Year: 2010 (Page 24 of 45)

Grisham’s Theodore Boone: A legal mystery for young and old

Growing up in Mississippi, I have always know John Grisham’s name. From his huge house outside of Oxford to his books and movies, some of which were shot in Mississippi, I have always felt that he was our very own version of a mythical being. As we would drive in to Oxford for football games, my dad would regale us with stories about John Grisham coaching tee ball and little league for his children, and even as a child I found these stories endearing.

When I heard that John would be publishing a young adult series, the same image of a caring father came to mind, and I knew I wanted to read Theodore Boone: Kid Lawyer to see what it was all about. I have to say that Theodore is an adorable character. He is thoughtful when it comes to his friends, loyal when trouble is afoot, and brave when he needs to be.

Theo is the only child of two busy lawyers, so this 13-year-old spends enough time around the courtroom to know quite a bit about the legal system. Every day after school he does his homework with his dog Judge in his “office” at his parents office building. He helps classmates with legal problems, such as bankrupt parents and escaped pets being held by the city pound. He even gets his Government class into the biggest trial of the year: the murder of  a woman in her own home. The only suspect in this trial is the husband, but even with such little evidence, Theo tries to stay objective as he watches the trial progress. When a friend comes to Theo with some information that could make or break this case, Theo must decide if he should convince his friend come forward or let a murderer walk free.

John Grisham’s language when describing the ins and outs of the legal system is so clear that I was never confused. Also, Theo’s knowledge never seemed unrealistic–this smart kid loves law, and whereas my hobby as a thirteen-year-old was reading and dancing, his is legal knowledge.  I had a lot of fun with this novel and cannot wait for the next book in this series, due very soon.

If you are a Grisham fan, young or old, you won’t be disappointed with this new brand of legal mystery. Adults will really enjoy another Grisham mystery, and Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys fans now have another series to devour. In the video below, Grisham talks about the inspiration behind Theo and the challenge of venturing into a new genre. Footage of John reading to his daughter’s classroom is also included, along with their very candid reactions to Theodore Boone.

We have signed first editions of Theodore Boone: Kid Lawyer, so come on by and pick up one for you and one for the tween in your life.

John Brandon knows Florida

by Kelly Pickerill

I started reading Citrus County this weekend,  John Brandon’s new book and our First Editions Club pick for August. The novel is set in Florida in, you guessed it, Citrus County (visitcitrus.com). The county is on the Gulf coast in central Florida, north of Tampa but south of the panhandle, and it’s home to such natural wonders as the Homosassa Springs, the lazy Crystal River full of gentle manatees, and, in Brandon’s rather dark, quietly violent tale, dangerously disillusioned children and apathetic adults.

Toby is a junior high delinquent with a Holden Caulfield complex who spends more time in detention than at home. Shelby is a bright-eyed and -minded good girl who one day decides to pursue Toby. Mr. Hibma is their geography teacher who, when not thinking of ways to avoid actually teaching, fantasizes about killing his colleague but is unable to come up with the right method — no cutting of throats or gun violence, no poison (too easy to track) — before he finally settles on smothering.

I’m not too far in, but the event that has put Citrus County on the news in the big cities has just occurred — Shelby’s little sister has been kidnapped — and Toby is more than involved. His intent, or one of many, is to take the swagger out of Shelby’s step, so to speak, to steal her confidence, incongruous as it is with his own worldview.  But more than that, Toby hopes that “when the manatees give up the ghost or a hurricane finally gets a bead on Citrus County, trucks of guys would come down from Tallahassee and dynamite the place and slide it off into the Gulf of Mexico to sink.”

Being from Florida, I enjoy reading books set there. Florida has a big personality; it can’t help but butt its way to the front of the stage in parts of the narrative. There’s kitsch in every corner and, while that may be true for most states, Florida’s different, because the kitsch is so often juxtaposed against tremendous natural beauty. That eyesore tourist shop on a white sand beach, the easter egg-colored condos that mar your view of the ocean, the sheds with signs that boast 20-Foot Gator! off the interstate, surrounded by thousands of them in their swampy natural habitat. In Weeki Wachee, not too far from Citrus County, there’s a spring where an underwater theatre was constructed back in 1947, and to this day tourists can get a glimpse of life under the sea as “mermaids” perform shows with the aid of air hoses.

“Natives” of Florida have a tendency not to claim it, though they continue to stay, aware that their inertia is conscious; their parents or grandparents moved to Florida from somewhere, some years ago, yet no matter how long they live there they will always consider it to be outside themselves, a place that should be mocked and degraded but that they are loath to leave.  What John Brandon has done in Citrus County is to create a culture around this quiet dissatisfaction, where sometimes something really bad has to happen in order to relieve the everyday, mundane misery. Toby thinks he knows just what that is — it’s the only thing he’s ever been meant to do.

