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www.alabamabooksmith.com
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Alabama Booksmith-
Description: Independent bookstore. Includes staff recommendations and a calendar of events.
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Books of The Times: For Master of Surreal, This Cast Feels Real
“Under the Dome” gravely threatens Stephen King’s status as a mere chart-busting pop cultural phenomenon. feeds.nytimes.com |
When Detroit Never Slept
In this novel of midcentury Detroit, a young woman searches for authenticity and passion. feeds.nytimes.com |
Entrapment by Nelson Algren | Book review
The self-styled "tin whistle of American letters", Nelson Algren writes prose that is both piercing and hauntingly lyrical: the song of an America forever in pursuit of an illusory ideal. Algren articulates the quiet tragedies of the dispossessed – the junkies, hookers, deadbeats and dreamers. This book spans his career, from the righteous rage of his Depression-era stories to the more strident statements of the 60s. His unfinished novel, Entrapment, is bracketed by early draft extracts from The Man With the Golden Arm, and previously uncollected stories, poems and essays. Like his characters, Algren lingers on the outskirts of the American literary canon; it must be hoped that this book will advance his case for inclusion.Lettie Ransleyguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds feeds.guardian.co.uk |
Colm TóibÃn wins Costa prize to at last take first major book award
After being pipped at the finishing line several times, Irish writer edges out favourite, Hilary Mantel, to win Costa novel categoryColm TóibÃn is one of the most highly regarded Irish writers of his generation, loved by his readers and admired by his peers, but when it comes to major book prizes he is something of a bridesmaid. He so often nearly wins them but doesn't – until, that is, tonight when he was named winner of the Costa novel of the year award.It was an achievement all the more notable because TóibÃn was up against the literary sensation of last year: Hilary Mantel's Booker prize-winning tale of Tudor intrigue, Wolf Hall. "It's just great but I'm very surprised," said TóibÃn. "Wolf Hall was a wonderful book."Brooklyn, a sparely written account of a young woman's emigration from 1950s Ireland to New York, was one of five category winners announced tonight which will now compete for the overall Costa book prize.Other winners were Christopher Reid in the poetry category for A Scattering; Graham Farmelo in the biography section for his account of the life of quantum physicist Paul Dirac; Patrick Ness, the children's book award for The Ask and the Answer; and Raphael Selbourne, the first novel award for Beauty.TóibÃn was on the Booker longlist but to widespread surprise was not shortlisted. Previously, The Master was just pipped to the Booker by The Line of Beauty in 2004 while The Blackwater Lightship was shortlisted in 1999, the year JM Coetzee won for Disgrace. TóibÃn also has form in the Costas – or Whitbreads as they were formerly known – with a shortlisting in 1990 for his first novel, The South.TóibÃn said he was delighted to win and that book awards did matter. "It does make a great difference to what publishers call sales and what I call readers." He described Brooklyn as quite low key, about somebody very ordinary and not a book that would be considered as an automatic prize winner.Brooklyn was straight away installed by William Hill as 6-4 favourite for the overall prize – odds too short for TóibÃn."I won quite a lot of money when I bet on Hilary Mantel when she was 12-1 for the Booker. I don't think I'll be betting on me," he said.The novelist made headlines last year when he suggested in an interview that he did not really enjoy writing and the best thing about it was the money. There was, though, probably a twinkle in his eye. Asked yesterday if he enjoyed writing he said: "Look I'm working at the moment and it has been a great Christmas and everybody has been out drinking and I've been locked in here since December 27 with these characters and sentences trying to get out. So, no. I want to finish this book."Second favourite, at 3-1, for the overall prize is a debut biography by Farmelo – a five-year labour of love telling the story of one of the least-known yet most important scientists of the last century. "It is absolutely appalling that most people in this country have not heard of the name Paul Dirac," said Farmelo. "He was the greatest scientist Britain produced in the 20th century."Part of the reason for the lack of knowledge is that Dirac loathed publicity. Farmelo gained access to a previously unmined family archive in Florida hopes the book will bring the genius of Dirac – and his importance to science – to a wider public. "He was a publicly educated boy from a Bristol terrace and what he achieved was immense. He conceived half the universe in his head, he conceived antimatter."The winner of the first novel award, Selbourne's Beauty, is the story of a young Bangladeshi woman on the run from her family. "I'm very pleased. It's great to be recognised and of course it's invaluable in terms of getting the book out there and being seen by people."Like most novelists Selbourne has had a range of jobs over the years, including as a scooter salesman, but all have been attempts to get out of teaching, he said. It was while teaching in Italy that Selbourne made the arguably unusual decision to move to Wolverhampton, attracted by a job teaching unemployed adults with basic skills needs.The city, he said, gets a bad press. "The people for one thing are incredibly friendly. I'm from Oxford so I'm a southerner used to unfriendly people. I find Wolverhampton very stimulating."For Reid, winning the poetry award is third time lucky – he has been nominated twice before. His winning collection is a tribute to his wife, who died in 2005.The 6-1 outsider for the overall award is Ness for the second book in his trilogy Chaos Walking, which the judges called "a major achievement in the making."A judging panel chaired by novelist Josephine Hart – including Marie Helvin, Caroline Quentin, Dervla Kirwan, Gary Kemp and Tom Bradby – will now decide the overall winner from the all-male list and announce it on 26 January.Costa book awardsColm TóibínAwards and prizesMark Brownguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds feeds.guardian.co.uk |
Andrea Arnold takes on Wuthering Heights
Red Road and Fish Tank director steps in to replace Peter Webber on new film of Emily Brontë's gothic romanceAndrea Arnold, the Oscar-winning British film-maker behind Red Road and Fish Tank, is stepping in to direct the new film adaptation of Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights, Variety reports.Arnold will direct from Olivia Hetreed's adaptation of the novel – a first for the director, who wrote the hard-hitting scripts for both her acclaimed feature films.Explaining the hiring yesterday, producer Robert Bernstein said: "Andrea has previously said that the only book she would ever direct would be Wuthering Heights, because of the passionate, impossible love story at its centre and its elements of class divide," he said. "It's a very lucky coincidence for us that we've found each other."Arnold, who won an Academy Award for best live-action short for her film Wasp in 2005, takes over from Peter Webber, director of Girl With a Pearl Earring. He left the project in December, having stepped in to replace The Edge of Love's John Maybury, who dropped out of the project last summer. Natalie Portman, Abbie Cornish and Gemma Arterton have all been linked to the part of Brontë's heroine, Cathy Earnshaw.Speaking to the Guardian last year, Bernstein acknowledged that the film success of Stephenie Meyer's Twilight saga – itself heavily indebted to Brontë's enduring story – had played a part in the project getting off the ground. "The Twilight factor is extremely helpful to Wuthering Heights," he said. "It's clearly in the zeitgeist. Why is anybody's guess, but people are absolutely obsessed with this doomed, romantic love that can only be achieved beyond death, or in the case of Twilight, by becoming a vampire."Andrea ArnoldFilm adaptationsEmily BrontëStephenie MeyerBen Childguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds feeds.guardian.co.uk |
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