Archive for February, 2009

March Top Ten (The List!)

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Well, the votes are in and the BookSwimmers have spoken. The Top Ten Cheesiest Romance Novels as nominated and voted on by you are as follows:

1. Twilight - Stephanie Meyer 30%
2. The Choice - Nicholas Sparks 23%
3. Confessions of a Shopaholic - Sophie Kinsella 17%
4. The Harlequin - Laurell K. Hamilton 10%
4. Rogue - Danielle Steel 10%
6. Change of Heart - Jodi Picoult 3%
6. Disturbance of the Inner Ear - Joyce Hackett 3%
6. Collateral Damage - Fern Michaels 3%
9. Shelter Mountain - Robyn Carr 0%
9. Devil May Cry - Sherrilyn Kenyon 0%

Some are surprising and others relatively expected, but our dear sweet Sherrilyn Kenyon has been vindicated since none but the nominator found her books to be “cheesy”. Stephanie Meyer, on the other hand, has cut the cheese for sure. Perhaps if she were to come on our show, our her ratings would be a little higher.

What question should we pose for March’s Top Ten? Your suggestions in the comments section below.

Interpress Service: “Generation Y Does Read, Report Says — For 9 Minutes A Day” by Alexandra Beggs

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Read the full article reprint at HighBeam.com

…read over 50,000 Harry Potter stories. “Twilight” is quickly catching up. Eric Ginsberg, vice president of marketing at BookSwim.com, a Web site that rents books online (it works like Netflix), said he is optimistic that the practice of reading will…

Read the full article reprint at HighBeam.com

I Should Probably Read More - by Eric (Required Reading edition)

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

The symptoms are many and the diagnoses few, but having been sick for the past few days (many spent almost exclusively in bed), I’ve had the time to finish reading Diablo Cody’s Candy Girl, watch an episode of her new Showtime TV show, United States of Tara, and get started on the new John Hodgman book, More Information Than You Require.

Having only begun the book (getting through the cover, alone, is at least one good sitting), I am already delighted by the wry, deadpan nature with which Hodgman addresses his fake almanac, a follow-up to his earlier work, The Areas of My Expertese. For those of you not in the know, John Hodgman plays the part of the PC in those ubiquitous and clever “Get a Mac” advertisements. Most recently, he also played the father in the film adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s Coraline.

My road to Hodgman is a bit different, though rest assured, all roads do, in fact, lead to Hodgman. See, as a bit of a musician, myself, I did a few shows and became friendly with fellow singer/songwriter, Jonathan Coulton. Coulton and Hodgman were college roommates at Yale and remain best friends to this day, with Coulton touring alongside Hodgman on the Areas of My Expertise book tour (inexplicable furry hat and all), playing music written specifically for the book (later included in the audiobook version) and Hodgman accusing Coulton of killing his cat on the back cover of More Information Than You Require.

By any means, I’m just at the beginning of the book and I’m thoroughly enjoying it, while also looking forward 700 Mole-Man names, including their occupations, after having so wholly enjoyed the earlier 700 Hobo names, including their occupations (later put into art form by means of fellow podcaster and all-around artistic wizard, Len Peralta’s 700 Hoboes Project).

Do you have any 6-degrees-of-separation-to-an-author stories? If so, share them in the comments section below.

Review o’ the Week: Moon Called by Patricia Briggs

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Since my newfound interest in urban fantasy lingers, this review o’ the week is a review of Moon Called by Patricia Briggs courtesies of Jacqueline from Pennsylvania:

While not the best werewolf-based fantasy story, I have read. I found myself definitely enjoying this book. Briggs brings the main character Mercy to life in this book. I like the fact that she is a strong, but very vulnerable character. She also isn’t a cocky heroine like in some other series of this type. She just feels real.

I felt though like everything was just compiled into too short of a book and I still want to know more about the other characters. Most of them were underdeveloped and did not make me care much for their survival. I hope her next books are as good as this one was.

