An end of week recap
PAUSE FOR A POD >>
* Lie Back and Listen *
Here I recommend engaging podcasts and other digital recordings I’ve come across during the week. Hopefully you too will enjoy them.
Listen to book blogger, Elisabeth van der Meer of A Russian Affair in a recent episode of the podcast Tea Toast & Trivia. She discusses with host Rebecca Budd: “the life and work of the brilliant writer, Ivan Turgenev, and the complicated relationships that existed between the great Russian writers.” Tune in to >> Season 2. Episode 4: Elisabeth on Ivan Turgenev >>
CHATTERBOOKS >>
* The Moomins and the Great Baltic Rescue *
Read >> #OURSEA: Help the Moomins Save the Baltic Sea >>
* Fitzcarraldo Editions Fortnight *
* Lit Crit Blogflash *
I’m going to share with you three of my favourite literary posts from around the blogosphere. There are so many talented writers posting high-quality book features and reviews, it’s difficult to limit the list to only these few – all of them published over the last week or two:
The Lady’s Guide to Celestial Mechanics by Olivia Waite – Chris Wolak’s first book of the decade was this “lesbian romance novel” set in England in 1816. She declares it “a smart and sexy read” combining “many of [her] favorite things”, such as “history, reclaiming women’s work, and lesbians.” It was, she says, a “good experience”.
Review 1460: The Story Keeper – Kay of Whatmeread found this “historical suspense novel” by Anna Mazzola both “atmospheric” and “entertaining”. Set on the Isle of Skye, it “nicely blends the folklore of the area with more sinister themes.”
* Irresistible Items *
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The Guardian: Rent rises force revered LGBT bookshop out of Paris’s gay district – “Les Mots à La Bouche’s move from the Marais shows loss of cultural heritage, activists say”.
BBC News: ‘First Middle-earth scholar’ Christopher Tolkien dies – “Christopher Tolkien, who edited and published the posthumous works of his father, Lord of the Rings writer JRR Tolkien, has died aged 95.”
Archilovers: A rural capsule hotel in a bookstore – A bookstore in an ancient Chinese village has created a capsule hotel, which can accommodate 20 people.
Town & Country: The 17 Must-Read Books of Winter 2020 – “Buzzy novels, compulsively readable memoirs, and a few guilty pleasures.”
CrimeReads: Reviving the Traditional Mystery for a 21st Century Audience – “Traditional mysteries used to be all about restoring the status quo. Now, they’re just about good people, striving.”
Book Marks: Sarah Moss on Wolf Hall, Miriam Toews, and King Lear – The author of Ghost Wall answers several “rapid-fire” questions about books that have shaped her life.
Book Riot: Curl Up With These Cozy Cat Mystery Books – P.N. Hinton urges you to check out her suggested cat mystery books for your winter reading.
Publishers Weekly: Book Sales Up in U.K. and France – Book sales are booming in the UK and France according to Ed Nawotka.
Entertainment Weekly: EW’s winter thriller preview: Your complete guide to the season’s best page-turners – David Canfield, Leah Greenblatt and Seija Rankin with “this winter’s must reads.”
The Irish Times: Can a work of fiction about the Holocaust be inaccurate? – “There’s a large quantity of new Holocaust fiction,” says Patrick Freyne, but “experts are worried about quality”.
Sahara Reporters: Nigerian Author, Chukwuemeka Ike, Dies At 88 – “Chukwuemeka Ike, one of Nigeria’s most read novelists, has died.”
Deadline: BBC & Warner Bros To Blend Natural History & Fantasy For Doc On JK Rowling’s ‘Fantastic Beasts’ Creatures – According to Jake Kanter, the BBC, Warner Bros and the UK’s Natural History Museum “are partnering on an hour-long documentary that will explore the connections between JK Rowling’s mythical Fantastic Beasts creatures and real animals that have roamed Earth.”
The Washington Post: Reading will supposedly make you a better person. That’s not the real reason to pick up a book. – Mark Athitakis is “irked by how readily news of these [reading studies go] viral” because, for him, “fiction is a kind of Schrödinger’s box”.
Quill & Quire: Loan Stars: Librarians pick their upcoming favourite January/February titles – “Canadian library staff vote for their most-anticipated upcoming books, via BookNet Canada’s Loan Stars readers-advisory program and the Canadian Urban Libraries Council.”
