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Archive for May, 2008

Mary Pols’ book gets a great review!

At work we’ve all been buzzing about the review we knew was coming out in Entertainment Weekly this week for Mary Pols‘ first book, her memoir “Accidentally on Purpose.” I guess it’s like family … Mary worked side-by-side with us for so long as our movie critic, we sooooooooo wanted the review to be a good one.

And, it is. I just got my magazine a few minutes ago, and they loved it. They gave it an A-. I don’t know about you, but even if it’s a B in Entertainment Weekly, I sit up and take notice. I really trust certain publications and writers, and EW is one of them. (Plus, of course, they have the good sense to have Gillian Flynn on staff as a TV critic, and she wrote one of my favorite novels of the year, “Sharp Objects.“)

Needless to say, we’re all thrilled at the Times. The phone lines are buzzing. I left a message on Mary’s cell but she’s down at the Booksellers Expo America convention in LA, promoting her book and meeting great authors (and they are meeting HER!)

As you know, I’ll be in conversation with Mary at Town Hall Theatre in Lafayette at 7 p.m. Monday June 9. It’s a small theater, as I’ve said, so we can all be in on the conversation. (And, as I’ve also said, you can buy a drink at the bar downstairs and take it to your seat.) Mary’s book, which goes on sale June 3, will be sold at Town Hall at a discount by Kathleen Caldwell, owner of A Great Good Place For Books, who says “Accidentally on Purpose” is one of her favorite books this year.

And by the way … I would like this book even if I didn’t know Mary. Obviously I’m not alone!

Posted on Friday, May 30th, 2008
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Books narrated by dead people

I just finished a book called “The Ten Best Days of My Life” by Adena Halpern.  I’d started reading it at work when I first got it, and was intrigued. The narrator, a 29-year-old woman, gets hit by a Mini-Cooper while walking her dog and dies. She spots a really cute guy while in line at the pearly gates, gets through and hooks up with her grandparents and uncle Morris, who take her to her new home which is the house she always lusted after when she was growing up. jimmy chooThere’s an entire room full of her favorite designer clothes and shoes (which never pinch) and it just gets better and better. Her dog is there with her, and the cute guy moves next door.

Turns out this is Seventh Heaven, but to stay there, she has to write an essay on the 10 best days of her life, because the powers that be think she’s a little shallow and wasn’t going to amount to anything. She needs to prove herself. She doesn’t want to end up in, say, Fourth Heaven, even though that’s where all the rock stars are.

Anyway, it’s one of those books that actually is a good read, perfect for a plane ride or beach, or Memorial Day weekend when the weather stinks (like this past one).

But, one of the reasons I almost didn’t read it is because I’m so uncomfortable reading books narrated by dead people. (And don’t get me started on “Defending Your Life,” the Albert Brooks movie, which I despised.)

It took me about a year to finally read “The Lovely Bones,” and that only happened because I was in a Vermont farmhouse on vacation and was too hot to sleep. In fact, my copy of the book has sweat drops on all the pages. But that one turned out to be good, even comforting in a way. This one is the same, although this one has a lot more designer clothes in it. Wouldn’t it be cool if we could just imagine our own heaven, and that’s where you end up?  Mine would have LOTS of books in it.

Posted on Tuesday, May 27th, 2008
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Author event alert!

One of the great things about my job is the people I get to work with. And one of my favorite people was Mary Pols, who I sat next to for a few years. Mary was our movie critic, and she was so darn smart about movies, it was always a joy to read her reviews.

The bad news is, Mary left the paper a few months ago. The good news is, she left because she’s now an author and her first book comes out on June 3. It’s a memoir: “Accidentally on Purpose: A One-Night Stand, My Unplanned Parenthood, and Loving the Best Mistake I Ever Made.” 

Yep, it’s the old cute-guy-in-a-bar scenario. Mary was 39 and single, and it was starting to look like she’d never have the children she so desperately craved (she came from a family of five kids). When she got pregnant, she was in a quandary. She was single. She was a journalist, which means she was not exactly rolling in money. She wasn’t sure about the baby’s father, or even if she wanted him in her life, much less her baby’s life. She wanted a girl. The baby was a boy.

The book is beautifully-written: witty, often poignant, and always brutally honest. mpcoverPublisher’s Weekly says “Candid and unaffected, Pols provides an important lesson about not being willing to compromise herself, and that being brave can bring the richest rewards.”

