Year: 2010 (Page 3 of 45)

Cleopatra: Queen of the World

Well, it seems as though Cleopatra has finally met her match and her name is Stacy Schiff. In case that name doesn’t ring a bell, let me enlighten you. Schiff is the author of Vera (Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov), winner of the Pulitzer Prize; Saint-Exupéry, a Pulitzer Prize finalist; and A Great Improvisation, winner of the George Washington Book Prize and the Ambassador Book Award. She has been a Guggenheim Fellow and a fellow at the center for Scholars & Writers, and received an Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

And to put the icing on the cake, yesterday, the New York Times came out with their list of the Top Ten Best Books of 2010 and Cleopatra was right there!

As Schiff said in a recent interview:

“Cleopatra was born a goddess, became a queen at 18 and at the height of her power she controlled virtually the entire eastern Mediterranean coast, the last great kingdom of any Egyptian ruler. For a fleeting moment she held the fate of the Western world in her hands. Having inherited a kingdom in decline, Cleopatra would go on to lose it, regain it, nearly lose it again, amass an empire and then lose it all.”

She continued:

“I wanted to take a story we have completely mangled – few as effectively as Cleopatra – and make this both a factual book and a readable book, for people who are not trained historians. I wanted to make her approachable but also strip away the incredible gossamer myth floating around her all the time. After Eve and Mary, Cleopatra may be the most written about woman ever.”

I think it’s fabulous when such a well known, respected writer takes on a person whose life has been completely misunderstood and gives them their due. Certainly, we all think we know a lot about Cleopatra; she looks like Elizabeth Taylor; wore an incredible amount of eye liner and seduced a lot of really famous men–Julius Caesar and Marc Antony for starters. And oh yeah, she committed suicide by bringing a poisonous asp (snake) into her bed. Truth is, only the barest of facts are known about her and from an historical perspective, her life can be proven in only the tiniest of bits and pieces. Schiff has uncovered every one and the result is a definitive biography on a truly fascinating woman. -Norma

Cleopatra: Queen of the World

 

 

Well, it seems as though Cleopatra has finally met her match and her name is Stacy Schiff. In case that name doesn’t ring a bell, let me enlighten you. Schiff is the author of Vera (Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov), winner of the Pulitzer Prize; Saint-Exupéry, a Pulitzer Prize finalist; and A Great Improvisation, winner of the George Washington Book Prize and the Ambassador Book Award. She has been a Guggenheim Fellow and a fellow at the center for Scholars & Writers, and received an Academy Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

 

And to put the icing on the cake, yesterday, The New York Times came out with their list of the Top Ten Best Books of 2010 and Cleopatra was right there!

 

As Schiff said in a recent interview,

Cleopatra was born a goddess, became a queen at 18 and at the height of her power she controlled virtually the entire eastern Mediterranean coast, the last great kingdom of any Egyptian ruler. For a fleeting moment she held the fate of the Western world in her hands. Having inherited a kingdom in decline, Cleopatra would go on to lose it, regain it, nearly lose it again, amass an empire and then lose it all.”

She continued:

I wanted to take a story we have completely mangled – few as effectively as Cleopatra – and make this both a factual book and a readable book, for people who are not trained historians. I wanted to make her approachable but also strip away the incredible gossamer myth floating around her all the time.

After Eve and Mary, Cleopatra may be the most written about woman ever.”

 

I think it’s fabulous when such a well known, respected writer takes on a person whose life has been completely mis-told and gives them their due. Certainly, we all think we know a lot about Cleopatra; she looks like Elizabeth Taylor; wore an incredible amount of eye liner and seduced a lot of really famous men… Julius Caesar and Marc Antony for starters. And oh yeah, she committed suicide by bringing a poisonous asp (snake) into her bed. Truth is, only the barest of facts are known about her and from an historical perspective, her life can be proven in only the tiniest of bits and pieces. Schiff has uncovered every one and the result is a definitive biography on a truly fascinating woman.

This would make a great Christmas gift!

.

Stacy Schiff

 

 

The Eleven Questions John Grisham Has Never Been Asked Before: Part 3

Question 3: How long have you collected first editions?

Answer: I bought my first one from Lemuria 10-12 years ago. I look for Faulkners, Hemingways, Steinbecks, and the occasional Mark Twain. The market for these has held up extremely well. Plus, they’re great to touch and look at.

Question 4: Do you have any first editions of A Time To Kill?

Answer: Yep, buried in the back yard. At one time I owned 1000 of the 5000 firsts, and I was desperately trying to sell them. This was back in 1989. I stopped when I had about a 100 left.

