 10 p.m. Tuesday, July 14, at Bayou Grill, next door to Best of Books in Edmond's Kickingbird Square Shopping Center. Hight said the dinner and entertainment should be completed by around 9:30 p.m. if you're worried about getting home by 10 p.m.
You can make reservations for the 8 to 10 p.m. dinner with the book or without a book by calling 340-9202 or by going to www.bestofbooksok.com.
NOTE FOR THOSE WHO HAVE MADE RESERVATIONS: WE ARE ASKING TO PREORDER YOUR DINNER MENU ITEMS BY SENDING AN EMAIL WITH YOUR SELECTION -- appetizer, entrée and side -- to bestofbooks@sbcglobal.net. This will help expedite your order.
Here is the complete menu and listing for the evening:
BEST OF BOOKS AND THE BAYOU GRILL PRESENT:
'TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD/GO SET A WATCHMAN' SOUTHERN DINNER & ENTERTAINMENT
8 to 10 p.m. Tuesday, July 14
(First seating from 6 to 8 p.m. sold out with waiting list)
Bayou Grill & Bakery, 1315 E. Danforth in Edmond's Kickingbird Square Shopping Center
MENU
Appetizer
Sardine Dip w/crackers
Or
Green Fried Tomatoes
Entrees
(Choice of one; served with side salad)
Fried Chicken (White or dark -- 3 pieces)
Grill or Blackened Chicken Breast
Pork Chops -- Grilled, Blackened or Fried (2 center cut)
U.S. Caught Catfished -- Grilled, Blackened or Fried
Sides
(Choice of one)
Southern Collard Greens
Mac & Cheese
Baked Sweet Potato
Mashed Potatoes
Creamy Coleslaw
Sweet Corn
French Fries
Fried Okra
Red Beans & Rice.
Breads
Cornbread, rolls or hushpuppies
Dessert
Praline Pecan Pound Cake
Beverages
Sweet/unsweetened team, lemonade or Coca-Cola soft drinks
Evening includes entertainment headlined by Philip West, trivia contest with prizes, and readings from "Go Set a Watchman."
Cost: $60, includes complete dinner and first-edition of "Go Set a Watchman." (Each additional dinner without a book will be $30 each. Other food, beverages, drinks not on the menu are extra. Tips also not included in cost.)
Friday, July 3, 2015
Third of four-part BOB blog: Ruta Sepetys' 2016 novel 'Salt to the Sea' takes us on important journey
BOB NOTE: Author Ruta
Sepetys talks passionately about the research that it took to write her next
book “Salt to the Sea.” The months of research. The travel to six different
countries. The interviews with more than 40 people. All to produce a historical
novel that may be one of the best Young Adult novels in 2016: “Salt to the Sea.”
Sepetys spoke to a small room of booksellers and Penquin editors during the
recent BookExpo America about her historical fiction book. Afterward, the
group, which included Joe and Nan Hight, received an advance copy of the book
as an exclusive to BEA. Here is their review on the book that is not scheduled
to come out until February 2016.
Joana. Florian. Emilia. Through these
characters, author Ruta Sepetys tells the story of the dramatic evacuation of
Germany and parts of Eastern Europe as the Russians advance into Germany in the
final days of World War II. The three
describe their journey through detail that makes you shiver as they and others
struggle during the winter of 1945 in their quest to reach the Wilhelm
Gustloff, a cruise ship that they think will carry them to safety but
ultimately could lead to their destruction.
Alfred. You also read the book through a
smug young German preparing the Gustloff for the thousands of people who will
crowd onto the ship. Alfred is constantly fantasizing about greater glory in
letters that he creates in his mind to a young woman back home. At times, you
hate him. At times, you feel sorry for him.
“Salt to the
Sea” is a tragic story, one that may not be known to many who are alive today.
It’s one of death, starvation, fear and heroism. It’s one of those who were fleeing from
Nazi Germany, not knowing whether their enemies are their own neighbors or
soldiers from invading countries.
It’s a story
that everyone should read whether they are young or old.
As Septys
points out, 25,000 people died on ships fleeing Germany, including an estimated
9,000 on the Gustloff, 5,000 of them being children. The ships, including ones
carrying Jewish prisoners from concentration camps, were sunk by torpedoes from
Russian submarines. The Gustloff alone easily ranks as the deadliest disaster
in maritime history, with thousands more dying than the better-known disasters
of the Titanic and the Lusitania.
Why didn’t we
know about them? Perhaps it was because we see them all as the dreaded Nazis who were
intent on destroying the world as we knew it then. However, Septys gives you a
different picture of the people who were actually victims of their own
leadership. Even though the four main characters are seriously flawed
themselves as well as those they interact with in different scenes, each of
them relates to the reader in different and unique ways. In many ways, they
become like us but stuck and powerless in a war that was not their choosing.
“Salt to the
Sea” is an important book because it reminds us that the human condition exists
in every culture, even those that are much different than our own. It allows us
see them as actual people with emotions and feelings rather than numbers who were
blindly falling a ruthless dictator.
Look forward
to “Salt to the Sea” when it comes out next year not because it makes you laugh
or cry, but because it will change the way you see how war so dramatically affects the
people enveloped within it.
