Archive for February 5th, 2009

ABC 15 Phoenix: “Save money on books, rent them” by Quita Jackson

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Read the full article at ABC15.com (ABC Affiliate - Phoenix, AZ)

If you’re an avid reader you know buying books can break your wallet. So why not rent them instead? There’s a website called bookswim.com and they rent paperback and hardcover books online….

….If you decide you’re all booked out you can cancel your service at any time but you’ll only have ten days to return your books before you are charged for them.

Sound and Fury by Chip: Name That Book!

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

It always gets me: that compelling sentence in a book’s description that catches my eye and forces me to read through the rest of the blurb, when all I’d meant to do was add it to a customer’s rental pool. I’m talking about the sales copy, the short book description written with action verbs and the same melodramatic, slightly inaccurate terms used to sell hair growth medication, diet pills, and $14,000 exercise machines.

Here are some of my favorite examples of riveting, exciting, man-I-gotta-read-that-book yet surprisingly generic blurbs. Can you match each compelling blurb with its book?

1) The killer has the whole city by its strings–and he’ll stop at nothing to become the most terrifying star that Washington D.C. has ever seen.

2) With this life-affirming tale of friendship and fate, [author] once again shows why she is a nationally bestselling author with legions of loyal fans.

3) But there are some lines that should never be crossed—like the one [character]’s stepping over . . . again!

4) A story of depth and emotion, hilarity and imagination, [title] tells a story of love, family, and loss.

5) But when a chance encounter brings them together again, the time has finally come to make a choice, one that will have profound consequences for them both for the rest of their lives.

a) The Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai

b) Double Cross by James Patterson

c) Lone Eagle by Danielle Steel

d) The Outlaw Demon Wails by Kim Harrison

e) Second Chance by Jane Green

I Should Probably Read More - by Eric (Cake!)

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

It’s been a busy week in the life of Eric. But I’m never too busy to read on the train. Heck, I even finished a book this past week - David SedarisHolidays on Ice (which, admittedly, I had already read most of before picking back up in the last few days). I polished off the last three short stories in no time and even had a few chuckles along the way.

I am now contently working on Sloane Crosley’s I Was Told There’d Be Cake. I haven’t gotten too far into the book yet, but I’m enjoying it so far. Her wit is quick and she has a terrific way of describing things and inserting mini-stories into the already short stories. For instance, in a longer story about sleep-away camp and the lice infestation that arose therein, she ticked off the items which she was forced to incinerate, which included, “an amiable stuffed rabbit named Bruce, whose hobbies included warding off ghosts and being thrown at snoring girls.”

In that one moment, though referring to instances otherwise unmentioned elsewhere in the story, the reader is brought into the life of a cabin-dwelling 10-year-old in the middle of the night, and all the maleficent forces that conspire to rob one of sleep. The sentence (or rather, part of a sentence…there is more than one such gem in that singular sentence, alone) also conveys a child’s love for and attachment to a stuffed animal which, for anyone who has ever had or been a child (which should be most of us) is simultaneously intrinsic and ethereal.

Another shining aspect of these stories, for me, personally, is that the writer is unabashedly Jewish and relates of her parents in an according manner. It may seem strange to use the word “unabashed” in describing someone’s discussion of their faith, but for all of you people out there who have never felt the isolation on December 25th and the rest of the year as countless characters in the movies, on TV and in books talk in a manner that embraces a faith that is not your own, I can tell you with a certain degree of delight that there is something indescribably comfortable about being able to relate to a character with whom you have such a defining quality in common - something for which, it seems from my potentially damned perspective, Christians too often take for granted (it being the norm for them, and all).

No, Crosley doesn’t just mention that she is Jewish in passing, but rather embraces it as a pivotal aspect of her character’s background and motivation, which I quite enjoy.

I’ll make it a point to thank the person who recommended this book to me as you may thank me some day, since I thoroughly endorse it as a fun read for anyone who enjoys the short story medium. What do you think I should send the recommender? A fruit basket? Flowers? Chocolate? A card? Something else? Help me out!