John Brandon will sign and read at Lemuria starting at 5pm on Tuesday, July 13th.

The Invisible Gorilla

The Invisible Gorilla and Other Ways Our Intuitions Deceive Us by Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons

(Crown, 2010)

Chabris and Simons shared the 2004 IG Nobel Prize in psychology for their now famous “Gorilla Experiment”. While teaching at Harvard 12 years ago, this single experiment launched a whole new wave of ideas on how we think about ourselves, our judgments, our reactions, and our intentions. Invisible Gorilla sheds light on the traps that we unknowingly lead ourselves into, not knowing that these traps even exist.  Hopefully reading this book will help us to become clearer thinkers and thus prevent problems caused by our erroneous views of reality.

Invisible Gorilla is focused on six everyday illusions that profoundly influence our lives. The illusions of:

1) Attention: Our overestimation of our intelligence, attractiveness, sense of humor, etc.

2) Memory: Our recollection of events based loosely on reality.

3) Confidence: Our self-assurance confusing confidence with competence.

4) Knowledge: We know less than we think we do.

5) Cause: We mistake correlation for causation.

6) Potential: Loosing sight of our limitations.

The authors explain in detail how these illusions affect us, the consequences they have and how we can overcome or minimize their impact.

I especially enjoyed the ending chapters. “Get Smart Quick” explores our misconception about perceived healthy mental habits: listening to Mozart makes you smarter or working crosswords prevents Alzheimer’s disease. This chapter does confirm our need for aerobic exercise and that blood flow to the brain and physical health may be our best tools for healthy mental awareness.

Chabris and Simons acknowledge in the conclusion the immense trust we have in ourselves and how difficult it is to be honest with our internal reactions and judgments. The Invisible Gorilla is a tool to help us tune up our daily mental vehicle allowing our physical self to run more smoothly.

Mary Karr and the power of the narrative

“Those who do not have power over the story that dominates their lives, power to retell it, rethink it, deconstruct it, joke about it, and change it as times change, truly are powerless, because they cannot think new thoughts.” (Salman Rushdie, “One Thousand Days in a Balloon,” New York Times, December 12, 1991)

This was the opening quote to a book entitled The Story of Your Life by Mandy Aftel. I chose this book to read on the craft of memoir for a course I took years ago entitled Women’s Lives. I really had no idea what it was about. I knew it would involve writing and women and a well-loved teacher named Polly Glover. That was enough for my nineteen-year-old self but I still reap the benefits of this course over ten years later.

Reading Mary Karr’s memoirs has been the perfect excuse to delve back into this world. I had always heard of Karr and Liars’ Club, but I kind of shy away from stuff everybody’s reading and wait until the hullabaloo passes. How lucky was I when I learned that Mary Karr was coming to Lemuria and I could read all three of her memoirs? . . . a course in one woman’s life. So I began to wonder why memoirs appeal to so many people. What was it about Karr that caused such a strong response from readers? Was it just another rough childhood story or was it something more, something that would endure?

The 10th anniversary edition of The Liars’ Club includes an introduction by Karr, a reflection on the response to Liars’ Club over the past ten years. Karr writes:

“If The Liars’ Club began as a love letter to my less-than-perfect clan, it spawned (on its own terms) love letters from around the world. Its publication constructed for me–in midlife, unexpectedly–what I hankered for so desperately for as a dreamy kid comforted only by reading: that mythic village of like-minded souls who bloom together by sharing old tales–the kind that fire you up and set you loose, the true kind.” (xvi)

I wish I had more time write on this subject matter for there are so many women writers who have shared, who have bared all, blazed new trails, who have opened the door to discussion on many taboo topics, who have created community through their words. Maya Angelo, Anaïs Nin, Simone de Beauvoir, Virgina Woolf, Anne Moody, Alice Walker . . . and Mary Karr. They are mothers and sisters and friends and mentors when there is a space to be filled, their words wait for the open door.

Sometimes, when I have something tough to do and when space allows (no, a Kindle won’t do), I put the only thing I have tangible from these women in my bag, Maya Angelou’s Letter to my Daughter, Simone de Beauvoir’s The Prime of Life, Alice Walker’s The Way Forward Is with a Broken Heart and In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens. Like Karr writes, it is some sort of mini-village I carry with me, a group of women who feed a confidence and bravery to move forward. The essayist Kennedy Fraser expresses a similar need:

“I felt very lonely then, self-absorbed, shut off. I needed all this murmured chorus, this continuum of true-life stories, to pull me through. They were like mothers and sisters to me, these literary women, many of them already dead; more than my own family, they seemed to stretch out a hand.”