Atlas Obscura: The Best 18th-Century Toilets Were Designed to Look Like Books – Jessica Leigh Hester introduces us to 18th century toilets that were made to look like books.
Brittle Paper: It Is 50 Years Since Nigeria’s Biafran War: Here Are Books to Read – A selection of “notable books—nonfiction books, memoirs, novels, short story collections—that deal with the [Biafran] War.”
Wales Arts Review: Writers’ Rooms | Gillian Clarke – We peek into the “big oak and glass room built on the south end of [an] old longhouse”, which serves as Welsh poet and playwright, Gillian Clarke’s writing space.
Literary Hub: Finding the Literature I Needed Everywhere But University – Jessica Andrews on seeing herself in the writing of Adrienne Rich, Jeanette Winterson, Audre Lorde and others.
The Moscow Times: Immersive Pushkin-Themed Park to Open in St. Petersburg in 2023 – “St. Petersburg is set to open a sprawling, immersive theme park that will bring iconic Russian writer Alexander Pushkin’s fairy tales and poems to life in 2023.”
Tor: How Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings Changed Publishing Forever – “Sometimes, the right book comes along with the right message at the right time and […] ushers in a new age”, writes Alan Brown.
KQED: San Francisco’s 49-Year-Old Russian Bookstore Opens a Progressive New Chapter – Globus Books has a “cult following among Russian-speaking bibliophiles around the world”, finds Nastia Voynovskaya
Euronews: Shakespeare’s First Folio: Rare 1623 collection expected to fetch $6m at auction – A folio “studied by 18th Century scholar Edmond Malone,” and “exhibited as part of the 1951 Festival of Britain”, will “go under the hammer in April”, says Jez Fielder.
SWI: Sibylle Berg wins Switzerland’s top literary prize – “The Zurich-based writer Sibylle Berg has been awarded this year’s Swiss Grand Prix Literature for her life’s work.”
BBC News: Petersfield Bookshop inundated after ‘tumbleweed’ tweet – “A 100-year-old bookshop has been inundated with orders after tweeting it had a “tumbleweed” day in which it had not sold a single book.”
NPR: How To Start A Book Club That Actually Meets – The folk at NPR have plenty of useful tips if you’re intending to start a book club, including an episode of their Life Kit podcast devoted to scheduling, book choice and everything else you’ll need to make sure your group meets regularly.
Khmer Times: 33 cities, 11 countries and a whole lot of books – “Dubbed the world’s biggest book sale, the Big Bad Wolf Book Sale has made its presence known in over 30 cities around the world.”
Oxford Mail: The Woodstock Bookshop to close its doors – Liam Rice reports that the “owner of an independent bookshop is looking to find new owners for her popular West Oxfordshire store.”
The Guardian: Australian fiction is already challenging the idea that catastrophic bushfire is normal – “The stories we tell about bushfire are changing. Our writers have been grappling with its link to climate crisis for years”, says Aussie ecofiction expert Rachel Fetherston.
The Calvert Journal: ‘Men are everywhere’: Svetlana Alexievich to launch publishing house for women writers – Paula Erizanu reveals the “Belarusian Nobel Laureate Svetlana Alexievich is opening a new publishing house exclusively dedicated to printing female authors.”
The New Republic: Can Amazon Finally Crack the Bestseller Code? – “The retail giant is publishing commercial fiction by famous authors. Publishers should be terrified”, warns Alex Shephard.
The Mainichi: 2 novelists named for Japan’s Akutagawa, Naoki literary awards – Makoto Furukawa and Soichi Kawagoe have respectively won the Akutagawa and Naoki prizes.
The Cut: Remembering Elizabeth Wurtzel, a Proudly Difficult Person – “She had a tiny nuclear reactor where the rest of us have a breastbone,” says Benjamin Wallace.
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FINALLY >>
If there is something you would particularly like to see on Winding Up the Week or if you have any suggestions, questions or comments for Book Jotter in general, please drop me a line or comment below. I would be delighted to hear from you.
Thank you for taking the time to read this post. I wish you a week bountiful in books and rich in reading.
NB In this feature, ‘winding up’ refers to the act of concluding something and should not be confused with the British expression: ‘wind-up’ – an age-old pastime of ‘winding-up’ friends and family by teasing or playing pranks on them. If you would like to know more about this expression, there’s an excellent description on Urban Dictionary.