Book News: December 28, 2009

books3Did you miss our regular book news chats? I know I did. So let’s jump right back into it!

Some new releases in fiction you should keep an eye on (all Borders links):

- Pirate Latitudes (Michael Crichton): This irresistible tale of swashbuckling pirates in the New World offers a classic story of treasure and betrayal. “Pirate Latitudes” was discovered as a complete manuscript in Crichton’s files after his death in 2008.

- Breathless (Dan Koontz): “New York Times”-bestselling author Koontz delivers a thrilling novel of suspense and adventure, in this story of a world where good itself is an endangered species and one man will risk his life–and more–to save it from extinction.

And some goodies in the non-fiction genre:

- Comeback 2.0: Up Close and Personal (Lance Armstrong): “Comeback 2.0″ is Armstrong’s first-person photo-journal of his 2009 comeback season. Heavily illustrated with color photos, this work features journal-like entries that describe the cyclist’s training and racing regimen.

It’s Your Time: Activate Your Faith, Achieve Your Dreams, and Increase in God’s Favor (Joel Osteen): The “New York Times”-bestselling author of “Become a Better You” shares a much-needed message of hope with readers: By using faith as a cornerstone, it’s possible for people to find a new place in their lives where they are happy, secure, and fulfilled.

There have been some great books released in 2009 and here are the current top sellers according to the New York Times for Hardcover Fiction:

  1. THE LOST SYMBOL, by Dan Brown. Robert Langdon among the Masons.
  2. I, ALEX CROSS, by James Patterson. Tracking the murderer of a relative, Alex Cross discovers a wild Washington scene with explosive secrets.
  3. UNDER THE DOME, by Stephen King. When a Maine town is trapped by an invisible force field, a sanctimonious and hypocritical politician takes over.
  4. THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett. A young white woman and two black maids in 1960s ­Mississippi.
  5. U IS FOR UNDERTOW, by Sue Grafton. Kinsey Millhone investigates the case of a 4-year-old girl who disappeared 21 years earlier.
  6. PIRATE LATITUDES, by Michael Crichton. In the 17th-century Caribbean, a British pirate attacks a Spanish galleon; this manuscript was found in Crichton’s files after his death in 2008.
  7. FORD COUNTY, by John Grisham. Stories set in rural Mississippi.
  8. THE LAST SONG, by Nicholas Sparks. A 17-year-old girl spends the summer with her divorced father in North Carolina and finds many kinds of love.
  9. THE CHRISTMAS SWEATER, by Glenn Beck with Kevin Balfe and Jason Wright. A boy learns from his disappointment with his mother’s gift.
  10. THE LACUNA, by Barbara Kingsolver. A young American growing up in Mexico becomes friends with artists and radicals; later, in the United States, he is menaced by ­McCarthyism.

And for the top sellers in Hardcover Non-Fiction:

  1. GOING ROGUE, by Sarah Palin. A memoir by the former Alaska governor and vice-presidential candidate.
  2. HAVE A LITTLE FAITH, by Mitch Albom. A suburban rabbi and a Detroit pastor teach lessons about the comfort of belief.
  3. ARGUING WITH IDIOTS, written and edited by Glenn Beck, Kevin Balfe and others. The case against big government.
  4. STONES INTO SCHOOLS, by Greg Mortenson. Building schools, many of them for girls, in northeast Afghanistan; takes up where “Three Cups of Tea” left off.
  5. OPEN, by Andre Agassi. The tennis champion’s autobiography.
  6. SUPERFREAKONOMICS, by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner. A scholar and a journalist apply economic thinking to everything: the sequel.
  7. TRUE COMPASS, by Edward M. Kennedy. The late senator’s autobiography.
  8. WHAT THE DOG SAW, by Malcolm Gladwell. A decade of New Yorker essays.
  9. A BOLD FRESH PIECE OF HUMANITY, by Bill O’Reilly. The Fox News commentator on his upbringing and career.
  10. OUTLIERS, by Malcolm Gladwell. Why some people succeed, from the author of “Blink.”

I hope you enjoy this little tidbit of news from the book world. But I have a question for you – What was your favorite book of 2009?

Photo credit: http://grizzlymedia.wordpress.com/2007/09/

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Book News: January 19, 2009

First off, Happy Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. It’s definitely going to be an exciting week with the inauguration and all. Regardless of who you voted for, this is a huge piece of American history happening and you can bet that I’ll be planted in front of my television catching every minute. And, of course, that means there are tons of books out there that you can pick up to learn more.

