An end of week recap
“It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.”
– George Orwell
You could have knocked me down with Vladimir Aniskin’s Levsha when I learned that one of my favourite online booksellers, Book Depository, is closing later this month. Not only is this dispiriting news for its long-standing customer base from over 170 countries, but it also creates a major headache for its army of affiliates (myself included), many of whom are fellow book bloggers.
Should you have queries regarding outstanding BD orders, please check the company’s Closure FAQ page on the official website, though I am informed it will be possible to continue placing orders until midday (12pm BST) on 26th April. Now, however, I begin the mammoth task of removing and replacing innumerable URLs dotted throughout Book Jotter.
On a lighter note, I would like to wish a Happy Easter to those celebrating the festival (with or without excessive quantities of chocolate) and a Sameach Pesach (Happy Passover) to my Jewish friends and readers.
As ever, this is a post in which I summarise books read, reviewed and currently on my TBR shelf. In addition to a variety of literary titbits, I look ahead to forthcoming features, see what’s on the nightstand and keep readers abreast of various book-related happenings.
CHATTERBOOKS >>
If you are planning a reading event, challenge, competition, or anything else likely to be of interest to the book blogging community, please let me know. I will happily share your news here with the fabulous array of bibliowonks who read this weekly wind up.
* Leap Into MCMXL *
* There is Nothing Like a DDM Dame *
* Irresistible Items *
Umpteen fascinating articles appeared on my bookdar last week. I generally make a point of tweeting (soon, perhaps, Mastodonning) my favourite finds (or adding them to my Facebook group page), but in case you missed anything, here are a selection of interesting snippets:
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The Japan Times: 600 pages all at once: What readers are saying about Mieko Kawakami’s new novel – “Mieko Kawakami, Japan’s literary It Girl, has a heavy new novel out about money and desperation,” reveals Thu-Huong Ha.
Penguin: What is the ideal chapter length? – “Whether it’s shortened for today’s distracted reader, or written long, the chapter’s 2000-year history is full of variations, trends, and surprises,” says Kat Brown.
Le Monde: Claire Etcherelli, novelist and valued collaborator of Simone de Beauvoir, has died – Philippe-Jean Catinchi writes: “From factory worker to winner of the 1967 Femina Prize, Etcherelli, author of Elise ou la vraie vie (Elise, or real life), died on March 5, at 89.”
BBC Manchester: Elizabeth Gaskell’s Manchester explored in new exhibition – “An exhibition investigating how a 19th Century novelist depicted her native city has opened at her former home.”
Philosophy Now: We Have Always Been Cyborgs by Stefan Lorenz Sorgner – In Stefan Lorenz Sorgner’s We Have Always Been Cyborgs, “Natasha Beranek sees transhumanism get an upgrade.”
Independent: Walter Scott Prize shortlist nominees announced – The judges of the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction have announced a shortlist of seven books for the 2023 prize.
The Quietus: Furious Since Birth: Grime, A Novel By Sibylle Berg – “The music genre provides a backdrop and a backbeat to [Grime,] a novel by Sibylle Berg about England’s uniquely awful treatment of its own population.”
The Asian Age: Book Review | Oh, the joy of the book hunt, the thrill of wishful contemplation – Sridhar Balan reviews The Book Beautiful: A Memoir of Collecting Rare and Fine Books by Sridhar Balan.
Literary Hub: Why I Decided to Update the Language in Ursula K. Le Guin’s Children’s Books – “Literary executor Theo Downes-Le Guin on what that means for readers, past and future.”
Brittle Paper: “African literature has always been speculative” | A Conversation with Tobi Ogundiran on Forthcoming Debut Jackal, Jackal – Tobi Ogundiran talks about his new book, Jackal, Jackal: Tales of the Dark and Fantastic, which “has everyone on the edge of their seats.”
The New York Times: How a Tiny Literary Magazine Became a Springboard for Great Irish Writing – “The Stinging Fly has helped launch several of Ireland’s most promising writers. How has a publication with 1,000 subscribers carved a niche in the Irish canon?” wonders Max Ufberg.
Esquire: The Unbearable Costs of Becoming a Writer – “After years of hard work and low pay, the risks I took to work in publishing are finally paying off. But now, I wonder about the price my family paid, and whether it was too steep,” says Nicole Chung.
LARB: Take a Lesbian for a Drink: On 50 Years of Rita Mae Brown’s “Rubyfruit Jungle” – Trish Bendix shows how Rita Mae Brown’s 1973 novel Rubyfruit Jungle has inspired five decades of lesbian pop culture.
BBC News: Judy Blume worried about intolerance and book banning in the US – “Author Judy Blume has said she is worried about intolerance in the US, after some of her novels were removed from schools.”