You are invited to meet Mary Karr this coming Wednesday for a signing and reading at 5:00 and 5:30 respectively. Her third memoir, Lit, is now out in paperback.

Click here for Billie’s blog posting on Lit.

Who can resist a puppy?

I can’t, anyway.

You can't handle this

A few weeks ago my wife and I got a standard poodle puppy. We had plenty of opinions and ideas (no froo-froo poodle haircuts for this guy!), but we realized there were plenty of things that we didn’t have settled in our minds. Even basic things — house training, for example — can get very frustrating if you are inconsistently applying different methods and ideas at the same time. We realized that, as with much in life, what we really needed was a good book.

There’s plenty of material about dog training out there, but we wanted something specific — straightforward, no-nonsense, easy to understand and apply. Books about dog psychology are fascinating, and I can appreciate the unique approach of the more esoteric puppy whisperers. But we wanted something that cut out all the unnecessary theory and boiled it down to just the essentials: some clear instructions that we could follow.

After asking around and looking at a few different books, I hit on Before and After Getting Your Puppy, by Ian Dunbar. It’s actually two previous books (Before Getting Your Puppy and…10 points if you can guess the title of the other book) bound together in a nice hardcover format. You know how some cookbooks are bound as hardcovers with glossy boards and no dustjacket, so you can use it in the kitchen and just wipe it off if it gets dirty? Same idea here, and they managed to keep the price down to $19.95 which is great for a hardcover — especially after heading to the pet store for a new collar, leash, food and water bowls, extra puppy food, some new treats, dog toys, replacement clippers after the old one burns out, trips to the vet for shots, trips to the vet for upset puppy tummy…

The book is structured perfectly — it’s broken down into “developmental deadlines” — so you can follow along, week by week, and keep track of what your puppy (and you) should be learning and working on. Dunbar is explicitly clear about what behavior is normal (and can be ignored) and what behavior is a sign of bad things to come (and needs to be addressed quickly).

Something else I really appreciated is that the language of the book, while it is written for a committed and willing owner, never assumes an advanced level of understanding or some previous experience of the reader. I’m familiar with some of the ideas and training methods, since I grew up with dogs all my life and have read about dog training before. But I still appreciated the clear explanations — and found that some of the things I thought I understood, I really didn’t.

A new puppy is great fun, but the funny puppy misbehavior can quickly become a huge hassle and annoyance as the dog grows older…and too frequently, what results is another “bad dog” in the city shelter hoping for a rescuer. Hoping that you just end up with a good dog occasionally works, but there’s no reason to leave it up to luck — put in some good work early on and you vastly increase your chances of getting a “good dog” — because you will be a good owner.

The Garden of Eden by Ernest Hemingway

I probably shouldn’t admit this, but I hated Ernest Hemingway all the way through high school and college.  (I place the blame on a bad experience with a 9th grade research paper on A Farewell to Arms) I have, however, decided to give Mr. Hemingway another chance to impress me, and this time I think he just might have succeeded.  I’m about halfway finished withThe Garden of Eden, a posthumously published novel about the relationship between American writer David Bourne and his young wife Catherine.

This novel examines interchangeability of gender roles, which for Catherine and David takes a dangerous turn when they both fall in love with the same woman.  That grabbed your attention, didn’t it?  There is, of course, much more to say about the themes in this novel (as well as the controversy over its editing), but for your sake,  I’m going to spare you my tendency to be a literature geek and let you explore these themes yourself. If you’re a Hemingway fan, and you haven’t read this yet, give it a try.  If you’re not a Hemingway fan, maybe this will win you over like it did me.   As soon as I’m finished with this novel, I can’t wait to get my hands on the newest edition of A Moveable Feast (See Lisa’s blog on that here)

Also be sure to check out our valuable Hemingway first editions. 

-Kaycie

What is a great book?

There is a special category of non-fiction books that I call just simply great books. You know the ones that you read and you don’t think “this is a book for a gardening person, or a sports fan, or the outdoor type” but instead you say this is a great book. Like I said this category is the “great books” category. In the store I created a section called “culture” – in the beginning it was secretly my way of keeping all of the books I like or want to read in the same place so I either won’t forget to sell them or forget to read them. Examples would be Into the Wild, Class by Paul Fussell, Suburban Nation, Fast Food Nation –  one of those types of really great books is Blind Side by Michael Lewis. When non-reader friends started to tell me about this book I took their advice and picked it up. Way before there was a movie Blind Side was clearly identified as one of those “great” books. Why? First, I think it’s very human without being cheesy and second because it takes something we (I) love – i.e. football and enhances it/makes it better. I want to read the book again before football season because I think it will make me enjoy football even more to have re-read it – that’s the kind of thing that makes a great book great.