So let’s jump into it. In the new releases category, we have a couple political books. The first book is What Obama Means… For Our Culture, Our Politics, Our Future. Description from Borders: A timely and sharp analysis about what the Obama phenomenon means for the future of American politics and society, by the celebrated “Washington Post” columnist, Jabari Asim.

The second book is called How Barack Obama Won by Sheldon Gawiser. Description from Borders: How Barack Obama Won—by one of the most lauded political journalists of our time, and one of the most respected pollsters in the business—gives us not only the inside state-by-state guide to how Obama achieved his victory, but also the essential toolbox for understanding the political implications of the 2008 presidential election—where the country stands vis-à-vis Red and Blue states, where it currently is and is headed politically, and whether a political realignment has taken place. The book features an introduction by Chuck Todd, putting the 2008 presidential election in political and demographic perspective, even as it reveals national trends. The final electoral map will appear in the front matter, as will unexpected “fun facts.” The book is divided into four parts, each of which proceeds alphabetically state by state: Battleground States (e.g., Colorado, Florida, Idaho); Emerging Battleground States (e.g., Arizona, Georgia, Montana); Receding Battleground…

In the fiction category, Meg Cabot (the author behind The Princess Diaries) just released her book called Ransom My Heart. Description from Borders: Mia Thermopolis, Princess of Genovia and star of Meg Cabot’s insanely popular #1 New York Times bestselling Princess Diaries books, has “penned” her first historical romance novel . . . with help from Meg CabotHe’s a tall, handsome knight with a secret. She’s an adventurous beauty with more than a few secrets of her own. Finnula needs money for her sister’s dowry, and fast. Hugo Fitzstephen, returning home to England from the Crusades with saddlebags of jewels, has money, and lots of it. What could be simpler than to kidnap him and hold him for ransom? Well, for starters, Finnula could make the terrible mistake of falling in love with her hostage. Princess Mia Thermopolis, Meg Cabot’s most beloved character, has always been an outspoken animal-rights activist and committed environmentalist. In keeping with Mia’s true spirit, Meg will be donating her advance to Greenpeace.

And in upcoming releases, I want to highlight Amy Dickinson’s book The Mighty Queens of Freeville. Description from Borders: Dickinson has made a career out of helping others, through her internationally syndicated advice column “Ask Amy.” Readers love her for her honesty and for the fact that her motto is “I make the mistakes so you don’t have to.” Here, she shares those mistakes and her remarkable story.

As has become our tradition, here is the NY Times Bestselling Fiction List for this week:

  1. PLUM SPOOKY, by Janet Evanovich. The bounty hunter Stephanie Plum hunts an evil genius and his sidekick, who are hiding in New Jersey’s Pine Barrens.
  2. THE HOST, by Stephenie Meyer. One woman won’t surrender to the aliens who have taken control.
  3. BLACK OPS, by W. E.B. Griffin. An Army officer and special presidential agent is targeted for death — but by whom?
  4. SCARPETTA, by Patricia Cornwell. The forensic pathologist Kay Scarpetta takes on a new assignment in New York.
  5. THE STORY OF EDGAR SAWTELLE, by David Wroblewski. A young mute takes refuge with three dogs in the Wisconsin woods after his father’s death.
  6. CROSS COUNTRY, by James Patterson. Alex Cross chases the leader of a lethal teenage gang.
  7. FIRE AND ICE, by Julie Garwood. A reporter and her bodyguard uncover a conspiracy in Alaska.
  8. THE HOUR I FIRST BELIEVED, by Wally Lamb. A man reconstructs five generations of family history.
  9. ECLIPSE, by Richard North Patterson. A San Francisco lawyer agrees to defend a Nigerian reformer whose wife he loved in college.
  10. THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY, by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. A journalist travels to the island of Guernsey to meet residents who resisted the Nazi occupation.

And here is the NY Times Non-Fiction Best Seller List:

  1. OUTLIERS, by Malcolm Gladwell. Why some people succeed — it has to do with luck and opportunity — from the author of “Blink” and “The Tipping Point.”
  2. GUILTY, by Ann Coulter. The columnist argues that liberals victimize everyone else by pretending to be victims themselves.
  3. DEWEY, by Vicki Myron with Bret Witter. The kitten left freezing in the returned-book slot of an Iowa public library and his rise to fame.
  4. AMERICAN LION, by Jon Meacham. Andrew Jackson in the White House, by Newsweek’s editor.
  5. TOO FAT TO FISH, by Artie Lange with Anthony Bozza. Humorous memories from the comedian, a member of the cast of “The Howard Stern Show.”
  6. WISHFUL DRINKING, by Carrie Fisher. A memoir based on Fisher’s one-woman show.
  7. HOT, FLAT, AND CROWDED, by Thomas L. Friedman. How a green revolution can renew America, by the New York Times columnist.
  8. WHY WE SUCK, by Denis Leary. Sardonic essays from the actor and comedian, currently the co-creator and star of the TV series “Rescue Me.”
  9. MULTIPLE BLESSINGS, by Jon Gosselin, Kate Gosselin and Beth Carson. A couple has sextuplets.
  10. A BOLD FRESH PIECE OF HUMANITY, by Bill O’Reilly. The Fox News commentator on his upbringing and career.

