Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Poem in Your Pocket Day!
Tomorrow, Thursday, April 26, is Poem in Your Pocket Day!
So find a poem you love and carry it around with you. Leave it underneath your saucer at the coffee shop. Give it to your bus driver. Post it in the comments. Spread it, share it, swap it--start a conversation with it.
Don't have a poem? Grab a free (and adorable) micro-chapbook by Origami Poems Project from our National Poetry Month display. You can find them all over the place!
Kim Prosise
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Get Obsessed!
Comedian Aaron Karo's new novel just hit shelves, and it's great. I hadn't heard of Karo before I picked it up, but I liked this YA debut enough for his previous books to secure slots on my reading list (Ruminations on College Life, Ruminations on Twentysomething Life, and I'm Having More Fun Than You).
Lexapros and Cons is fast-paced, uplifting, and laugh out loud funny. Seventeen year old Chuck Taylor with his hand sanitizer and color-coded Converse All-Stars is a sympathetic and memorable hero. His sarcasm and self-consciousness temper even the book's few stock moments: "I have become a cartoon character. I am literally hiding behind a bookshelf peering at Amy through an opening in the books. I'm toeing the line between spying and stalking... I glance up at what section I'm in. It's Women's Studies. Even the Dewey decimal system is mocking me."
That's probably Karo's closest call with cliche. For the most part, the book feels incredibly real. From the Indian guy who talks like Jay-Z, to Chuck's parents and his psychologist, Karo's characters are consistently on point, their mannerisms and idiosyncrasies not only palpable but familiar. And the love interest is decidedly more than just a pretty face.
It's also full of compassion for the complex emotions that accompany mental illness in young people while remaining staunchly upbeat. We take Chuck's problems seriously, but if Lexapros and Cons were a movie (and I'm sure it will be) it'd be PG-13 for language and acknowledging that teenage boys think about sex uncomfortably often, not for any dark content. I love that the novel manages to capture timeless adolescent concerns in the age of Google and Adderall without preaching to or belittling those who are caught up in it. And the clever chapter headings and snappy self-referential jacket are irresistible.
Published by Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux
Kim Prosise
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
You’ve Finished Dance with Dragons


The Religion by Tim Willocks. This somewhat historical novel is set during the siege of Malta where the Ottoman empire sent the largest armada in history against the Knights of Saint John the Baptist, and follows the exploits of the Saxon soldier of fortune, Mattias Tannhauser. This is sword and ax swinging action at its best, complicated by religious conflict, geopolitics, and romantic betrayal.

The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson. Brandon Sanderson is probably best known as being


Monday, April 2, 2012
Support Independent eBooks

Like independent bookstores, small and independent publishers are vital to our literary culture. They take risks on new authors, fill niches, and produce and sustain the diversity of voices that enriches American society. Often, these publishers are so small, they don’t have the resources to distribute their books so they find larger distributors or join together to make sure their books get into stores.
Independent Publishers Group was founded in 1971, the first organization specifically created for the purpose of representing titles from independent presses to the book trade. Recently IPG has been in the news because of its conflict with Amazon. Though we don’t know the exact terms of the conflict, Curt Matthews, chief executive of IPG, in a post argued that the small publishers could not have stayed in business under the terms Amazon offered. (And while you’re on the IPG blog, read through some of the other posts. They are great insights into publishing.) In response to their inability to reach an agreement, Amazon removed all of IPG’s titles from its Kindle store. That’s 4,443 titles that can no longer be purchased for the Kindle.
We need small, independent publishers, in the same way we need small independent bookstores, so we are highlighting ten ebooks from IPG publishers on our homepage for the month of April. Fiction, history, spirituality, sci fi and more. Independently published titles, that, at least at the moment, are not available in ebook form on Amazon. Click here for the full list.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
