10/30/07

Bookstore Events in my email

Today my email included event reminders from two New Hampshire bookstores:

On Thursday, Nov. 1, at 7 PM Jonah Lehrer, author of Proust Was A Neuroscientist will be at Gibson's Bookstore in Concord to read and sign books.
"What can you say about a 25-year-old who is not only a Rhodes Scholar, but also has already written a book that is sort of a Unified Field Theory of literature, neuroscience, and art (including culinary art), and has managed to have it published by the most venerable independent publisher in the U.S.? Did I mention that the author was only 25? It's a great book. Come meet the author--we're sure his reading and the conversation that follows will be fascinating and far-ranging."

Village Book Store in Littleton will be part of Littleton's November Madness Event
on Friday, November 2nd, and Saturday, November 3rd.
"The Store is chock full with our holiday inventory of toys and games for you to shop, at special savings:
Toys and games are 10 to 20% off for this event.
Boxed holiday cards and calendars are 20% off.
We have a special selection of bargain books and toys at great savings.
Visit Littleton's Main Street and get a head start for the holidays!"

Book of the Week #44

Pumpkin Shivaree by Rick Agran; illustrated by Sara Anderson (Handprint Books, 2003)

This book begins "Well, I bet you never considered what its like to be a pumpkin..." and I bet you never have. But Rick Agran, a NH poet, considered it and the result was an inventive, boldly illustrated story of the life of a pumpkin.

Happy Halloween!

10/26/07

Tomorrow is Tomie dePaola Day

On Saturday, October 27, 2007 Tomie dePaola will accept the 51st annual Sarah Josepha Hale Award at 4:00 at the Newport Opera House. The event is free and open to all of Tomie's fans!
New Hampshire Governor John Lynch has proclaimed October 27, 2007 Tomie dePaola Day!

10/22/07

2007 New Hampshire Literary Award Winners

The New Hampshire Writers’ Project (NHWP) has announced the winners of the 2007 New Hampshire Literary Awards, a biennial program that honors outstanding works by writers connected to the Granite State. The awards ceremony takes place on November 17, 2007 at Southern New Hampshire University. Here are the details from their 10/19/07 press release:

This year NHWP presents the new Donald M. Murray Outstanding Journalism Award in honor of the late Donald M. Murray, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and mentor to many reporters and writers. The award’s first recipient is Annmarie Timmins, a veteran reporter for the Concord Monitor. The journalism judges said this about Timmins’s work: “Like Don Murray, Timmins tackles difficult and painful subjects, such as her sensitive and thorough look at gay adoptions and prison visits by loved ones outside the bars. Her compelling collection of stories displays tenacious reporting, unflinching prose and a commitment to portraying subjects with dignity.” Judges were Roy Peter Clark and Chip Scanlon of the Poynter Institute.

The New Hampshire Literary Award for Outstanding Work of Children’s Literature goes to Julie Baker for The Bread and Roses Strike of 1912. In this work of narrative nonfiction for young people, Baker explores the landmark strike involving textile workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts that galvanized the American labor movement and brought attention to such issues as child labor and workplace safety. “Baker delved into rich, documented material—complicated, historical, emotional, political—and laid it out fairly and with intelligence,” said the children’s literature judges. “She managed to acknowledge conflicting versions and responses and yet also took a stand in how the strike was presented. She didn’t lose the human story beneath a mountain of dry facts.” Judges were Carolyn Coman, Anita Riggio, and Carolyn Yoder.

The New Hampshire Literary Award for Outstanding Work of Fiction goes to Rebecca Curtis for the short-story collection Twenty Grand: And Other Tales of Love and Money. Curtis sets many of her stories in small-town New Hampshire, where she grew up hiking, skiing, and working in local restaurants and amusement parks. She has been called a “hugely talented writer” (Village Voice), and Twenty Grand, her debut collection, was published to critical acclaim. “Curtis is unafraid to peel back the beautiful top layer of bucolic New England to reveal the darkness beneath,” said the fiction judges. “From the simplest language, she can coax emotionally complex scenarios that resonate with the reader long past the story’s last word.” Judges were Tricia Bauer, Aine Greaney, and Deb Navas.

The Jane Kenyon Award for Outstanding Book of Poetry goes to Maggie Dietz for Perennial Fall, her first book of poetry. Dietz creates a world populated by the everyday and strange: amusement-park horses named Virgil and Sisyphus and squirrels hanging over tree branches “like fish.” Her poems have been described as mysterious and direct, humorous and elegiac. The poetry judges said, “Perennial Fall has music, wit, eloquence, emotional complexity, and sensual specificity of breathtaking tenderness. Her way of wrestling with the world’s harsh beauty is deeply persuasive.” Judges were Patrick Donnelly, Joan Houlihan, and Joyce Peseroff.

