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BookBrowse Free Newsletter 03/21/2013

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March 21, 2013

Hello
 

 

In this issue of BookBrowse Highlights we review The End of The Point by Elizabeth Graver, set in rugged coastal Maine. We also go "beyond the book" to explore the inventions of Jules Verne.

We also feature two books that our members have been reading recently for First Impressions: Fever by Mary Beth Keane and Rage Against the Dying by Becky Masterman.

These are just a taste of the many recommendations, readalike suggestions, book previews, news and more in this issue.

Best wishes,

Davina,
BookBrowse Founder & Editor



 

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Readers Recommend  

Each month we give away books to members to read and review (or discuss). Members who choose to take part tend to receive a free book about every three months. Here are their opinions on two recently published books:


Book Jacket Rage Against the Dying
by Becky Masterman


Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur
Publication Date: 03/12/2013
Thrillers, 320 pages

Number of reader reviews: 26
Readers' consensus:


BookBrowse Members Say
"Brigid will not 'go gently into that good night' although she has been forced to retire from the FBI. At 59 years old she has created a quiet life for herself and husband but is drawn back into an unsolved case when the police find the supposed killer who confesses to the serial murders that happen yearly along Route 66. The prologue of the book grabs you and the book does not disappoint. All of the characters are believable, the story plausible, the tension high. This is a winner of a thriller, up there with the best." - Shelby L. (Hamden, CT)

"I read this novel in two reading sessions, could have done it in one, but life got in the way. The story line, suspense and pace of Rage Against The Dying is unfaltering and flawless. Bravo! May I have another?!" - Lydia M. (Lakeview, Oregon)

"As a 61 year old, it was an incredible treat to find such a feisty steel eyed older female heroine the likes of Brigid Quinn. Run out and read..You won't be sorry!" - Lani S. (Narberth, PA)

"Wow! This is a book you might not want to read in public because people may stare as you gasp, cringe, cover your eyes, cheer. It totally involved me and held me to the last word. I predict a best seller and the first in a series. (I hope, I hope.) I look forward to more from this author." - Jeanine.

These are 4 of the 24 reviews for this book.
Read all the Reviews

Buy at Amazon

 
Readers Recommend  

Book Jacket Fever by Mary Beth Keane

Publisher: Scribner
Publication Date: 03/12/2013
Historical Fiction, 320 pages

Number of reader reviews: 20
Readers' consensus:



BookBrowse Members Say
"We've all heard about Typhoid Mary, but who was she? Was she real or just a made-up character? Well, she WAS real and this fabulous book tells her story. This is a woman with moxy and self-confidence (at least outwardly) and stamina that enabled her to last through six day work weeks and 12 hour days. Not only did I learn about this tremendous woman, Mary Mallone, I also was put right into the streets and tenements of the early 1900s. Get this book! It was an absorbing read. I gobbled the words down, typhoid be darned!" - Darcy C. (San Diego, CA)

"Wow! Loved, loved, loved this book. It usually takes me a good 100 pages to get into a book... and really want to continue reading. Not so with Fever. After reading the first 5 pages I was hooked." - Teresa R. (Evansville, IN)

"I finished reading the book a few days ago, and I can't stop thinking about it. I loved it. Keane has written a fascinating and also heartbreaking human story." - Mary S. (Pinson, AL)

"Fever would be a great book for book groups- there are so many issues to discuss and debate." - Jean N. (New Richmond, OH)

"Rich in characters and in setting, this book is a winner." - Rebecca J. (Knoxville, TN)

These are 5 of the 20 reviews received to date
for this book. Read all the Reviews

Buy at Amazon
 
Featured Review

Below is part of BookBrowse's review of The End of the Point. Read the review and backstory in full here


Book Jacket The End of the Point
by Elizabeth Graver

Hardcover (Mar 2013), 352 pages.

Publisher: Harper
ISBN 9780062184849

BookBrowse Rating:
Critics' Consensus:

Review:
Some novels are propelled by a breakneck plot or suspenseful narrative; others are driven by character development. Still others, like Elizabeth Graver's The End of the Point, are pulled together by a strong and unifying sense of place. In this case, the place is Ashaunt Point on Massachusetts's Buzzards Bay, where the Porter family has summered for generations. At times, in fact, it seems as if the Porters have little to hold them together beyond this point of land, the place where they can be most at peace, most themselves.