Werewolves & the women who love them: that’s what it’s all about, folks. This is a book I’ve had my eye on, so I’m relieved to hear the heroine isn’t made into one of those uber-sarcastic, unlikeable heroines that some writers create when they can’t think of more compelling strong female protagonists. Thanks for the review, Jacqueline!

Inter Press Service: “U.S.: Gen Y Reads - But Only for Nine Minutes a Day” by Alexandra Beggs

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Read the full article at IPSNews.net

NEW YORK, Feb 25 (IPS) - Are twentysomethings changing the culture of literature?….

….Eric Ginsberg, vice president of marketing at BookSwim.com, a website that rents books online (it works like Netflix), said he is optimistic that the practice of reading will never die….

Silly Survey (What-the-Dickens? edition)

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

Well, we’ve tabulated the votes and by a whopping 52%, the BookSwimmers are most excited for, I kid you not, “Finger Lickin’ Fifteen” (I can’t make this stuff up, folks).

This week, we’re takin’ it back to the old school with a question about Charles Dickens’ most beloved scamps (of which there were many). Dickens wrote sweet and genuine little boys that made all of our hearts go out.

But which is the most apple-cheeked? The most doe-eyed? The most beloved Dickensian scamp?

And while you’re at it, take another moment to vote in this month’s Top Ten, and keep an eye out for tomorrow’s Review of the Week (maybe even write a review and see if you get picked).

Fun fact: Dickens got paid by the page, which is part of why his books contain SO many characters.

USA Today: “Business founders likely to emerge from meltdown” by Del Jones

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

Read the full article at usatoday.com

As this protracted recession plays out and millions are laid off, there may be some reassurance in knowing that many of the job-creating company founders and CEOs of the future will rise from the ashes of today’s unemployed….

…”Sometimes we need that extra push when a great idea is upon us, but we’re too comfortable to pull the trigger,” says George Burke, co-founder of BookSwim, a company that rents books much as Netflix rents movies…..

ChannelWeb: “As Kindle 2 Starts Shipping, E-Reading Questions Abound” by Chad Berndtson

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Read the full article at CRN.com

Tuesday marks the official start-ship date for Amazon’s Kindle 2 — the next generation of the e-retailing giant’s red-hot e-reading device first unveiled in New York on Feb. 9….

…For e-reading observers such as Eric Ginsberg, vice president of marketing for BookSwim, the answer is a little more complicated than whose device does what best….

The Literary Life podcast 13 (guest: Alex Irvine)

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

It’s another beautiful day in sunny Newark, NJ. The birds are chirping, the smoke stacks are billowing and the nematode mutants are on their way to work just like the rest of we humans, and boy do Chip and Eric have a show for you this week!

Like the hit CW show, “Supernatural”? Well “Supernatural” author, Alex Irvine is our guest for this week’s BookSwim Minute! We’ve also got a few words for you from BookSwim’s new art director, as well as Chip & Eric’s incredulous, but reliably fabulous witty banter - charming as always.


Hear what’s new at BookSwim, catch the good news that we’re in Oprah Magazine this month, and just generally enjoy the show.

Also, use the comments section below to nominate your favorite library for next week’s Alpha Library segment (and to tell Chip and/or Eric that he is handsome) and be sure to vote in February’s Top Ten and, of course, this week’s Silly Survey

Examiner.Com: ” Use Bookswim subscription book rental for savings on bestsellers and college textbooks” by Katie Roy

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Read the full article at Examiner.com

If you are a book novice and book trading isn’t your style, you’re in luck!

BookSwim offers an online book rental service, similar to Netflix, with plans that allow you to rent books starting at $10 per month….

….Additional perks include free shipping both ways, and the option to purchase books you don’t want to return. If you read 4 or more books per month, BookSwim estimates that you will save more than $200 per year over list price!

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: “Kindle 2 new chapter for e-books” by Adrian McCoy

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Read the full article at post-gazette.com

Digital media already have altered the landscape of the music and movie industries radically….

….But Eric Ginsberg, vice president of marketing for Bookswim, doesn’t see the Kindle/Sony model as a real cost saver….