Question 5: So you collect your own books?

Answer: Only the first three have any real value as first editions – A Time To Kill, The Firm, and The Pelican Brief. After that, the first printings were large and killed any chance of owning a rare book. A keep a stash of all my books. I enjoy giving them away.

Stay tuned to the blog over the coming weeks: John Grisham will be answering more of his own questions no one has ever asked him before.

See if you can correctly answer Question #1 to win signed first editions and other goodies. (By the way, John Evans, has added one more prize to the pot: A signed first edition of King of Tortsclick here to find out more.) This first question will be answered at the end of Grisham’s question series.

Click here for Question 2 on Mississippi Politics.

Home Repair and Halibuts

I like the idea of giving big books for Christmas — big glossy books seem slightly extravagant, something you might not buy for yourself very often, but would be happy once you owned it. DK books make some of the best “big books” on the market, and I often can’t help but flip through them when we get a DK order in. And this last time, after flipping through them, I decided I had to take a couple of them home with me. I think either would make a great Christmas gift.

Do It Yourself: Home ImprovementMy wife and I became first-time homeowners a year ago, and since then I’ve started collecting books about home repair and home improvement (it’s slightly cheaper and infinitely easier to buy books about a subject than to actually do that thing). What I’ve found is that pretty much all the books cover about 90% of the same material, but each book will have something unique — maybe a topic that isn’t covered in the other books, or a set of instructions that are slightly more in depth than the other books, or even just a single photograph or illustration that saves the day when you are well past the point of no return in a repair or project.

DK’s Do It Yourself: Home Improvement is one of the best guides I’ve seen. Every repair or project has full-color photographs for every step in the process. Materials, tools, construction…everything is laid out with clear, concise descriptions and instructions. Whether you need your first home improvement guide, or just want to add another to your library, this is a great choice.

Natural HistoryThe title on the cover reads Natural History, but it’s the subtitle that gives it away: “The Ultimate Visual Guide to Everything on Earth”. Rocks and minerals, bacteria, plant life, and the entire spectrum of the animal kingdom is contained in this book, with sharp full-color photos and descriptions. This is the kind of book that I would flip through for hours as a kid, though I don’t remember any books that looked this good or were this complete. I bought this as a Christmas present for my intensely inquisitive nephew (nobody tell him!), and my hope is that he will find a lot of answers and a lot of new questions in this book.

Glasswort


Beetle

Mississippians – the coffee-table book – Trivia

1. Who was the most reluctant famous Mississippian to be profiled (hint: this Mississippian owns all of his or her own photos — and didn’t want to give us permission to publish his or her likeness)?

2. What was the most expensive photograph to acquire for publication?

3. Who is the relatively unknown Mississippian who was the force behind Die Hard, 48 Hours, Predator, Point Break and Field of Dreams?

4. Who was the fastest man to ever play baseball – a name, perhaps, one we’ve never before heard?

5. What Mississippian sent comic skits scribbled on notebook paper to Saturday Night Live – and soon became head writer for the show?

6. What Mississippian has the largest collection of first-edition magazines in the world?

7. What Mississippians has one of the largest collections of blues photography in the world – and is one of the few non-musicians to be inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame?

8. What Mississippian was the first female African American postmaster in the U.S?

9. What Mississippian is the only American to live – with permission – in North Korea?

10. What Mississippian heads a company that will change the way Americans use electricity?

11. What African-American Mississippian was responsible for the Teddy Bear craze?

12. What Mississippian received the most nominations (this person is not featured in the book).

13. Who has been nominated for next year’s edition?

14. Who was intentionally left out of the 2010 edition?

Tonight at Lemuria Books, find the answers to these questions – and more!

Also, meet editor Neil White, as well as the Mississippians listed below (all are happy to inscribe for Christmas gifts):

1. Gary Grubbs, one of film and television’s most recognizable character actors.

2. John Maxwell, award-winning actor and playwright.

3. Martha Bergmark, found of the Mississippi Center for Justice, a group that is changing the legal landscape of Mississippi.

4. William Goodman, emerging visual artist

5. Mike and Cathy Stewart, America’s top dog trainers and breeders (their dogs sell for $12,000 each)

6. Howard Bahr, award-winning author.

Submerged in Karen Russell’s Swamp(landia!)

In my previous blog post, I raved about Karen Russell’s short story collection St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves. Since then I’ve received an advance copy of her new novel Swamplandia! which centers on a family from one of the St. Lucy’s stories.