Edith Milton is the recipient of the New Hampshire Literary Award for Outstanding Work of Nonfiction for The Tiger in the Attic: Memories of the Kindertransport and Growing Up English. In this memoir Milton describes her journey from life as a Jewish child in Nazi Germany to life with a British foster family in England, where she and her sister lived as refugees for seven years, to the reunification with her mother in America. The nonfiction judges said, “Milton deftly brings the reader into the mind of an ‘alien’ child placed in a manor house, where the British character is everywhere in evidence. While Milton has a powerful story to tell, it’s the way she tells that dazzles. Always, she pushes past her own experiences to illuminate big questions: What is an alien? And where is home?” Judges were Pagan Kennedy, Rebecca Sinkler, and Ben Watson.

Theodore Weesner is the winner of the New Hampshire Literary Award for Lifetime Achievement. The author of seven novels and one short-story collection, Weesner has also had work published in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, Best American Short Stories, and many other publications. NHWP’s board of trustees grants the Lifetime Achievement Award. The board said, “From his award-winning debut novel, The Car Thief, to his most recent, Harbor Lights, Theodore Weesner has, in the words of Russell Banks, ‘come numerous times to the rescue of American realism in fiction.’ Raised in Flint, Michigan, Weesner is a New Hampshire writer by choice and by temperament. His novels The True Detective and Novemberfest are set in Portsmouth, where he has long made his home, and Harbor Lights crosses the Piscataqua into Maine. Throughout his career, he has pursued, to great critical acclaim, what he has called ‘the writer’s challenge of bringing order and interpretation to the chaos of general experience.’”

Book of the Week #43

Also the Hills by Francis Parkinson Keyes (Julian Messner, Inc., 1943)

Set in a village in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, probably based on North Haverhill, this is one of over 50 novels written by Francis Parkinson Wheeler Keyes (7/21/1885 - 7/3/1970). Keyes was married to U. S. Senator and Governor of New Hampshire, Henry Wilder Keyes. She published her first novel in 1919 and for over a decade she wrote a monthly column for Good Housekeeping called "Letters from a Senator’s Wife" and from 1923 to 1936 was a contributing editor. She is probably best known for the novel Dinner at Antoine's which is set in New Orleans where she lived for many years in what is now known as the Beauregard-Keyes House. She is buried in Newbury, Vermont which was the home of her maternal grandparents.

Ms. Keyes correspondence, much of it with Eleanor Roosevelt, is held by the New York State Library.

10/15/07

Book of the Week #42

The Voice at 3:00 a.m.: Selected Late & New Poems by Charles Simic (Harcourt, 2003)

This volume from the current U. S. Poet Laureate provides a good selection of his recent work. Simic begins his official duties as Poet Laureate this week when he opens the Library of Congress’s annual literary series on October 18 with a reading of his work.

10/8/07

Book of the Week #41

New Hampshire Patterns Photographs by Jon Gilbert Fox; text by Ernest Hebert. (Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 2007)

Beautiful photographs of New Hampshire -- from Shaker fence posts to NASCAR pit stops -- are complimented by ten essays by New Hampshire native and novelist Ernest Hebert.

10/5/07

Big Read Event Tonight

Author Jeanne Cavelos will present One Mother, Two Fathers: The History of Science Fiction in Concord tonight. She will discuss how the genre has grown through the work of its founders Mary Shelley, H.G. Wells and Jules Verne through today's groundbreaking masters of science fiction. Ms. Cavelos was last night's guest on NHPR's The Front Porch.

This program is part of the Big Read: NH Reads Fahrenheit 451 and will be presented twice:

10/5/2007 (7pm) at the Christa McAuliffe Planetarium, as part of their Super Stellar Fridays series. The evening will begin with a presentation of the planetarium program, The Night Sky. This event is open to the public free of charge, however reservations are required. Reserve your seats by calling 271-STAR or 271-7831.

10/9/2007 (7pm) at the Keene Public Library, Heberton Hall. This program is supported, in part, by The Keene Sentinel.

10/4/07

Holy Guacamole! Judy Schachner is coming to NH!

Water Street Bookstore has announced that Judy Schachner, winner of the 2005 Ladybug Picture Book Award, will be at Time of Wonder Bookstore in Exeter, NH on Friday, October 26, 2007 (3:00 - 4:00pm) I just saw Judy Schachner at the National Book Festival this past Saturday where she read the latest Skippyjon Jones adventure and it was very funny! So -- children of all ages -- go and see Schachner and find out what El Skippito is up to now!

Book of the Week #40

A Hundred White Daffodils by Jane Kenyon (St. Paul, MN: Graywolf Press, 1999)

Jane Kenyon is best know as a poet, but she wrote prose as well and this volume collects this work along with the Akhmatova translations, interviews with Kenyon, and the poem "Woman, Why are you Weeping?"

I have been planning new gardens recently, and phrases from the essays Kenyon wrote for the end page of Yankee keep popping into my mind.
"Sensible people grow beans. I grow peonies, campanula, roses, lilies, astilbe, bee balm. No matter how many flowers, there are never enough, and I harbor Napolionic tendencies toward floral expansion." (p. 48)
As New England begins thinking about saying "Good-bye and keep cold" to its gardens, these essays describe the experience beautifully. "Bulbs Planted in the Fall" originally appeared as a column in the Concord Monitor and is another good choice from this volume for this time of year.