I was so entranced reading Mary’s book, I forgot I was reading about a friend.  It’s already being considered for a movie and TV series, and rightfully so. And, Mary is going to start on a novel after she finishes her book tour for this one. 

And here’s the really fun part. Mary and I will be in conversation at the intimate Town Hall Theatre in Lafayette at 7 p.m. Monday June 9. This theater works great for author events … I did one with Candace Bushnell there a few years ago and it was a blast. This one will be, too, because Mary and I know each other, so who knows what will come out! Also, Town Hall has a full bar, and you can bring your drinks to your seats, unlike other venues.

Because the theater is small (180 seats), the audience will be able to participate as well. And, her books will be sold at the event by my friend Kathleen Caldwell, who owns A Great Good Place for Books in Oakland.

Tickets are a bargain; $8 (cheaper than a movie, and much better for your mind!)  Call 925-283-1557. Town Hall Theatre is on the corner of School Street and Moraga Road in Lafayette.

I hope to see you there!

Posted on Wednesday, May 21st, 2008
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The new Elizabeth George book

I just finished “Careless in Red” by Elizabeth George, one of my favorite mystery writers. It’s huge, 640 pages. I was so engrossed, I completely forgot about reading the book for my Lafayette book club (The Barefoot Book Club).

Inspector Lynley is backcornwallin this one, which takes place on the coast of Cornwall. He is in mourning, and those of you who are fans know why. Havers is back, too, thank goodness. She’s one of my favorite characters in literature.

I’m not giving anything away, but would like to know what you Elizabeth George fans think of this one. I have questions about the whodunit parts of it, and also the title. And, regarding the way I try to guess the killer and hate it when I guess too soon, this one kept me on my toes.

But seriously. If you read it, let me know and I’ll ask you what you think about certain aspects of it. Such as … well, paternity. That’s all I’m saying, don’t want to spoil it. I’m handing it off in the next day or so to my friend Lori, who is great at picking apart books and all the hidden meanings.

Posted on Wednesday, May 21st, 2008
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There’s a new author in town …

I just heard that Lolly Winston (”Good Grief”) can’t make this weekend’s big author festival, put on by the Contra Costa County library system. Instead, someone very intriguing to me has graciously stepped up to the plate. She’s Michelle Richmond, author of “The Year of Fog.”michelle richmond (That’s her, below, at a reading.)

 I  blogged about this book a long time ago … it arrived on my desk and I did the first page test (if it grabs me, I keep reading) and it DID grab me, and I kept reading it for most of the afternoon. (Yep, I sometimes get to read on the job. I love my job.) The reason I may not have been able to put it down is because it involves a missing child, and I really really really hate books about missing or ill (or dead) children. I think I wanted to find out if the child ever got found. And I’m not telling.

But the book so perfectly captures San Francisco. It’s fun to read a book that takes place where you live (or lived, in my case). It’s hard for an author because someone is always sure to complain that they got the name of the barbershop wrong, or the restaurant is on the OTHER side of the street. bay bridge(Once I read a book about San Francisco that had the characters paying the Bay Bridge toll on the city side, instead of the Oakland side, and I felt I couldn’t trust another word of the rest of the book.)  

But Michelle lives in the area, so she’s pretty sure of what she is writing about. And I lived in The City for  15 years, and didn’t find anything wrong. “The Year of Fog” is now is paperback, and Michelle is writing a new book, “No One You Know.”

For the Contra Costa County Library Reading Festival, Michelle will be at Ygnacio Valley Library at 1 p.m. I can’t be there (my daughter’s Senior Ball is that day, I’ll be taking pictures like a madwoman) but I have a feeling Michelle and I will be meeting someday soon. She’s good.

 

Posted on Wednesday, May 14th, 2008
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Authors galore!

Watch where you step this weekend. Chances are you’ll step on an author, if you are in Contra Costa County. The library is is holding its first ever reading festival from May 16 to 18, with events in almost all the libraries. Fifty amazing writers are participating, and all genres and ages will be addressed.

A quick glimpse at the first page on the website shows me Anita Amirrezvani, my friend who used to sit next to me here at the paper. Her book, “Blood of Flowers,” is a tale of a feisty young girl in 17th-century Persia. Anita will be at the El Sobrante Library on Saturday morning at 11. Also at 11, but at the Crockett Library, is Cara Black, whose mysteries are all set in Paris.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted on Tuesday, May 13th, 2008
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