History Today: The Wing of Friendship – “Charles Dickens’ most enduring friendship was with his sister-in-law, who has been remembered as his housekeeper,” finds Christine Skelton.
Publishers Weekly: Ukraine to Hold Book Festival in Kyiv This June – Ed Nawotka announces the first book festival to be held in Ukraine since Russia’s war on the country – it will run from 22nd to 25th June in Kyiv.
Humanities: Gabrielle Suchon, Philosopher Queen of the Amazons – “Centuries before the rise of feminism, this underappreciated thinker wrote to set women free.”
Public Books: Finding Your “Voice”: Author-Read Audiobooks – Does the author-read audiobook offer a perfect confluence between person, authorial persona, voice and aesthetic form, wonders Samantha Pergadia?
Guardian Australia: Aphrodite’s Breath by Susan Johnson review – a revealing memoir about mothers and daughters – “A trip to Kythera for the Australian author and her mother results in this unsparing and intimate look at their intense and often unhappy dynamic.”
Newsroom: Easter’s bestselling books – “The latest Nielsen BookScan New Zealand bestseller list, described by Steve Braunias.”
Sierra: “Harvest of Survivors”: 30 Years After Octavia E. Butler’s “Parable of the Sower” – Ayana Jamieson describes this piece on Butler’s 1995 dystopian classic, Parable of the Sower, as “Into the HistoFuture Butlerverse.”
The Baffler: Drinking from the Original Fountain – Suleiman Al-Bustani on translating The Illiad into Arabic.
Nippon.com: “Shinjuku Shark”: Japanese Mystery Writer Ōsawa Arimasa and the Enduring Appeal of His Hardboiled Series – Takino Yūsaku sat down with mystery writer Ōsawa Arimasa to discuss the “latest installment in his long-running Samejima series, […] the enduring popularity of the novels and his approach to writing.
Locus: Archita Mittra Reviews Pomegranates by Priya Sharma – Archita Mittra describes Pomegranates, Sharma’s dystopian tale of environmental disaster as “a lovely, layered, and luscious retelling of the story of Persephone and Demeter, unfolding against the backdrop of climate change and patriarchal violence.”
Quantra.de: I’m not afraid for myself – “In her latest novel, Lebanese writer Alawiya Sobhwrites [highligts] the failure of the Arab Spring and how religious bigotry and patriarchal structures are impacting people’s health.”
Prospect: Martin MacInnes’s science fiction: encounters with the unknown – “The author’s latest novel, In Ascension, takes its protagonist into deep space—and towards deeper self-understanding.”
Scroll.in: Marguerite Duras’s novel ‘The Lover’ is ‘a great literary act of looking back’ – “The book is a study in making and unmaking yourself, reinterpreting past selves through the lens of present and future selves,” says Anthony Macris.
Oprah Daily: 10 African Writers to Read This Year – Join [Wadzanai Mhute] in reading [a selection of] captivating books—some by debut authors and some by global sensations.”
The Irish Times: All Ukrainians know Gulliver’s Travels. Here at Marsh’s Library they love to hear about Jonathan Swift – “The novel, written by one of the first readers at Ireland’s first public library, is a good guide to making the best of the most awful and absurd circumstances,” writes Olga Taranova.
Yahoo! News: Owner of bookstore down the street from Covenant School opens doors to community: ‘If you don’t know where to go, come here’ – “‘You’re welcome here, today and all the other days,’ says the award-winning novelist,” Ann Patchett.
Australian Book Review: A bon vivant’s life – Susan Varga on Drink Against Drunkenness, the “long awaited biography” of Sasha Soldatow – “gay activist, member of the Sydney Push, party animal, and bon vivant with legions of friends” – from Inez Baranay.
Vulture: The Women Are Smart. The Men Are Sincere. And the Ending Is Always Happy. – Allison P. Davis discovers how Emily Henry “cracked the modern romance novel.”
Arab News: US luxury publisher Assouline celebrates Saudi dates, coffee with two new titles – The luxury US publisher, Assouline has added two new books to its Saudi series.
Indie Wire: Warner Bros. in Talks for Harry Potter TV Series at HBO Max – The HBO Max streaming service, Warner Bros. “is reportedly looking to mine old IP with a new adaptation of J. K. Rowling’s ‘Harry Potter’ books.”
The Verge: The OverDrive library ebook app is shutting down on May 1st – “OverDrive, maker of the well-loved library ebook app Libby, is shutting down its legacy OverDrive app on May 1st.”
The Wall Street Journal: He’s Been Dead for Nearly 10 Years. Now He’s Narrating Your Audiobook. – “Apple, Google and others embrace the new AI technology for recording audio versions of books,” says Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg.
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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 is an excellent description on Urban Dictionary.