Graver's novel spans several decades of the twentieth century and several generations of the Porter family. It opens (following a brief historical vignette in which the original Native Americans sign their land over to the colonists for a pittance) in 1942, at a time when American troops have (unofficially of course) been stationed on the point, patrolling the coastline for German U-boats and planes and causing a serious uproar in the previously stagnant social scene in Ashaunt Point. Older Porter daughters Helen and Dossy sneak out of the house to attend servicemen's dances. Their long-time nanny, Bea, must also decide where her loyalties and longings reside when she's asked to choose between a burgeoning romance with a dashing soldier and her devotion to, in particular, the Porters' youngest daughter Jane.

Later sections of the book focus on Helen, now a young woman in 1947 trying to decide whether to explore an academic path in Europe or a more family-oriented life back at home in the U.S., and then on Helen's son Charlie, whom we first come to know in 1970 as a struggling college student suffering from LSD flashbacks. Without knowing the precise reason why he's compelled to go there, he winds up at one of the outbuildings at Ashaunt Point where he discovers solace for a time, at least until larger forces start to invade this idyllic territory once again. This time it's the dual pressures of a land developer and the Vietnam War, in the form of a troubled young veteran who draws Charlie in to his compelling circle. The closing section of the novel takes place in 1999, as an oil spill threatens to mar the landscape further and as Helen's life comes to an end and Charlie's is, in many ways, just beginning.

Certainly there are a handful of characters here - namely Bea, Helen, and Charlie - whose stories take much of Graver's attention and the reader's sympathies despite the multi-decade span of the novel. These characters-Bea and Helen in particular-are visited at multiple touchpoints in their lives, from young womanhood through middle-age and even old age. Graver even folds Bea back into the narrative years after she's returned to her native Scotland, an ocean away from Ashaunt Point. That being said, though, the novel lacks an overarching plot and comprehensive character development, which might frustrate or flummox some readers. Perhaps for those readers it's better to think of The End of the Point not as a novel but as a series of linked novellas, each of which focus on a single family but together, ultimately, have the love and power of place as their theme.

Graver's writing about this place and her characters' relationship to it is poetic and profound. Helen's final return to Ashaunt Point - after a life spent in pursuit of excellence and achievement both for herself and others - is particularly poignant. "To be here has brought her the deepest kind of happiness, of the sort she'd not known for... how long? ... How lucky she is. She thinks it all the time now. Lucky to have the sky and sea before her at any time of day or night ... To have hummingbirds visit." Graver illustrates how this place - and everything it's come to mean to Helen and her family - has the power to pull Helen out of her life-long striving and into a place of unexpected acceptance and peace. Again and again, Graver's characters either articulate or exemplify the idea that, whether they understand why or how, it's only at Ashaunt Point that they are truly themselves at their most authentic, largely removed from the dramas that might characterize the rest of their lives. Readers will likely come away from Graver's novel reflecting on the special places in their own lives, longing to reconnect with or revisit them, to introduce their meaning and beauty to new generations.

Reviewed by Norah Piehl

Above is part of BookBrowse's review of The End of the Point. Read the review in full here

Read-Alikes:
Above The Thunder by Ren�e Manfredi
Schroder by Amity Gaige
The Sandcastle Girls by Chris Bohjalian

 

Beyond The Book   

 

At BookBrowse, we don't just review books, we go 'beyond the book' to explore interesting aspects relating to the story.  

 

Here is a recent "Beyond the Book" feature for Matthew Goodman's Eighty Days: Nellie Bly and Elizabeth Bisland's History-Making Race Around the WorldRead the review in full

Jules Verne: A Man Ahead of His Time
February 8, 2013 would have been Jules Verne's 185th birthday. The acclaimed author is considered the father of science fiction and wrote many novels, some of the most well-known being Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, Journey to the Center of the Earth, From the Earth to the Moon, and, of course,
Around the World in Eighty Days which plays an important part in Matthew Goodman's
Eighty Days.

Two years ago, on Verne's birthday, National Geographic featured 8 modern inventions that are surprisingly - or maybe not so surprisingly - similar to inventions created by Verne himself.

Check them out!

1964 3-person submarine AlvinElectric Submarines - Captain Nemo, from Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, travels the underwater world in Nautilus, his electric submarine, which bears a striking resemblance to the real Alvin, a 1964 three-person sub. The idea of a vehicle like this running on electricity was a mere magical thought in Verne's time.

Newscasts - Verne wrote an article in 1889 in which he created an alternative to newspapers; he said that the news would, instead, "be spoken to subscribers." The first real newscast didn't happen until 1920.

Solar Sails - This time the "prediction" came from Verne's From the Earth to the Moon. He imagined a light-propelled spacecraft, and now solar sails actually exist.