NEXT WEEK:
In the fourth and final installment of this blog on BookExpo America, find out
what author who had long lines in New York will be coming to Oklahoma and Best
of Books for the first time in September!
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Second of four-part BOB blog: 'Illuminae': Illuminating a new form of storytelling
BOB Note: Illuminae was touted during the recent BookExpo America as being one of the hot Young Adult novels of the fall. Editors at Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House in New York City, said they were excited about the creative way that the two Australian writers tell the story. The editors promote it as being in the same style as Marie Lu and James Dashner. Lu has endorsed it by writing "Brace yourself. You're about to be immersed in a mindscape that you'll never want to leave." We at Best of Books decided to put it to the ultimate test and let one of the BOB's best readers read and review an advance copy of the book. Mikaleh Offerman is an incoming freshman at Oklahoma Baptist University and an avid reader. We greatly appreciate that she wrote the following review and are impressed in how she wrote, too! (She even wrote the headline!)
Mikaleh Offerman |
Kady
and Ezra are not exactly on speaking terms when their ice planet is invaded. In
fact, they’ve just finished breaking up when the
time comes to escape through the exploding mass that used to be their home.
When they reach safety on separate evacuating space ships, their fight still
isn't over. However, a plague has infested one of the escaping ships, an
advanced intelligence computer has gone haywire, and the only people Ezra and
Kady have left are each other.
Calling
Illuminae a book would be like calling the Atlantic Ocean a glass of water.
Amie
Kaufman and Jay Kristoff have created a new breed of storytelling, and it’s amazing. Illuminae is an intricate tale that reveals
itself through a compilation of hacked emails, classified documents, IMs, and
other strangely poetic methods.
Normally,
I would have struggled to conjure any form of interest in a book like this. I
would have taken a look at it, admired the cover a little, opened it up to see
if I liked the inside, and then slammed it right back onto the shelf.
Classified documents? A couple of emails? Pfft. Give me a real novel. Something that I can sit down
and absorb instead of sort through like a wannabe police investigator.
However,
these emails, reports, documents, and IMs reveal a cast of characters that turn
the wannabe investigator into an addicted reader.
No
dialogue tags or single-voice narrator?
Nope.
Illuminae has no need for those storytelling devices.
Yet,
while Illuminae is vastly different from typical novels, it carries many of the
same elements because it uses the written word to tell a story. It has
extremely relatable characters that kept me turning the pages and even flipping
back a couple to re-read those emails exchanged by So-and-So and What’s-His-Name because Oh my gosh, everything makes so much
sense now! One minute I was laughing and the next I was fighting tears. In
the end, I was shaking my head in awe because I couldn’t believe that I’d
just finished reading almost six hundred pages in one sitting.
You
can’t judge a book by its cover, and you
certainly can’t judge a story by the method that it’s told. Illuminae proves this point to infinity and beyond.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
First of four-part BOB blog: BookExpo America full of celebrities, heavyweight authors and intrigue
BOB NOTE: This is the first of a four-part blog on the recent BookExpo America. Today's post is on the expo itself. The next two blog posts will be reviews of two YA books that were introduced during it. Then the final one will reveal the nationally known children's author who had one of the longest lines at BEA and who will be coming to Best of Books and Oklahoma for the first time! Joe and Nan Hight both attended as BOB representatives.
NEW YORK -- The recent BookExpo America featured celebrities such as Al Roker, Dr. Ruth, Lee Greenwood, Christie Brinkley, Nathan Lane, Mindy Kaling, Emeril Lagasse and many others.
It featured intriguing controversy, including China being introduced as the guest of honor at the BEA's Global Market Forum; the move prompted a protest in the city. It also featured author James Patterson lambasting Amazon.And it featured nationally known authors who were there for BEA and then BookCon the following weekend. Large banners hanging and wrapped throughout the Javits Center proclaimed their latest books.
Thousands of people crowded into the Javits Center for the events that included numerous signings, previews of the latest books, breakfasts. lunches, giveaways, workshops and every major publisher. Some people arrived early to stand in long lines for tickets to stand in more long lines to receive signed books and pose for photos with their favorite authors.
The word "overwhelming" was used many times by those attending BEA.
An example of the flurry of activity came when three heavyweight authors showed up at the same time on the last day of BEA: John Grisham, Marie Lu and Patterson.
Grisham was there to sign booklets promoting his upcoming book "Rogue Lawyer," which is scheduled to come out in October.
Young Adult author Lu had the largest banner of any at the Javits Center promoting her upcoming book "The Rose Society." She also was there signing booklets promoting the book that also will be coming out in October.
Then there was Patterson, who introduced his new children's imprint and accepted an award for championing independent bookstores. Best of Books was the recipient of one of Patterson's grants for bookstores in 2014 and is planning a program this fall in relationship to it. His new imprint with Little, Brown, and Company seeks to encourage children to interact more with the literary world.
Patterson didn't shy away from controversy either as he sharply criticized Amazon during his awards speech, saying that it was endangering literature.
"Amazon wants to control book buying, book selling and even book publishing," Patterson said in a USA TODAY story, while adding the company "sounds like the beginning of a monopoly."
BookExpo America was full of celebrities, heavyweight authors and controversies. It'll be fun to see what happens when it moves to Chicago in May 2016.
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