But also it’s a book about real people. These real people made a decision, seemingly effortlessly so, to adopt Michael Oher. This decision obviously changed their lives and his. Now we have the unique opportunity of learning what lead them to that choice. What decisions did they make years and years ago that led them to the choice to adopt someone who seemed so different from themselves. This wasn’t a little baby but a nearly grown man. They made a difference – a tangible difference. I, for one, am interested to read the book and to meet the Tuohy’s. We’ll get that chance as In a Heartbeat will be out next week and the Tuohy’s will be here signing on July 21 starting at 4:00.

I Loved this Book: Art Lover by Anton Gill

I have always been a history buff. I grew up with a father who loved to read books having to do with history or historical figures. Some that I remember seeing on his bedside table were about Churchill, Madam Chiang Kai-shek, Mark Twain; anything on World War II, the Terracotta Soldiers, Nixon, Kennedy, etc. He was interested in everything and everybody. From him, I developed a wide spread curiosity and a particular love of biographies.
I have just finished Anton Gill’s biography of Peggy Guggenheim entitled Art Lover. I was, of course, familiar with the Guggenheim Museum in New York but not familiar with Peggy Guggenheim per say. The fact that I learned from the fly leaf still goes down as one of the most interesting things I have learned about anybody! At age 14, Peggy’s father, Benjamin Guggenheim, went down with the Titanic. That is fascinating enough but add to that he was en route home from installing the elevator machinery in the Eiffel Tower. Now, read that sentence again…how wild?!?
Needless to say, Peggy inherited a small fortune that in the ensuing years would be directed towards acquiring primarily modern art. Just before the outbreak of WWII, Peggy had plans to open her own museum in Paris but with the advent of war, she fled Paris and lived awhile in the French countryside. With the museum’s money at her disposal she commenced to building the art collection that would one day make her famous. After several years she moved to New York, where she became a real patron of the arts with her eye primarily fixed on new, modern artists. She practically discovered Jackson Pollack and financed his work and showcased his art. She bought numerous Picassos and works by Magritte, Miro and Brancusi. It was her uncle, Solomon Guggenheim, whose name and money created the gorgeous Guggenheim Museum in New York that was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Peggy was very involved in the museum, overseeing the collections and always on the look out for new artists like Alexander Calder.
Her private life did not fare as well as her artistic endeavors and Gill goes into great length detailing her dalliances with men such as Samuel Beckett, Max Ernst, Yves Tanguy and Roland Penrose. She had several failed marriages and two children whom she kept in boarding schools and with nannies. She never wanted to be a mother and did not try to hide that fact. She was always searching for some kind of meaning or real fame and looked to find it through men, money, power and influence. She died alone in Venice, where there is a museum of modern art that bears her name. A really interesting book that I thoroughly enjoyed. -Norma

excited about a book

I have read one chapter of David Mitchell’s new book and I’ve now put everything else down to finish it.  This is a big deal for me because I have lots of things to read; lots of things to do; a limited amount of time before I go back to school in the fall and thus a finite time to indulge in ‘fun’ reading; also because I’ve never read David Mitchell before.  And it’s kind of a long book.

But The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet has garnered some very nice attention – you’ll spot it on the front page of the New York Times Book review this weekend, a lovely review by Dave Eggers – and David Mitchell’s work (Cloud Atlas, Black Swan Green, Ghostwritten) has been so highly praised in the past (“Mitchell is, clearly, a genius. He writes as though at the helm of some perpetual dream machine, can evidently do anything” wrote the NYT book review after Cloud Atlas came out) that I feel compelled to read him.

Already (one chapter!) I’m overwhelmed by the scope of Mitchell’s imagination. The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet is set in 1799 in Japan – specifically a man-made island in Nagasaki harbor named Dejima – and tells the story of a young Dutch clerk (our Jacob) who plans on making his way as a bookkeeper in Dejima for a while before returning to Holland to marry his fiancee.  And that’s really all I know.  Read Eggers’ review to find out more.  But it doesn’t even matter, does it?  Nine pages in and I can tell that for the next 460 of them, I will be happily immersed in a really, really good story, set in, for all I know about Japan circa 1799, another world.

So……..even though we’re shut today (Happy 4th July), come and check it out.  We are, by the way, open tomorrow.

Susie

A Nest for Celeste by Henry Cole

As the title indicates, this story is about Celeste, art, inspiration, and the meaning of home. The time period is 1821 at Oakley Plantation located a short distance from New Orleans. The story is not only about Celeste and her quest for making a home, but you will get a glimpse into life and time of James John Audubon (1785-1851) and how he went about painting portraits of beautiful birds of North America. The story also includes Audubon’s 13-year-old assistant, Joseph Mason and his relationship with Celeste. This is a very charming and entertaining read. (Young Adult Middle)

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