Set in the swamplands of Florida, Russell’s novel focuses on the Bigtree family:  owners of the theme park Swamplandia!, faux Native-Americans, and alligator wrestlers.  The narration oscillates between the youngest Bigtree child Ava and her older brother Kiwi, and it explores the heartache of losing Hilola Bigtree, wife, mother, and alligator-wrestler extraordinaire, to cancer.

In addition to their grief, the family must cope with the loss of interest in Floridian swampland culture and history—essentially the Bigtree way of life and source of pride.  Tourists stop coming to see the Bigtrees wrestle their Seths (the Bigtree name for all of their alligators), preferring a new corporate-owned theme park called the World of Darkness in which you can go through a simulated water-park version of “hell.”  The World of Darkness becomes a hell for poor Kiwi Bigtree as he joins forces with his family’s enemy to send money home.  He suffers through bad food, poor living arrangements, shady co-workers, and a cruel boss for his minuscule paycheck.  Meanwhile back in the swamps, his sisters Ossie and Ava venture to their own version of hell through Ossie’s spiritualist ventures and dates with the dead.

I was touched by this quirky family’s heartache and how each of them copes with their hardships.  You will be too.  I urge you to grab a copy of this book when it’s released in February.  Bonus: Karen Russell will be here signing Swamplandia! on March 25, 2011.  So get it, read it, then discuss it with Karen Russell herself!

Read Zita’s take on Swamplandia! here.  -Kaycie

Welcome to Earth

Earth by The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (Grand Central Publishing, September 2010)

Jon Stewart takes readers through a clever look at various aspects of earthly living.  With an Alien Preface, this guide is a handbook for post-human existence.  Stewart and the writers of the Daily Show take these planetary outsiders through the gamut of all things Earth: from our of understanding of planetary geography to weather to evolution to the human body to reproduction. Our views of politics, science, and social practices, such as religion and weddings, are explained.

“For Earth, weather was the physical manifestation of daily and yearly fluctuations of the atmosphere. For us, weather was the topic of choice used to fill the myriad of awkward silences that plagued our daily lives.  No other shared experience evoked this kind of elemental empathy. Weather reminded us that we were all in this together, that for all our differences, rich and poor, black and white, zealot and atheist could all agree that yes, last Wednesday was, in fact, cold enough for us.”

Interspersed throughout are helpful FAQs (Future Alien Questions).  A few of my favorites include:

Q: What was the happiest period in a human’s life?

A: Either the one immediately preceding the period one was currently in, or the one immediately following it.”

Q: In a population of billions, how did you decide whom to marry?

A: Most of us believed we had one perfect soul mate somewhere on earth. Luckily for us, that person usually lived not too far away, spoke the same language, was of an equivalent level of physical attractiveness, and shared our love of mountain biking.”

-Peyton

http://lemuriabooks.com/index.php?show=book&isbn=9780446579223

“This ain’t your grandma’s embroidery”

First of all I would just like to thank all of the crafters out there in the world for dedicating their lives to be surrounded by precious handmade things. Second of all I have made it my life’s mission to join their ranks. The next time you walk through the doors of Lemuria be sure to check out the most awesome craft section at the far end of the front desk.

Within the past month and a half I have become obsessed with embroidery. Not just any embroidery though, this is Jenny Hart embroidery. Jenny Hart is the queen of the crafters. She has her own company online called Sublime Stitching where you can buy all kinds of hip patterns. Or better yet, you can buy her books! We have two of her books in the store and they are great!

She can teach the most beginner of beginner embroiderers how to stitch. She includes easy to understand how-to illustrations of a number of popular stitches, along with super cute projects. Her first book is called Sublime Stitching, which is great and has a TON of reusable embroidery transfers. However, her newest book Embroidered Effects is my favorite!

Seriously, the cuteness is unending. There is such a variety of patterns that you will want to make something for everyone you know. Inexpensive Christmas gifts perhaps? Well that is what everyone is getting from me! And might I add I will be creating all these awesome handmade goodies in the crafting room I have set up in my house. I know, I know.

But honestly Jenny Hart is not the only crafter with some great books out there. Our craft shelves have some of the best. -Ellen

Lemuria Reads Mississippians: Mike Stewart

Flipping through the galley of Mississippians, I gratefully acknowledged the bios and pictures of Mississippi greats so familiar from literature, racial reconciliation history, music, education and art in this comprehensive Hall of Fame.