Lunar Modules - Also in From the Earth to the Moon, which, by the way, was written in 1865, Verne described missiles that could take people to the moon.

Skywriting - In that same 1889 article, which was titled "In the Year 2889", he wrote about what he called "atmospheric advertisements." Very similar to the skywriting that we see today!

Videoconferencing - According to Technovelgy.com Verne's "phonotelephote" is possibly the first reference in fiction to a videophone. This was, again, in his 1889 article.

Taser - Go back to Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, and Verne describes a gun that produces a large electric jolt. He wrote this book in 1870 and Tasers were invented in 1974...over 100 years later!

Project Mercury spacecraftSplashdown Spacecraft - Finally, in From the Earth to the Moon, Verne envisioned a spacecraft that could land in the ocean and float much like the Project Mercury spacecrafts.

Jules Verne didn't have a science background or any formal scientific training but he was fascinated by science and he listened to people who knew things about it. He was also a keen observer and, above all else, a brilliant storyteller, which is why his works have endured for so long in so many forms.

Reviewed by BookBrowse First Impression Reviewers

Above is part of BookBrowse's review of Eighty DaysRead the review and backstory in full here

 

Blog: The Country-House Genre  

 

Readers and viewers seem endlessly fascinated by the English country-house genre. From classic and award-winning novels such as The Remains of the Day,

Howards End, or Mansfield Park, to the mysteries of Agatha Christie and P.D. James, to television epics such as or Downton Abbey, they offer both the writer and the reader a concentrated glimpse into a rarefied social milieu, one that often prompts both romantic intensity and social commentary. Although many of these works are historical in nature, they nevertheless seem relevant to contemporary society, especially when (as in The Uninvited Guests) the author obliquely or explicitly comments on historical behavior and attitudes through a modern lens.

What is the attraction of the country house as a setting for fiction, whether on page or screen? According to Blake Morrison, writing in The Guardian, "what draws them to a country house setting is the space it offers for everything to happen under one roof; the house of fiction has many rooms, but country house fiction has more rooms than most." It also, Morrison goes on, offers writers a defined canvas on which to explore issues that have resurfaced in British literature for centuries: these include the definition of "Englishness," the fascination of illicit sex, the idea of rightful ownership, and the cheek-by-jowl coexistence of very different social classes.

For the reader, there's also the undeniable "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous" attraction to many of these novels, especially when the wealthier classes get their comeuppance in one way or another. As Lev Grossman writes in Time about the recent (and not-so-recent) fascination with this genre, "It's a contradiction that's oddly impossible to resolve: we loathe and decry the 1%, but at the same time we're very sentimental indeed about the box they came in." In other words, the English country house story, with its numerous attractions to writers and readers alike, is liable to persist at least as long as the venerable structures that give the genre its name.



The Univited GuestsThis article, by Norah Piehl, originally ran as the "beyond the book" story to Sadie Jones's The Univited Guests about which Norah writes, "Jones pulls readers into the drawing-room with what appears at first to be a classic English country-house tale, but winds up becoming something quite a bit darker, and thoroughly unexpected. Using the country house novel as a commentary on social class is nothing new - what's surprising and innovative about this one is the particularly daring and delightful ways in which Jones does so. This many-sided novel, which constantly confounds and even dashes expectations, is not for everyone; but for those who like their reading with a dash of surprise and a soupcon of satire, The Uninvited Guests will be very welcome indeed."



Image: The cast of the original Upstairs, Downstairs 

   

More blog posts 

 

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Life After Life 
by Jill McCorkle

 

 

Publication Date: Mar 2013

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From the Jacket

Delivered with her trademark wit, Jill McCorkle's constantly surprising novel illuminates the possibilities of second chances, hope, and rediscovering life right up to the very end. With Life After Life, she has conjured up an entire community that reminds all of us that grace and magic can-and do-appear when we least expect it.

 

Reviews:

"McCorkle finds that space where the humor and the sadness in these characters' lives come together, that space where she has always worked the best of her magic...You are undoubtly changed when you reach the novel's end." - Kevin Wilson, author of The Family Fang

"With Life After Life, Jill McCorkle knocks it out of the park and into the cosmos. Each character holds unique surprises that unveil the intricate magic of this brilliant novel." - Beth Henley, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright

"Jill is going to break your heart, but along the way make you glad you went with her. She has written a book that will haunt me for a long time - in the best way." - Dorothy Allison, author of Bastard out of Carolina

"Like Flannery O'Connor, McCorkle's genius is to give us both philosophical speculation and a riveting narrative filled with unforgettable characters. Great writing, poignancy, humor, wisdom - all are in abundance here. Jill McCorkle is one of the South's greatest writers; she is also one of America's." - Ron Rash, author of Serena  



5 people will each win a hardcover copy of Life After Life. This giveaway is open to residents of the USA only, unless you are a BookBrowse member, in which case you are eligible to win wherever you might live.

