The Literary Life

From the staff of BookSwim.com

Day: Monday, November 24th, 2008

Book Review: The Book of Lost Things

Children are often much more imaginative than adults. This can lead to horrible things like nightmares, but in books their inventiveness often keeps them alive where adults have failed; especially in coming-of-age novels. The Book of Lost Things manages this idea exceptionally well.

In this story, David has recently lost his mother and longs to have her back. He’s also gained a younger sibling and a step-mother whom he in uninterested in. He copes by escaping into books, a medium his late mother had often praised. As he delves deeper into this story-world the lines between reality and fiction blur and David believe himself to be entering a new world. Here he encounters new dangers that threaten the family he resents.

As David becomes more involved in trying to survive as well as protect his friends in this world and his family in the next, he begins to grow up. With astounding rapidity he must face his own fears, learn to solve problems and finally is left to fend for himself. His ingenuity often saves him while he learns the rules of things. It’s sad that as we learn the rules we often forget to be inventive, which is why I believe coming-of-age novels are so popular. They allow us to experience the best of both worlds.

This novel follows the normal template without being overly trite or entirely predictable. The author’s own inventiveness and word choice bring the story to life in a way that most books fall short of. Connolly does not pull any punches in telling his story, death and depravity are not hidden from the young boy yet nothing is obscene, just realistic. This book receives my whole hearted recommendation.

Rent The Book of Lost Things at Bookswim

NY Examiner: “Swimming Upstream in a World of Books” by Terri Schlichenmeyer

Read the article at Examiner.com

Stephen King has a new book out, and you want it.

There’s a new Janet Evanovich coming out next summer, and you want it, too. And the newest Omar Tyree, and the latest Eric Jerome Dickey, and this really cool business book you heard Malcolm Gladwell wrote, the Willie Nelson western, the new Nicholas Sparks, that new Zane book (hoo wee!) and about three dozen other books that you’re dying to read.

But at $20 to $30 bucks a crack to buy them and a waiting list a block long at the library, you know it’s going to be awhile before you get read to any of those books.

Sigh.

Yeah, I’m there, too. So many books, so little time, right? Which is why I was interested when I got an email from this new service called BookSwim.

You know how Netflix works, right? Pay a fee, order a movie, get it, watch it, send it back, get another. BookSwim works along those same lines.

I checked out the website (www.BookSwim.com). If you’re a slower, casual reader, you can get 3 books at a time for $9.95 a month, which is less than half the price of the average hard-cover book, even with the discount card that the Big Chains want you to carry. If you consider that you get three books for that price, it’s a HUGE savings. Even more, if you get six books (three at a time, twice) a month.

The programs (and prices) go up from there. Romance readers and oater lovers who can whip through a book in a day can get more books at a time for a higher fee, and the books will come to your door.

Advantage #1: as with those movie rental websites, you can keep a book as long as you want. There’s no “due date” (like at the library), and nobody asking for their books back (like, when you borrow from friends). If you can’t bear to part with the book, you can buy it (presumably, at a discount) and keep it forever and ever.

Which leads me to advantage #2: you don’t have to keep books forever and ever. If you’re a big reader, you know how much hassle it can be to get rid of that which you’ve finished reading, particularly paperbacks that are past their prime. You know how hard it is to store books. With BookSwim.com, all you do it drop them in the mail when you’re done reading them. And the postage is free, both ways.

Although I didn’t sign up myself, this looks promising, especially for voracious, hungry readers with slim budgets. Many recent best-sellers are on the website, which should mean they’ll be getting brand-new books as they come out. It is to hope that they’ll have enough copies to go around when a book is wildly popular (“Twilight”, anyone?) My only complaint right now is that there is a lack of the off-beat in their choices, but as the site gets popular, that’s bound to change.

I’m optimistic about BookSwim. I like the idea. It’s a great way to try new authors, risk-free; an excellent Earth-friendly way of getting books you want to read without killing another tree; a good way to become uber-literate on a budget; and at a price that’s not all wet.

The Literary Life podcast – Week 1

This week, on The Literary Life, with Chip and Eric, we debate the great conundrums of our time, including but not limited to “Who the heck are Chip and Eric?*”, “What books are they reading?”, “Why is that thing on the back of neck still getting bigger?” and “Who would win in a fight: Tom Sawyer or Huck Finn?” (thing-on-the-back-of-my-neck question not included…*also, we kind of, sort of, accidentally edited out Chip talking about who he is around here, so we’ll give that a whirl again next week – it’s kind of a learning curve around here, folks).

Listen to your new favorite podcast, The Literary Life at BookSwim.com online:

or download The Literary Life to play on your iPod or other audio device. (right click link and select “save target as” – or option click for Mac Computers)

The first Silly Survey gets posted tomorrow, so keep your eyeballs peeled (ewwwwwww).

Best podcast ever? Worst? Something you specifically want us to talk about next week? Let us know, below.