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Book News for the week of January 12

Living in Northeastern Ohio always means a snowy January. And for me that means curling up with a really good book. Here are some books that are coming out or just released that I may be taking a peek at:

Bases Loaded by Kirk Radomski. Description from Borders: Radomski, a former New York Mets employee, pleaded guilty to distributing anabolic steroids to dozens of major league players between 1995 and 2005. Since cooperating with baseball’s steroids investigation, Radomski breaks his silence on life in the Major Leagues. Release date: January 27, 2009.

The Associate by John Grisham. Description from Borders: Kyle McAvoy grew up in his father’s small-town law office in York, Pennsylvania. He excelled in college, was elected editor-in-chief of The Yale Law Journal, and his future has limitless potential. But Kyle has a secret, a dark one, an episode from college that he has tried to forget. The secret, though, falls into the hands of the wrong people, and Kyle is forced to take a job he doesn’t want — even though it’s a job most law students can only dream about. Three months after leaving Yale, Kyle becomes an associate at the largest law firm in the world, where, in addition to practicing law, he is expected to lie, steal, and take part in a scheme that could send him to prison, if not get him killed.

Here is this week’s New York Times Bestseller List for Fiction:

  1. BLACK OPS, by W. E.B. Griffin. An Army officer and special presidential agent is targeted for death — but by whom?
  2. SCARPETTA, by Patricia Cornwell. The forensic pathologist Kay Scarpetta, newly married, is splitting her time between Boston and New York, where she takes on a new assignment.
  3. THE HOST, by Stephenie Meyer. Aliens have taken control of the minds and bodies of most human beings, but one woman won’t surrender.
  4. CROSS COUNTRY, by James Patterson. Alex Cross chases the leader of a lethal teenage gang.
  5. FIRE AND ICE, by Julie Garwood. A reporter and her F.B.I. bodyguard uncover a conspiracy in Alaska.
  6. THE STORY OF EDGAR SAWTELLE, by David Wroblewski. A young mute who can communicate with the dogs his family raises takes refuge with three of them in the Wisconsin woods after his father’s death.
  7. THE CHRISTMAS SWEATER, by Glenn Beck with Kevin Balfe and Jason Wright. A boy learns from his disappointment with his mother’s gift.
  8. RUNNING HOT, by Jayne Ann Krentz. Two members of the Arcane Society, dedicated to paranormal research, encounter a group of criminal sensitives.
  9. THE HOUR I FIRST BELIEVED, by Wally Lamb. A man reconstructs five generations of family history.
  10. THE LUCKY ONE, by Nicholas Sparks. A marine returning home sets out to track down the woman whose photo he found in Iraq.

Here is this week’s New York Times Bestseller List for Non-Fiction:

  1. OUTLIERS, by Malcolm Gladwell. Why some people succeed — it has to do with luck and opportunity — from the author of “Blink” and “The Tipping Point.”
  2. DEWEY, by Vicki Myron with Bret Witter. The kitten left freezing in the returned-book slot of an Iowa public library and his rise to fame.
  3. AMERICAN LION, by Jon Meacham. Andrew Jackson in the White House, by Newsweek’s editor.
  4. MULTIPLE BLESSINGS, by Jon Gosselin, Kate Gosselin and Beth Carson. A couple has sextuplets.
  5. WHY WE SUCK, by Denis Leary. Sardonic essays from the actor and comedian, currently the co-creator and star of the TV series “Rescue Me.”
  6. A BOLD FRESH PIECE OF HUMANITY, by Bill O’Reilly. The Fox News commentator on his upbringing and career.
  7. WISHFUL DRINKING, by Carrie Fisher. A memoir based on Fisher’s one-woman show.
  8. HOT, FLAT, AND CROWDED, by Thomas L. Friedman. How a green revolution can renew America, by the New York Times columnist.
  9. TOO FAT TO FISH, by Artie Lange with Anthony Bozza. Humorous memories from the comedian, a member of the cast of “The Howard Stern Show.”
  10. THE SNOWBALL, by Alice Schroeder. The life of Warren Buffett.

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