Then I saw the dogs, dogs standing at attention next to a handsome, outdoorsy looking fellow named Mike Stewart, owner and trainer at Wildrose Kennels right up in old Oxpatch, 143 acres of field just for training and housing English labs whose genetic make up comes from dogs with such regal sounding homes as Queensbury Estate in Scotland and Arley Hall Estates in England.

Ranked by Forbes magazine (April 2009, complete with pictures of Mike and labs) as one of the best recession proof businesses in the USA, Wildrose Kennels specializes in training labs to do just about anything you can imagine and more. One of the newer programs is training in diabetic alert.

These dogs are taught to retrieve, to hunt, to play, to obey. They can even major in adventure. Lucky dogs. Rather expensive dogs, ($1,500 for a pup, $15,000 for a fully trained adult), Mike says the dogs don’t cost as much as a big fine car which you swap out every four years or so. These dogs are now living all over the world and people fly in from near and far to be a part of the training and purchasing of these fine working and companion dogs.

Mr. Stewart was Ole Miss Chief of Police from 1981-2000 and equates training dogs with keeping students well behaved at the University, quipping that dogs and college kids both need consistency and repetition to be good citizens.

Character wise, I will say this fella is way up there. Who, owning kennels in Oxford, Arkansas and Colorado, has time to call an admiring, blogging bookseller in Jackson, MS for an inteview over the phone? He does. And he’s prompt. He even invited me up to train any shelter puppy from my own copious list on www.sitstay.petfinder.com. Lucky me. Thanks, Neil White, for introducing me to this hospitable, gentlemanly entrepreneur whose passion for dogs equals my own and many others in this gone-to-the-dogs world.

-Pat

Edible Schoolyard: A Universal Idea by Alice Waters

The moment I laid eyes on this book I knew I wanted to read it, and I found it to be beautiful both inside and out.

Many years before “green” became fashionable, Alice Waters was living in Berkeley, California, running her own restaurant. Though she had been trained at the International Montessori School in London, Alice knew after several years of teaching that her true calling was the culinary arts. Soon she opened her own restaurant in Berkeley, California, but it was not too long before she began to notice that the once vibrant public education system was suffering.

Edible Schoolyard is full of beautiful photos taken by David Liittschwager of National Geographic

With all the beauty of synchronicity, Alice began to share her ideas and soon she had teachers and volunteers willing to make the dream a reality: a school garden. The idea of Edible Education involves the following principles: Food is an academic subject; Schools provide lunch for every child; Schools support farms; Children learn by doing; Beauty is language. Teachers are able to turn every type of lesson out of the school garden–lessons for math, writing, reading, and science to name a few.

Alice’s story quickly goes to your heart. I immediately wanted to find out if there were school gardens in our own public school system here in Jackson–and there are! Buddy Bounds and Noah Gray lead the Environmental Learning Program for the Jackson Public Schools. Since 1992, they have been providing all kinds of outdoor programs for students to enjoy. Some of these include: Gardening; Soil Erosion; Nature Trails; Fishing; Water Testing; Catfish Feeding; Soil Conservation; Recycling; Nonpoint Source Pollution; Plant/Tree Identification. All of this takes place on 640 acres that is said to be “breathtaking.” The area boasts a 35 acre lake, 14 miles of nature trails, three outdoor classrooms, catfish pond, ropes course, cemetery (1800 circa), old home sites, more than 75 different native trees, animals, and much more.

School gardens beckon individuals to come together whether you are a teacher, parent, child or involved citizen. I have heard of one more school garden devoted to just one school, Marshall Elementary. I wonder how they are doing. Do you know about a school garden in the area? Please comment if you do.

Much more information on Edible Education can be found on Alice Waters’ website.

By Nightfall by Michael Cunningham

In 2000, Michael Cunningham’s The Hours won the Pulitzer Prize. Those who did not read it probably ended up seeing the spectacular movie by the same name featuring many contemporary Hollywood faces. Now, Cunningham has written another novel, entitled By Nightfall, this time based on the life of an art gallery dealer in New York City.

Set in current day times, Cunningham does a great job of describing the SoHo art district and the thin walled loft inhabited by the 40-something protagonist Peter and his disillusioned editor wife, Rebecca.  All rocks along in their rather non-spectacular, often boring existence, until Rebecca’s wayward much younger brother Ethan settles in at their loft for a three week stay. His cunning personality mixed with his inability to “find himself” rocks the status quo and sends chills and questions into the hearts and minds of Peter and Rebecca. This short, but appealing, novel expands on the nature of contemporary wealthy city life, its characteristics  and dilemmas, and the role of all kinds of love in the twenty-first century.

Signed copies are available!

-Nan

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