Enter the giveaway  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Contents
 
Readers Recommend
Featured Review
Beyond The Book
Blog
Win
Book Discussion
Reading List
Read-Alikes
For Book Clubs
Publishing Soon
Interviews
Wordplay
News
 

 

 

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to discuss Quiet:
The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking

   


 
Discussions Opening Soon

Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald opens
March 26

When Women Were Birds opens April 2

The Supremes at Earl's All-You-Can-Eat opens April 9


The House of Rumour opens April 23

 
Featured Reading:
Foreign Language Translation
The Thief
The Bathing Women
In the Sea There are Crocodiles
This is a small selection of the titles to be found in our Foreign Language/Translation recommended reading list

 
Read-Alikes

If you liked...

Try these...

A Map of Tulsa

Broken Glass Park

Dear Life

The Memory of Love



If you liked...

Try these...

A Moment in the Sun

Havana Fever

Shadow of the Wind

The Sense of an Ending


More Readalikes

 

Recommended
for Book Clubs


A Good American

Quiet

More reading guides & book club advice

 
Publishing
 Soon
Book Jacket
Book Jacket
Book Jacket
Book Jacket
Book Jacket

 

Author Interviews
 


In a thoughtful and personal interview, BookBrowse reviewer Kim Kovacs talks with Ramona Ausubel about the inspiration for her debut novel,
No One Is Here Except All of Us
  

In an interview with
CBS This Morning
Susan Cain, author of
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking, makes the distinction between introversion and shyness, and delves into the importance of quiet decision making.
 
 

 

Wordplay

Solve this clue 
"A R T W Lift A B"
and be entered
to win the book of your choice

Entry & Details


All winners are contacted by email. View list

 

 
Answer to the Last Wordplay

I N M Cup O T
It's not my cup of tea

Meaning: 
I don't like it; it's not to my taste. Can be used in a variety of ways, such as in reference to activities (skiing isn't my cup of tea) or people (he's not my cup of tea).

Background:  Unsurprisingly, this expression originates in Britain in the first half of the 20th century. But long before that, at least as far back as the mid 18th century, the affirmative version was in use. In fact, according to phrases.org.uk, "cup of tea" was such a synonym for acceptability that it became the name given to a favored friend, especially one of ebuliant nature. From the use of it in William de Morgan's 1908 novel Somehow Good, it can be assumed that the expression started as one used by the working class... continued

 
News 

Mar 20 2013: 
Best-selling author James Herbert who wrote the horror classic The Rats, has died aged 69...(more)

Mar 19 2013:  The controversy over the Chicago Public Schools restricting access to Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi's memoir of her youth in Iran during the Islamic Revolution, continues to roil the nation's third largest school district, as free speech advocates weigh in...(more)

Mar 19 2013: 
The Supreme Court have ruled 6-3 that the "first sale doctrine" applies to books purchased overseas. ...(more)

Mar 18 2013: 
Publishers Weekly estimate that over 1000 different titles sold 25,000+ ebooks in...(more)

Mar 14 2013: 
January bookstore sales rose 5.5%, to $2.1 billion, compared to December 2012, according to preliminary estimates from the Census Bureau. Total retail sales in January rose 6.1%, to $382.4 billion, compared to the same period a year...(more)

Mar 14 2013: 
The American Academy of Arts and Letters announced today the names of 19 writers who will receive its 2013 awards in literature...(more)

Mar 14 2013: 
Malaysian author Tan Twan Eng won this year's Man Asian Literary Prize for his novel The Garden of Evening Mists.
...(more)

Mar 13 2013: 
A long anticipated rival to the UK's Man Booker Prize is now a reality with the announcement that the Literature Prize has a sponsor, The Folio Society, and will thus be known as the Folio Prize...(more)

Mar 13 2013: 
The longlist for the Women's Prize for Fiction (formerly Orange Prize) has been announced, including Hilary Mantel, Zadie Smith, Barbara Kingsolver, Maria Semple, Gillian Flynn and fifteen...(more)

Mar 12 2013: 
More organizations, including the Authors Guild and Barnes & Noble, have filed objections to Amazon's request for future domain names such as .book, .author, .read, .app and...(more)


Read these news stories, and many others, in full
 

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