February Top Ten (Voting Week)

Friday, February 20th, 2009

The nominations have poured in by comments and e-mail and we at The Literary Life are now thrilled to open up the voting for this month’s Top Ten: Cheesiest Romance Novel.

This month we’re trying something a little different: you can vote for all of your favorites, instead of just one. So take your time, consider the options, cast your vote and maybe even add a few books to your Rental Pool for a little guilty pleasure-reading.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to vote in this week’s Silly Survey and check out the Podcast with your favorite people named Chip and Eric.

Did your favorite Cheesy Romance Novel not make the list? Is it not in the lead? Debate it in the comments section, below.

“I Should Probably Read More” - by Eric (You-are-my-world Edition)

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

I am now pummeling my way through Diablo Cody’s Candy Girl: A Year in the Life of an Unlikely Stripper. To be honest, I’m actually just in the fourth chapter, but it’s going well so far.

I’ve spent a lot of time in the last few months reading short-story books almost exclusively, whereas this is one fluid story from beginning to end. But still, I do prefer the non-fiction genre when it comes to reading entire books and this one, as it is a memoir, fits the bill.

So Diablo Cody, also the writer of last year’s almost formulaicly quirky hit film, Juno, actually spent a year taking her clothes off for the thrill of it. To be honest, I finally got around to watching Juno and, while I didn’t necessarily enjoy some of the premises of the story, I did enjoy the pacing and the witty banter (helped in no small part by the terrific cast).

So the next day, I went to my BookSwim account, curious to know if she’d written a book and - what luck - she had.

Has that ever happened to you? Have you ever just searched for someone on a hunch they may have written a book because, if they had, you knew you’d want to read it?

Also, 25 bonus points goes to the first reader to accurately identify the reference in this week’s column title.

Sound and Fury: Quality & Quantity

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

NJ Transit likes to change the train schedule on random holidays– MLK Day used a standard schedule, Presidents’ Day used the holiday schedule.

Thus I found myself loitering at Newark Penn Station this past Monday, finding ways to kill fifty minutes before the arrival of my train home. While I sat on a bench and let my mind wander, I noticed what had once seemed to me a near-impossible site: a young family, parents maybe in their late thirties, with a small boy of about eight years old sitting quietly. Propped in his lap was a thick book with a colorful cover about twice the size of his head.

Literacy makes a comeback in the new generation!

A second thought, though: I also began my reading escapades with fantasy & scifi. Then in my college years, I suffered the traditional English major’s guilt that I hadn’t spent my prime reading years perusing, say, A Time to Kill instead of high fantasy. There’s a period of time in your life as a young adult when everything you read actively impacts your personality; books will never be as enthralling or surprising or instructive after that door in time closes. And I wonder now how different my mind could be if I had spent those years reading works that talked about the real world and our ways of dealing with it, instead of stories that are fun but the literary equivalent of cotton candy.

Granted, my father used to read Moby Dick to me as a bedtime story– but I wasn’t quite old enough to appreciate novels, much less the classics.

Question of the week: Should we use the children / YA fantasy literature trend as a doorway to encourage deeper reading?

Review o’ the Week: In the Woods

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Lisa hails from Connecticut, and you know what? She reads. She graces us with what we’ve selected as our Review o’ the Week, a review of In the Woods by Tana French (not to be confused with The Woods by Coben, previously reviewed here on The Literary Life):

I really enjoyed this book. I disagree with other reviewers who disliked Ryan so much. I think he was trapped, in many ways, as a young teenager, because of what happened to him, and it shaded the way he felt and experienced everything. I loved the friendship between himself and Cassie, and I liked the way the author portrayed it.

Having said that, I was disappointed that the mystery of what happened to Ryan and his friends was not solved.

Healthy disagreement with your fellow reviewers is one of the signs that you enjoyed a book. If you didn’t care much about what you read, frankly, madam, you wouldn’t give a damn.

Thanks for the review, Lisa. Want to join her within the ranks of BookSwim’s own elite cadre of book reviewers? Review your book rentals on the site, and every week we’ll comb through the ranks searching for the best one. Give it a try– it could happen to you!